"Sabermetrics" Was A Word In The Scripps National Spelling Bee
The Scripps National Spelling Bee, which alongside poker, cheerleading, and hot dog eating constitute the E for Entertainment in ESPN, featured an actual sports word in the third preliminary round of its competition today in Washington, D.C. as "sabermetrics" made its appearance.
14-year-old Emma Ciereszynski—who honed her spelling skills by filling out paperwork requiring her full name—drew the word and successfully spelled it after learning its definition ("the statistical analysis of baseball data") and its origin (an English acronym plus a Greek-derived English part). The word's appearance in the Bee outraged both baseball purists (who deny the legitimacy of sabermetrics as an idea) and stat junkies (who insist on spelling it SABRmetrics). [ESPN]
Why Mark DeRosa Should Never Work in Baseball Again
What Is the College Basketball Crown and Why It’s Struggling
Miami (OH) vs SMU Prediction: Best Bet for NCAA Play-In Game
MLB Home Run Leader Future Picks: Best Bets for 2026 Season
Early NFL Free Agency Winners and Moves That Stand Out
- MLB Home Run Leader Future Picks: Best Bets for 2026 Season
- Top NBA Picks for Today: Thunder vs Magic, Cavs vs Bucks, Nuggets vs 76ers
- Best Future Bets for MLB Strikeout Leader: Crochet, Gilbert, and Cease
- Top NBA Picks Today: Betting Predictions for Monday’s NBA Slate
- Best NCAA Tournament Championship Future Betting Picks Before Selection Sunday
- Sunday NBA Odds and Betting Picks for March 15th
- UFC Vegas 114 Betting Preview: Three Best Bets for Fight Night

