Regular We Got Ice Jack: Says the craziest shit at the mound that even Editor Jack has to stop and just shrug and shake his head at. Weather Jack: Can tell no lies, knows all facts, potentially sees into the future, potentially rewrites the past.
Love it! As an OS, I can help with that one... I'll send Jomboy the examples the MLB sends to all of us. (It's actually a test for ordinary effort or not, but same idea.)
@@mattforbes221 The mistake people tend to make on those: not cutting off any action prior to an errant throw in the sequence of assists. If there is a long array of people handling the ball, usually there was an overthrow in there to extend the action. A famous example was Ramon Laureano's robbing of Teoscar Hernandez of a homer. He caught it over the fence then tried to double up Justin Smoak at first. The throw airmailed the first baseman, allowing Smoak to take off for second. However, the catcher Nick Hundley was backing up first. Hundley caught the overthrow and fired to second to get Smoak. Laureano does not get an assist on that play because it was his wild throw that allowed Smoak to run in the first place. Thus, Smoak is out 2-4.
The weather quiz is particularly interesting to me: my friend's kid is both training to be an umpire and studying atmospheric science in college. If he makes the big leagues, he'll instantly become the end boss at that particular aspect of the job.
Those hard trivia questions were easier than the in-the-moment call challenges. I don't know what to say about Jack's alter ego, the Tropical Storm man.
R3 started at third, so they are entitled to it as it is "their base". R2's base is second. Since they're both at third, R3 owns it while R2 would have had to return to second.
I guess these two are too young to have seen Little Big League, where that last question literally happens in the first few minutes (only with three runners).