'Baseball Season' refers to the annual period during which
organized baseball games are played, typically running from early spring (March/April) through fall
(September/October) for regular season play, with playoffs and World Series extending into late
October or early November in professional baseball. According to Major League Baseball's official
schedule documentation, the modern MLB regular season consists of 162 games per team played over
approximately six months, representing one of the longest seasons in professional sports and deeply
embedding baseball into the rhythm of American summer. The Baseball Hall of Fame's historical archives
document how baseball season has evolved since the sport's professionalization in the 1870s, expanding
from shorter seasons to today's marathon schedule that has made baseball synonymous with summer
itself. Youth baseball organizations like Little League follow similar seasonal patterns, with spring
tryouts, summer games, and fall championships creating annual cycles that millions of American
families structure their schedules around. The phrase 'baseball season' carries cultural weight beyond
mere sports scheduling—it evokes American traditions of summer evenings at ballparks, family outings,
community gatherings, and the leisurely pace associated with summer activities. Weather forecasters
and cultural commentators reference baseball season as a temporal marker dividing the year, with
Opening Day celebrated as a quasi-holiday marking winter's end and summer's approach. Sports
economists study how baseball season impacts local economies through game attendance, television
viewership, merchandise sales, and tourism to ballparks. The National Pastime Foundation documents
baseball's unique American cultural position where the season's structure—daily games throughout
summer rather than weekly contests—creates sustained engagement and tradition unlike any other sport,
making baseball season a defining American cultural phenomenon representing summer, tradition, and
community gathering around a shared sporting heritage. Sources: Major League Baseball - Season Schedule, Baseball Hall of Fame - History and Tradition.
How to Solve Frame Games
Frame Games are visual word puzzles created by famous puzzle author Terry Stickels. In
these puzzles,
words or phrases are arranged within a "frame" in a way that represents a common saying, phrase,
quote, movie title, trivia fact, or concept.
The key to solving Frame Games is to pay attention to:
Position: Where words are placed (top, bottom, inside, outside, etc.)
Size: How big or small the text appears
Arrangement: How words relate to each other spatially
Repetition: Words that appear multiple times
Direction: Text that may be upside down, backwards, or diagonal
Within 6 guesses, solve the common phrase or saying the puzzle above
represents- Here are some tips:
Guesses: You have 6 tries to solve the puzzle phrase.
Inputs: Type in an entire phrase each time, and colored feedback for your guess
will indicate correct letters and their positions.
Green letters: Indicates correct letters in the correct position.
Yellow letters: Indicates correct letters but in the wrong position.
Grey letters: Indicates incorrect letters.
Need Hint? button When clicked, will show helpful clues.
See Answer... button When clicked, will show the correct answer.