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A brief history of Baseball
by Regan Shaors
http://www.fleerbaseball.com
The game of baseball is said to have begun in the early 19th
century, but that's just half the truth. The game was played
much before but the first baseball clubs were formed around
that time. An Englishman named Alexander Cartwright in the
year 1845 devised the first set of rules baseball. In fact,
many of the rules listed out then are still used in the
game.
In the year 1858, a group of amateur players came together
to form the first baseball league - known as the National
Association of Baseball Players. Right from the first year,
the National Association of Baseball Players began charging
for admission to baseball games.
The year 1868 saw baseball hitting a new summit. The
National Association of Baseball Players saw the coming of
delegates from over a 100 clubs across the country. The end
of the Civil War saw the game being introduced to the other
parts of the country and everywhere it managed to enamor the
people.
Even as late as 1960, rival leagues tried to make their way
into American baseball. All of them failed to leave any
significant mark, and the game is still ruled today by the
National and American leagues. And throughout the last part
of the 20th century, baseball became both a game of
strategy and hitting. Pitching and home run hitting,
though, are the baseball benchmarks of today. Baseball
teams are either big winners or big losers, depending on
the strength of their bullpens and their home run hitters.
And the cost of admission still continues to rise.
The game of baseball is still ruled by the National and
American leagues, despite rival leagues leaving no stone
unturned to make a mark in the American Baseball. The few
changes that have happened in the game are the game becoming
a test of both strategy and hitting. However, the yardsticks
for baseball now are pitching and home run hitting. The fate
of the teams is decided by the strengths of the team's bull
pens and the home-run hitters.
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