Play Ball!
Slated to be published April 9, 2003:
Spring is in the air, and with spring comes baseball. Baseball has always been Americas pastime, but ask a sports fan whether or not they think of it that way, and youre bound to get a different answer.
Football, basketball and baseball are widely known as the big three when it comes to professional sports. Football is one of the most popular spectator sports in America. Take a drive down any given neighborhood street and at least one house will have a basketball hoop in the driveway.
Baseball has a reputation of being boring, or, slow. Its a sport laden with economic problems, drug and gambling scandals, and labor issues. Still, there is something about the sport that makes it different than any other.
Think about it. At its simplest, baseball is a sport with no play sets, no formations, and no inbounds plays. Hit, run, catch. Thats all there is to it. Its so easy, we begin learning the basics as early as age five, when we start smacking the wiffle ball around in the backyard.
Most of us get involved in Little League soon after that, and as soon as were able to sit through an entire game, usually around age seven or eight, we can experience a game live and in person, in a big league ballpark.
It doesnt cost a whole lot to go to a game, and you dont need to know the ins and outs of a 2-3 zone or a 3-4 defense to have a good time. All youre required to do is eat some peanuts and Cracker Jacks and soak up the sun.
Once were a little older, say 12 or 13, we can learn some of the nuances of the game. We might start keeping score, collecting baseball cards, and following certain players. All the while, were bonding with our parents, grandparents, brothers, and sisters.
See, with baseball theres no clock, no time limit. You dont have to be on the lookout for last second shots or Hail Mary passes. You can talkand not necessarily about baseball. What was once slow becomes relaxing.
After a few more years, when weve had a little more experience with the game, we start to form our own opinions about it.
We no longer like the As just because thats who our dad liked. We like them because we remember the heartbreak we felt when Kirk Gibson hit a home run in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series for the Dodgers. We like them because we remember the elation we felt the following year when they beat the Giants in the Battle of the Bay.
We begin to see that boring is not boring at all. We learn that all that time between pitches when it doesnt look like anyone is doing anything is some of the most interesting action of all.
If theres a downside to baseball at all, its that the longer youre around it, the more you begin to love it. As different as baseball is from other sports, its the same in that it has its problems. Those problems usually hurt the people who love it most.
As much as wed like to, 24-year-old baseball fans cannot avoid the talk about economic shambles the game is in. News that steroid use in Major League Baseball is prevalent among 25 to 40 percent of its players cannot be ignored. Stories about gambling scandals and contract disputes make us angry and maybe even a little sad.
Its good to know then, that the best thing baseball has going for it is that if you let it, it has a way of making 24-year-olds feel like kids again.
see! writing here isn’t so hard! why do you make me force you to write?
Warning Comment
Did you write that? That’s great! I love baseball SO much. I remember watching the World Series when the Earthquake hit…God, I was little. I remember hating David Justice for his home run in the 6th game of the 1995 Series; I have never forgiven him or Atlanta, even when he came to play for us. Hey, good article, and thanks for the memories. 🙂
Warning Comment