In short, APBA’s general placement of the numbers on the APBA baseball card are no accident. The point of all this is that other than a 66, there is no really fantastic number you can roll with a six showing. 65: the most automatic of all result numbers… every hitter gets a 35 here.64: other than 66, the best of the bunch.63: a fly-out number, a 31 if you’re lucky.62: this is catch-all number but most likely a 13 or unusual play number.61: could be a DP or if you’re lucky an unusual play.The options aren’t much better for a red six: 56: monster cards may have a 14 but again, either a pop out or a strikeout.36: if you’re lucky, it could be a 14- walk but probably a pop out.26 (and 46): most likely a strikeout or if you’re Albert Pujols, a DP.However, look at the other possible rolls with a white six. Rolling a 66 is a fantastic thing we can all agree on that. If you’re lucky, it ends up another six.īut is rolling a six on one die really a good thing in APBA? I guess it depends on the situation. It keeps spinning and you’re encouraging it in your own special way (Mike Bunch, my commissioner in the Illowa APBA League, would shout out, “Git it! Git it!” while his rogue die is spinning). After rolling the dice, one die lands squarely on a six and the other one is spinning. If you play dice APBA, you’ve probably had this happen.
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