Stick to baseball, 7/14/18.

No new Insider pieces this week; I’ll have a Futures Game wrapup Sunday night and an updated top 50 prospects ranking out on Thursday. I did hold a Klawchat this past week.

Over at Paste, I reviewed the popular and very highly-rated new board game Rising Sun, from designer Eric Lang (Blood Rage, Ancestree), a $100 game with meticulously-crafted miniature figures but a fairly straightforward set of mechanics around area control and negotiation.

In just a few hours, I’ll be DC’s famed bookstore Politics & Prose with Jay Jaffe to talk about our books and sign copies. The event starts at 6 pm.

Two weeks from today, I’ll be at the Silver Unicorn Bookstore in Acton, MA at 1 pm to speak and sign copies of my book as well.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. I’mnot on Twitter so if what I say here is woefully ignorant, please tell me so…

    But… “snitch tagging”? If you’re on a ‘public’ (i.e., your communications are accessible to the general public) platform talking about someone and they are notified of such… that’s wrong? How?

    Not trying to be snarky but trying to make sense.

    • Keith’s job is to provide opinions on players’ futures. Sometimes that opinion is negative (or at least able to be perceived as such) by default. If he says “Jimmy is unlikely to ever be a GUY,” there’s no reason to go in and tag @Jimmy in it. It’s tattle-taleing just to start a fight. If Jimmy comes across it organically, fine, Keith will (I’m sure) stand by the opinion, but it’s essentially akin to running across the schoolyard to spread gossip in hopes of starting a fight.

    • So, let’s say I get mad at Keith because he says that Estevan Florial isn’t the second coming of Mike Trout, and I go and tweet “Keith Law is a big poopyhead who can’t get his nose out of his spreadsheets!!1!” I’m just some rando on Twitter who Keith doesn’t follow, so chances are he’ll never see that, everybody goes about their day. Now you come along and quote-tweet that with “What do you think about this, @keithlaw?” Because he’s been tagged in it, he now gets notified that I’ve called him a big poopyhead, says something snarky about bias cat, and then his fans blow up my mentions for four days. Obviously it’s possible he would have seen it anyway, but I’m not on his radar and wouldn’t have reasonably expected that kind of interaction.

      In Keith’s case, obviously it’s not as ridiculous as the scenario I laid out above, but it’s ultimately a similar dynamic. If he had wanted the subject to see the tweet, he’d have tagged said subject himself.