(Note: This was originally posted on July 31, 2006. In light of recent developments regarding Major League Baseball, I decided to post this again, as it expresses my feelings perhaps even stronger now than when I originally wrote it. And seems to be just as pertinent. What follows is the entire body of the original post. Thank you for tolerating a bit of old prose.)
It was the definition of “love at first sight.” The first time I got involved with her, I was hooked. I loved everything about her. The excitement, the heartbreak, the little intricacies both on the surface and below it. I couldn’t get enough. I wanted to be around her all the time. She only came around for a few months every summer before the seasonal change in a small town in North Dakota would take her away for me, leaving other activities and challenges that would present themselves but never proved to be quite as interesting. It was an undying love that never got old or stale.
Things went incredibly well for a long time. I was in heaven. Until one summer day in ’81. I had feared it for several weeks, and my fear came to fruition. She left me. Baseball left me for the first time. I was crushed and no idea how to handle it. I was lost without her, but, luckily for me, she decided to come back a short time later. Obviously, I welcomed her back with open arms, and figured the relationship was going to be grand once again. It was a given it would last forever.
It was a great time for several years. Perhaps not as memorable as the 1970s, but great nonetheless. I got to see my Dodgers beat the hated Yanks later in ‘81, a fabulous year by the Tigers in ’84-a year that also featured one of the rare Cub playoff appearances. Naturally they had a 2-1 lead in the best of five versus the Padres and lost. In ’85, the first year that the league championship series went to seven games instead of five, I got to see the Royals come back from a 3-1 deficit. Not once, but twice. First against the hard-luck Toronto Blue Jays, then over the Cardinals in the World Series. Of course everyone remembers the Red Sox-Mets series in ’86, which was preceded by an incredible ALCS in which the Red Sox prevailed over the Angels after Boston was down to their last strike and trailed three games to one. (See also my earlier posts regarding Donnie Moore, Bill Buckner, etc., from 7/02, and "Do You Remember . . ." from 5/17).
The Twins, my first favorite team growing up as a child in North Dakota, broke through and won in 1987, which amazed us all. Of course ’88 brought Orel Herschiser’s record-breaking scoreless inning streak, and later Kirk Gibson’s home run (“I do not believe what I just saw!”) against the A’s. I remember it like it was yesterday.
She left me again in 1989. Naturally, as any man would with his first love, I again took her back. She got what she had coming to her that same year, though. Even though the A’s would rebound from their ’88 loss, sweeping the Giants in a series that was interrupted by an earthquake, it was about as anti-climactic as could be.
As the spring of 1990 arrived, I was over our last break-up. And to loosely paraphrase a well known quote, sports makes for strange bedfellows, which brings me to the Cincinnati Reds. They got off to a great start in ‘90, like the Tigers in ’84, and wound up sweeping the A’s in the World Series. Being a Dodger fan, I didn’t care too much for the Reds’ success, so I was rooting for the A’s in the Series, the same team I had rooted against the previous two years. Naturally, since the A’s had won handily the year before, I figured the Reds were doomed. And of course the Reds won four straight. Ah, her beauty shone through once again. I both loved her and hated her (not really) at the same time. Oh well. I guess you must take the bad with the good. But even though the Reds won the World Series, life was, and had been, very good. I had seen some of the best baseball of my life in the years following the ’81 strike. I couldn’t have been happier, all things considered. The relationship between she and I was absolutely wonderful. The Twins won again in ’91, followed by the Blue Jays winning back-to-back titles.
For some reason when I was a kid, maybe it was the cool uniforms and the outstanding batting helmet, or the underrated talent they had like Tim Raines and Andre Dawson in the early ‘80s, I had taken a serious liking to the Expos. Or maybe it was because I was one of the few baseball fans who got to see a lot of them. With the advent of cable TV in the late 1970s, we had a whopping 13 channels, including two Canadian channels. I became familiar with Raines and Dawson as well as Tim Wallach, Steve Rodgers, Gary Carter, and so many other Expos who didn’t get their due because fans just simply didn’t get to see them very often. Granted, the ’94 Expos didn’t have the same team I had watched growing up, but the soft spot for them was still there. I thought of how great it would be for the franchise and the city of Montreal to finally realize a championship. And how great it would be for major league baseball. And as a baseball fan first and foremost, how great it would be for me to see it. Or perhaps the Cleveland Indians or the Chicago White Sox, neither of whom had won a World Series since well before I was born. At any rate, the ’94 post-season would no doubt prove to be interesting, since MLB had broken each league into three divisions for that season, and with a wild-card team now qualifying, the playoffs would take on a whole new look. I anticipated it greatly, even though she told me she might not stick around to see it through. I didn't want to believe it. Couldn't believe it. But she ultimately left me again, one last time. Before I got to see the Expos, Indians, White Sox, or anybody else compete in that ’94 post-season. After much thought and reflection, I came to the conclusion that I was not going to go through the pain of her leaving any more. I told her not to bother coming back. Sure, she tried, but I held firm. With a stiff upper lip, I said no. No more.
Major League Baseball has brought a lot of problems on itself in recent history. A. Bartlett Giamatti, a true baseball man, was hired as commissioner in September of 1988. He died just under a year later. Giamatti wrote in “The Green Fields of the Mind,” regarding baseball:
“It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops.”
The owners wanted Faye Vincent, another baseball man who replaced Bart Giamatti after his sudden death, out as commissioner in favor of one of their own. They got it. Under pressure-one might even say duress-Vincent resigned in September of 1992. (Looking back, many of the owners at the time wouldn’t have had a clue on how to deal with Bowie Kuhn, who made decisions, usually prudent ones, based on the ‘best interests of baseball,’ and was seldom questioned. But then, times change. Boy, do times change.) In the Selig regime we have had rampant steroid use, a tied All-Star Game, the ingenious decision that the All-Star game winner would decide home-field advantage in the World Series, (a poor attempt to make the All-Star game mean more than it should, and an even poorer attempt to divert the attention away from Selig’s major snafu to call the game after nine innings when it was tied), and a major labor roadblock during the 1994 season. Which, of course, meant that I didn’t get to see it to fruition. Not that the owners were the only ones at fault. There was and is more than enough blame to go around for the debacle of the 1994 Major League Baseball season. Both the owners and the players had serious delusions of grandeur in thinking they were bigger than the game. They weren’t. But they did prove they were too big for me.
Without looking it up, and aside from 2001, I couldn’t tell you who won the World Series in any given year since then, though I do know a lot was made of the Yankees playing the Mets one year. I did watch most of the 2001 Series, in part because of the emotions of 9/11 being fresh in everyone’s mind and in part because the local Diamondbacks were involved, and who knows if or when I’ll ever see that again. Other than that, I have not watched one major league game. I still watch baseball and love the game. But now it’s the Arizona State Sun Devils or an occasional minor league game. And every game I do watch, without fail, the song from “A League of Their Own” goes through my mind. This used to be my playground. Because for me, as a kid, it really was. And I can’t help but get choked up. The pain that she caused by leaving me three times is great. But nothing in comparison to the pain I would experience if I allowed it to happen again.
Thanks for taking the time to read.
“This Used To Be My Playground,” from the movie “A League Of Their Own.” Sung by Madonna. Written by Madonna and Shep Pettibone. Sire Records
I decided to watch some of the Yankees-Tigers game tonight. You see, my girlfriend was watching "The Nanny" or "Nanny 911," or “Nanny With An English Accent Living With A Severely Dysfunctional American Family,” or whatever the heck it's called. The last thing I want to see when I get home from work is a show about screaming kids, which is probably staged anyway. I'm convinced of that. I’m also convinced that sports are the only REAL reality show there is. Anyway, as I was watching a Kenny Rogers masterpiece, no, not the movie “The Gambler,” I started to think, as I always do, what made the game of baseball so great when I fell in love with it. And what could be done to bring ‘traditionalists’ like myself back to the game. Make it better for everyone, not just people like me. Go ahead and snicker at us traditionalists, if you want. Call us ‘old school,’ say the game has passed us by, say whatever you want. But baseball, at its core, is one game that hasn’t changed the rules much at all, at least on the field. The way it’s run leaves much to be desired, however. It wasn’t broke, but they tried to fix it anyway. Sure, MLB set an attendance record this year. So what. The NBA and NHL have done the same recently. That doesn’t mean the game itself is any better. But it could be. And I've got a few ideas..
So as I was watching, and enjoying the underdog Tigers have their way, I must add, I was mentally playing “Commish For A Day.” Okay, a week. Gotta have time to implement these new bylaws. Here’s what I would do, in a heartbeat:
1) Shorten the season. Not the number of games played. The length. With more playoff teams now than in the past, the season should end around mid-September, which would allow the World Series to start the second week of October or so, which would mean nicer weather for the fans. To accomplish this, I would . . .
2) Schedule more double headers. A double header today means one of two things-one of the games is a make-up for a rainout, or it’s one of those dreaded “day/night” double headers, for which the fan must pay twice in order to see each game. Abner Doubleday, Alexander Cartwright, or whoever invented the game must be spinning in their grave regarding this one. And Ernie Banks is crying somewhere. Let’s bring back the terms ‘twin bill.’ ‘Twi-night.’ ‘Nightcap.’ In the 60s, there were double headers nearly every Sunday, and always on holidays. Lou Gehrig’s famous ‘Luckiest Man on the Face of the Earth’ speech was delivered between games of a double header. Ted Williams could have sat out the second game of a double header on the final day of the ’41 season and protected his (rounded up) .400 average. He didn’t, and finished 6 for 8 on the day, with a .406 average. Guess that’s why they called him ‘Teddy Ballgame.’ I would also make it mandatory for each team to schedule a double header on opening day and the last day of the season. For a one-game fee.
3) Eliminate “batting glove maintenance” between pitches. Too many hitters step out of the box and re-fasten their batting gloves between every pitch. This must stop. If it doesn’t, outlaw batting gloves. That’ll fix their ####.
4) Any batter hit by a pitch gets two bases, not one. This would eliminate a lot of intentional hit batsmen. Sometimes it’s necessary, I get that. But teams would have to pick their spots. Which would mean more strategy for the manager to deal with. Not a bad thing.
5) No game will start later than 7:15 local time. This could be a deciding factor in whether parents take their kids to a ballgame. If the kids don’t get into the game, where’s the future of baseball?
6) Ban the DH. When I was a kid and I first heard of this ‘new rule,’ I was incredulous. “You mean there is going to be a guy who only hits? He doesn’t play a position?” To this day, I don’t know many rules in any sport that make less sense.
7) Let’s have some World Series day games, even if only on the weekend. Go get a haircut. Go get your oil changed. And watch the World Series. Walk by the store in the mall and watch it on TV while your significant other continues on to shop. We’ll make time, believe me. We’ll enjoy it like it used to be.
Although I have heard all I want to regarding Barry Bonds in the past year, I couldn't help but mull over the ramifications of the latest chapter in the saga. As we are all aware of by now, Game Of Shadows authors Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada were sentenced to serve some time behind bars for not revealing their sources. I applaud them. Any reporter worth his/her salt should do the same in order to maintain credibility. I also have a hard time condemning the source of the information for leaking it to the reporters, though common sense would say that it was not right to do so. But whether the judicial system is flawed or not for imposing this penalty, the source was at fault, or whether the authors handled their situation correctly is not the point of this writing. But it now appears obvious to me that Barry Bonds did in fact use steroids. Not that I needed any further proof in my own mind, but if the facts in Game Of Shadows were erroneous, I find it hard to believe the government would have pursued this matter as fervently as they did. In other words, if the information leaked was not, in fact, what was disclosed in the grand jury hearings and subsequently wound up in the book, the government would not have much of a case against the "leaker" or the authors, would they? It appears to me that the book was indeed factual and was based on actual grand jury testimony, which is no doubt what got the ire of the feds up when the information surfaced in the book. That, and the fact that perhaps they deemed this to be getting in the way of their "investigation," which as we all know is moving along at a record pace.
That sound you just heard was another egg breaking on the face of Major League Baseball. Can I get a towel, please? Make that lots of 'em!
"There's a break in the action. Let's send it down to Rick. What's going on on the field, Rick?"
"Well, we were supposed to go back to the studio for an update on scores and breaking sports news, but they are having technical difficulties, apparently. So let me tell you what happened to me recently. Went to a minor league ballgame the other day. When the lineups were announced, I learned that the first two hitters for the visiting team were brothers named Fowler. The starting pitcher for the home team was named Walker. I left.
"I went home and watched a different Triple-A game on TV where the pitcher was getting drilled. The manager, who was miked up, finally came out to pull him for a reliever and the pitcher said, 'Skip, I'm not tired at all.' The manager replied, 'No, but your outfielders sure are.'
"The pitcher, irate that he was coming out of the game, turned and fired the baseball with all his might into center field. The ball bounced off the wall and the center fielder, who was squatting down getting a breather, suddenly sprinted to where the ball was and threw a perfect strike to second base.
"About that time, my neighbor, who was at the minor league game but also left early, called and wanted to go to a bar at a nearby hotel. When we finally got there, we heard from the bartender that the the visiting team was staying there. After a few drinks, I had to use the men's room. As I was walking through the lobby to get to the restroom, I saw a man whom I recognized as the manager standing in the lobby. As his starting pitcher from earlier stumbled in the front door, the manager said in a booming, agitated voice, 'Drunk again!' The player replied, 'Me too!'
"Oh, I think the technical difficulties have been fixed. Let's send it back to the studio."
It was the definition of “love at first sight.” The first time I got involved with her, I was hooked. I loved everything about her. The excitement, the heartbreak, the little intricacies both on the surface and below it. I couldn’t get enough. I wanted to be around her all the time. She only came around for a few months every summer before the seasonal change in a small town in North Dakota would take her away for me, leaving other activities and challenges that would present themselves but never proved to be quite as interesting. It was an undying love that never got old or stale.
Things went incredibly well for a long time. I was in heaven. Until one summer day in ’81. I had feared it for several weeks, and my fear came to fruition. She left me. Baseball left me for the first time. I was crushed and no idea how to handle it. I was lost without her, but, luckily for me, she decided to come back a short time later. Obviously, I welcomed her back with open arms, and figured the relationship was going to be grand once again. It was a given it would last forever.
It was a great time for several years. Perhaps not as memorable as the 1970s, but great nonetheless. I got to see my Dodgers beat the hated Yanks later in ‘81, a fabulous year by the Tigers in ’84-a year that also featured one of the rare Cub playoff appearances. Naturally they had a 2-1 lead in the best of five versus the Padres and lost. In ’85, the first year that the league championship series went to seven games instead of five, I got to see the Royals come back from a 3-1 deficit. Not once, but twice. First against the hard-luck Toronto Blue Jays, then over the Cardinals in the World Series. Of course everyone remembers the Red Sox-Mets series in ’86, which was preceded by an incredible ALCS in which the Red Sox prevailed over the Angels after Boston was down to their last strike and trailed three games to one. (See also my earlier posts regarding Donnie Moore, Bill Buckner, etc., from 7/02, and "Do You Remember . . ." from 5/17).
The Twins, my first favorite team growing up as a child in North Dakota, broke through and won in 1987, which amazed us all. Of course ’88 brought Orel Herschiser’s record-breaking scoreless inning streak, and later Kirk Gibson’s home run (“I do not believe what I just saw!”) against the A’s. I remember it like it was yesterday.
She left me again in 1989. Naturally, as any man would with his first love, I again took her back. She got what she had coming to her that same year, though. Even though the A’s would rebound from their ’88 loss, sweeping the Giants in a series that was interrupted by an earthquake, it was about as anti-climactic as could be.
As the spring of 1990 arrived, I was over our last break-up. And to loosely paraphrase a well known quote, sports makes for strange bedfellows, which brings me to the Cincinnati Reds. They got off to a great start in ‘90, like the Tigers in ’84, and wound up sweeping the A’s in the World Series. Being a Dodger fan, I didn’t care too much for the Reds’ success, so I was rooting for the A’s in the Series, the same team I had rooted against the previous two years. Naturally, since the A’s had won handily the year before, I figured the Reds were doomed. And of course the Reds won four straight. Ah, her beauty shone through once again. I both loved her and hated her (not really) at the same time. Oh well. I guess you must take the bad with the good. But even though the Reds won the World Series, life was, and had been, very good. I had seen some of the best baseball of my life in the years following the ’81 strike. I couldn’t have been happier, all things considered. The relationship between she and I was absolutely wonderful. The Twins won again in ’91, followed by the Blue Jays winning back-to-back titles.
For some reason when I was a kid, maybe it was the cool uniforms and the outstanding batting helmet, or the underrated talent they had like Tim Raines and Andre Dawson in the early ‘80s, I had taken a serious liking to the Expos. Or maybe it was because I was one of the few baseball fans who got to see a lot of them. With the advent of cable TV in the late 1970s, we had a whopping 13 channels, including two Canadian channels. I became familiar with Raines and Dawson as well as Tim Wallach, Steve Rodgers, Gary Carter, and so many other Expos who didn’t get their due because fans just simply didn’t get to see them very often. Granted, the ’94 Expos didn’t have the same team I had watched growing up, but the soft spot for them was still there. I thought of how great it would be for the franchise and the city of Montreal to finally realize a championship. And how great it would be for major league baseball. And as a baseball fan first and foremost, how great it would be for me to see it. Or perhaps the Cleveland Indians or the Chicago White Sox, neither of whom had won a World Series since well before I was born. At any rate, the ’94 post-season would no doubt prove to be interesting, since MLB had broken each league into three divisions for that season, and with a wild-card team now qualifying, the playoffs would take on a whole new look. I anticipated it greatly, even though she told me she might not stick around to see it through. I didn't want to believe it. Couldn't believe it. But she ultimately left me again, one last time. Before I got to see the Expos, Indians, White Sox, or anybody else compete in that ’94 post-season. After much thought and reflection, I came to the conclusion that I was not going to go through the pain of her leaving any more. I told her not to bother coming back. Sure, she tried, but I held firm. With a stiff upper lip, I said no. No more.
Major League Baseball has brought a lot of problems on itself in recent history. A. Bartlett Giamatti, a true baseball man, was hired as commissioner in September of 1988. He died just under a year later. Giamatti wrote in “The Green Fields of the Mind,” regarding baseball:
“It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops.”
The owners wanted Faye Vincent, another baseball man who replaced Bart Giamatti after his sudden death, out as commissioner in favor of one of their own. They got it. Under pressure-one might even say duress-Vincent resigned in September of 1992. (Looking back, many of the owners at the time wouldn’t have had a clue on how to deal with Bowie Kuhn, who made decisions, usually prudent ones, based on the ‘best interests of baseball,’ and was seldom questioned. But then, times change. Boy, do times change.) In the Selig regime we have had rampant steroid use, a tied All-Star Game, the ingenious decision that the All-Star game winner would decide home-field advantage in the World Series, (a poor attempt to make the All-Star game mean more than it should, and an even poorer attempt to divert the attention away from Selig’s major snafu to call the game after nine innings when it was tied), and a major labor roadblock during the 1994 season. Which, of course, meant that I didn’t get to see it to fruition. Not that the owners were the only ones at fault. There was and is more than enough blame to go around for the debacle of the 1994 Major League Baseball season. Both the owners and the players had serious delusions of grandeur in thinking they were bigger than the game. They weren’t. But they did prove they were too big for me.
Without looking it up, and aside from 2001, I couldn’t tell you who won the World Series in any given year since then, though I do know a lot was made of the Yankees playing the Mets one year. I did watch most of the 2001 Series, in part because of the emotions of 9/11 being fresh in everyone’s mind and in part because the local Diamondbacks were involved, and who knows if or when I’ll ever see that again. Other than that, I have not watched one major league game. I still watch baseball and love the game. But now it’s the Arizona State Sun Devils or an occasional minor league game. And every game I do watch, without fail, the song from “A League of Their Own” goes through my mind. This used to be my playground. Because for me, as a kid, it really was. And I can’t help but get choked up. The pain that she caused by leaving me three times is great. But nothing in comparison to the pain I would experience if I allowed it to happen again.
Thanks for taking the time to read.
“This Used To Be My Playground,” from the movie “A League Of Their Own.” Sung by Madonna. Written by Madonna and Shep Pettibone. Sire Records.
Spent half my life in North Dakota. The other half, so far, in the Valley of the Sun. As a kid, I was always playing, watching, reading, or writing about sports. I lost most of the "playing" along the way, but the rest remains the same. I pledge to refrain from commenting on a blog unless I've read it in its entirety. If I have time, of course.
Carry on.
Email address: rickoblog@ear thlink.net