My five-year-old recently started t-ball and the games have been even more fun to watch than I imagined. The kids are young enough that they don’t bother to keep score and the concept is just to introduce the game and help teach the rules. Despite the best efforts of parents and coaches, there is a delightful regularity with which things tend to go awry. Seeing a baserunner chase a ball his teammate hit into the outfield is something that never gets old. Also, if you’ve never seen an entire team in the field swarm to a ground ball, I would recommend you catch a local t-ball game. It’s great to see the kids enjoy themselves and full of entertainment for the spectators.
Baseball and investing have long been linked. Nobody has done more to highlight the ties between the two than Warren Buffett, who hardly can conduct a single interview without making a baseball analogy. He often talks about “no called strikes” in investing and waiting for the “fat pitch.” My favorite baseball quote of his refers to focusing on underlying business performance instead of on stock price, “in investing, just as in baseball, to put runs on the scoreboard one must watch the playing field, not the scoreboard.”
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