Grandpa said he wanted Cha Segye to have a family that gives him all the love and support he wss lacking as a child. He doesn't think Seori can give it to CSG but moments like this show Shin Seori is all that CSG needs.
#MyRoyalNemesis#MyRoyalNemesisEp11
can’t be blue (캔트비블루) "can't love (Feat. HAN (Stray Kids))"
Released Online
Spotify https://t.co/EqcszXVpI0
Apple Music https://t.co/Z05HcVRTeR
YouTube Music https://t.co/7WPPwjmKB6
#StrayKids#스트레이키즈#한#HAN#캔트비블루#cantbeblue#cantlove#캔트러브
#YouMakeStrayKidsStay
We chatted with Seungmin from Stray Kids on his live and he shared his favorite MLB teams! ⚾🐶️
*yes we are fangirling* 😊
#StrayKids#Seungmin#SKZ#스트레이키즈
But that's true for Furuya too. He couldn't play in any games in middle school because no one could catch his pitches. He only started playing seriously in Seidou.
When you think about it, Eijun is so insane bcs he only started training seriously when he got to Seidou while the pitchers he faced have prior training or years of experience compared to him
His growth in such a short time managed to overpower them AND SUFFERED FROM YIPS btw
@bangtanstyle07 I agree with you about the audio. But I just thought it could be that there are different VAs as compared to the previous seasons. Sawamura and a couple of others sound different
It is hard to decide through livestream, cause it depends on which angle the livestream takes. Most Japanese broadcasts use an angle from the center field but are a bit offset towards the first base for main frame, while the perfect angle to see the pitch variations clearly is from the back of the net right behind the ball umpire.
Since that angle rarely broadcasted frequently and only shown occasionally to show the exact pitch that had been thrown by the pitcher, we barely can assume which pitch that was (actually MLB livestreams are more aligned from center of outfield to the umpire position than Japanese one so I'm really appreciating MLB livestreams for their clarity of angles)
The most possible way to guess what pitch that was through livestream is to watch over the velo and grip. Velocity is much more recognizable cause it's often shown on livestream (in Japan it's marked with km/h while western often marked with mph)
In amateur fields, the average of fastball (4-seamer) is around 130-145 km/h. And for breaking balls like curveball/slider, it is around 80-110 km/h, or more for slider. Meanwhile in professional (NPB), average of fastball is around 140-155 km/h while slider/curve can be around 110-130 km/h.
While for grip, sometimes the camera will show a replay of the pitch thrown by a pitcher and zoom in to the pitcher's grip to see what exactly the pitch thrown is, aside from looking through the pitch's movements. Some of the most recognizable grips imo probably change-up, slider/curve, forkball, and 4-seamer. I'm putting the grip's reference & explanation below of you wanna know.
Tbh I didn't exactly master this part since I am also still learning thoroughly until now and sometimes hard to identify pitch's variations. But don't sweat yourself too hard, since it's not a must to be able to identify pitches as long as you enjoy it :)
Last one, I'll drop this yt video link that might help you understand better on how to identify pitches in baseball 👇
https://t.co/KJPHyZWn43
Season 2 of TV Anime "Ace of the Diamond act II" (Diamond no Ace: Act II) is listed with ONLY 13 EPISODES (≈ ‘01 Cour’)
Hideaki Oba directing the team sport sequel at Studio OLM, with April 5 premiere
�� ICYMI: Season 1 has total 52 episodes (≈ 04 consecutive cours)
@ranroxyrox Rewatching act 2 for the 100th time and just got to this episode. That day he was not the only who was happy. The 2nd and 3rd years who have watched him from day 1 all shared in his joy and unbelief. It had not been easy for Sawamura. I even wondered at some point if TJ hated him