<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="jakobeast" data-cid="234759" data-time="1405462104">
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Nope.</p>
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Radio PBP can give you the away from the puck action better then tv. Most of the time the camera stays on the puck. If something happens away from the puck, they might switch the view. With radio, if there is a dust up, or a player is having trouble with something, or Q is making an obscene gesture, the colour guy usually lets the listener know. TV might get around to it after a break or what have you.</p>
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I am not saying I would rather all the games be on the radio exclusively, just that radio is a great tool for using your imagination. Honestly, the picture in my head I get from the radio is better then what my eyes actually see.</p>
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We're just going to have to agree to disagree because that sort of stuff isn't what I'm talking about. It's more player positioning/reactions away from the puck which you can see in an instant and see the potential impact of and then the actual impact of (if there is one) where on radio everything is after the fact with stuff like that. That has nothing to do with a lack of imagination, it's just lack of information, there's no way you could've known. And there's no way for them to possibly inform listeners of everything like that. More often than not there's just too much going on to be spending too much time describing anything other than what's happening with the puck alone at that given second. It just doesn't translate well when compared to other sports, you lose too much. You can get away with it in all the other major sports because the pace is so much slower or different, with lots of stoppages within play, timeouts etc. Not to mention much more predictable, whereas in hockey insane randomness is rampant at times. It's just night and day between watching or only listening to hockey.</p>