By Larry Thornberry on 3.31.04 @ 12:03AM
Welcome back, baseball, an art form that will triumph over steroids.
TAMPA -- T.S. Eliot said April is the cruelest month. But he was
a gloomy guy, so not trustworthy on all things. He even liked being
a banker.
Chaucer came closer when he said, "Whan that April with his
baseball soote."
OK, the exact line is, "Whan that April with his showres soote"
-- April with its showers sweet. Folks weren't too good at spelling
back then. But it was before No Child Left Behind, so we have to
make allowances.
I live in Tampa -- where it's sunny and lush most of the year --
so April doesn't bring nature's pyrotechnics the way it does
elsewhere. (Heck, the azaleas bloomed here in early February.) But
I learned to appreciate April when I lived in Northern Virginia in
the early eighties while working on Capitol Hill, helping to make
the world safe for then Congressman Andy Ireland. If you can't be
impressed by spring in Northern Virginia -- and a fair fraction of
the rest of the lower 48 -- you're a hard case.
But, Florida or elsewhere, spring brings more than a feast for
the eyes. It brings a renewal of that most American of rituals. The
annual pageant that gladdens our hearts while it reaffirms our
values. I speak (you might guess) of that elegant,
luxuriously-paced work of art -- baseball.
We may be facing seven more months of a presidential campaign
between two inarticulate candidates and their dopey minions, who
will make such an oily show of loving us all to death that we'll
have to have the carpets cleaned after the election. And we face
this with the backdrop of possible attacks by deranged
Islamo-fascists.
But by golly we now have more satisfying metaphysical questions
to ponder, to wit: With Lucy Van Pelt and Grady Little out of the
picture, who will snatch the football away this year just as the
Red Sox start to kick it? Can George Steinbrenner reach new depths
of boorishness? (And -- in his unflagging pursuit of trophy players
-- can he keep his payroll below W's budget deficit?) Can Sweet Lou
Piniella light a fire under yet another underperforming team (this
time the Tampa Bay Devil Rays)? Does Roger the Rocket have a little
more red glare left in his right arm? Are the Fish for real?
These theorems, and others, are a delight to ponder and discuss.
They expand the soul. They lighten the day. They can even take our
minds off Bush and Kerry and the Real World for a bit, and are
therefore socially useful.
I KNOW, I KNOW, baseball has its problems. Players are wildly
overpaid and ticket prices are too high. The season is too long,
beginning and ending in football weather. There are salary disputes
and franchise maneuverings (usually featuring working stiff
taxpayers being held up for new stadiums for the benefit of
millionaire owners and millionaire players).
But here's the one to watch this year. Increasingly, players who
actually know the difference between the hit and run and the
straight steal are being replaced by chemically enhanced
weight-room geeks with just one big eye in the middle of their
foreheads whose only function is to try to hit the ball into the
next zip code. (Geez, it wasn't that long ago that baseball players
looked like normal human beings and Greg Luzinski was the only guy
in the bigs who could rotate the tires on the team bus without
using a jack.) MLB would like very much to ignore this issue, but
Congress and baseball's fans don't seem to be in the mood to let
them. They probably can't be bought off with a non-buffed Jason
Giambi and a steroid policy written by Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm.
And who the hell said I wanted to hear "YMCA" at 120 decibels
every time I go to a ball game? What happened to the nice lady who
used to play the organ between innings?
Indeed, the church has been defiled. But baseball will survive
in spite of its leadership. It will survive .230 hitters with
agents, stockbrokers, hair dryers, and more jewelry than the Gabor
sisters. It will survive a grasping, self-destructive union and
ham-handed marketers. ("Hey, why don't we pitch the game at people
who love loud rock music and have the IQ of turnips?") It will
survive troglodyte owners like Steinbrenner, Peter Angelos, and
Charlie Finley. (Remember Charlie? When he owned the Oakland A's he
tried to get MLB to switch to orange baseballs. Dick Green, his
second baseman at the time, thought it was a dopey idea because, he
admitted, "I haven't figured out how to hit the white one yet.") It
will survive because of its beauty, its grace, and its power to
move us.
One of the toughest things I've had to come to terms with over
the years is that some good-hearted, otherwise sane, patriotic
Americans don't like baseball. Some even say it's "just a game." It
passeth all understanding. For bigger mysteries than this you have
to go to the Bible.
Some of these people are very nice and I still like them. But
secretly, I feel a little sorry for them. It seems to me that if
baseball is just a game, ballet is just walking around on your
toes, Itzhak Perlman is just your average fiddle player, and the
'57 Chevy was just a car.
topics:
Islam, Oil