C.J. Nitkowskis swipe at fans on phones

Forget for a moment about the Twitter fight between retired major league pitcher and current Fox analyst C.J. Nitkowski and ESPN analyst Keith Law, which resulted Tuesday in Nitkowski writing titled ESPNs Keith Laws Attempt to Defame Me Highlights Dangers of Social Media Overreactions.

The i sues between Nitkowski and Law centered on Nitkowski highlighting a fan in a pink hat in the front row at Monday’s White Sox-Angels game, behind the dugout, staring at a phone. Law a serted sexism was at play;Nitkowski vigorously defended himself against that claim.

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Your parents paid a lot of money for that seat…

CJ Nitkowski (@CJNitkowski)

Theres a discu sion to be had about the way that we look at people in pink hats, who, yes, are almost universally women. Theres Deebo Samuel Hoodies Sweatshirts plenty to be said about gender-based prejudice among sports fans. Theres also something to be said about Nitkowskis a sertion that the parents of the fan with the phone paid a lot of money for that seat,” and generational i sues, and cla s i sues, and a whole lot of other things. But were forgetting all that for now, because theres a larger point being mi sed that affects everyone.

Here is what Nitkowski wrote in his explanatory post: My intentions were simple, we look at our phones too much, myself included, and mi s a lot of life that is happening right in front of us. I meant nothing more, nothing le C.J. Beathard Jerseys s.

We do look at our phones a lot, its true. Its also true there are lots of reasons to look at one’s phone during a baseball game. Perhaps, with great seats behind the dugout, this fan was looking at some freshly taken photos of that very baseball game. Perhaps the fan was posting to Facebook about how great the seats were. Perhaps the fan was using the official MLB Ballpark app (yes, baseball itself encourages fans to use their phones at games)to find out that the nearest nacho stand was near Section 143.

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C.J. Nitkowski with the Pirates in 2006. (Getty Images)

Even if the fan in the picture was playing Candy Crush, who cares? If you have a ticket to a baseball game, you are free to sit in your seat for three hours and do whatever you want as long as youre not disturbing those around you. Quietly looking at your phone falls under the spectrum of allowable activities.

Besides, the photo Nitkowski posted depicted a White Sox hitter at the plate, which means the White Sox were down by at least John Taylor T Shirts five runs at the time. The Angels blitzed Sox starterCarlos Rodon in the first inning Monday night, leading by a nickel before Chicago even took a turn with the bat. It was 7-0 by the end of the 2-hour, 58-minute affair, during which you can be sure the vast majority of the 14,706 fans looked at their phones. Should they be shamed for it? Absolutely not.

Go to a game and look at your phone if thats the way youre going to have the most fun enjoying an entertainment product. This isnt the movies, where taking out your phone means shining a bright light in a dark theater. This isnt driving on a highway, where you might kill Elijah Mitchell Jerseys yourself or somebody else if you send a text. Its a baseball game, where if you mi s a couple of pitches to see what your friend sent on Snapchat, youll still get to see a replay on the Jumbotron if it was actually important.

Also, to the original point: Theres no guarantee that the fan, or the fans parents, paid a lot of money for that seat. On StubHub, tickets for that section behind the dugout were available for Tuesdays game for as low as $30. Maybe the fan was on the phone scooping up another great deal to see the White Sox.