By Lisa Fabrizio on 5.3.06 @ 12:05AM
Everyone's angry about the state of Major League Baseball. So?
Now that the baseball season is in full bloom it has, unlike the
brilliant springtime flora and fauna, spawned much unsightliness in
the form of sports-radio talk. The constant yammering is almost
enough to make one thankful for the intrusion of the interminable
NFL draft.
Instead of reveling in the beauty of baseball's constancy while
appreciating its enduring ability to surprise -- like Omar
Vizquel's amazing pivot in an elusive four-six-five double play
earlier in the season -- many fans are wasting time debating the
complex issues surrounding Barry Bonds.
When discussing the enigmatic Mr. Bonds it is clear that he is a
most singular personality, yet some of the problems which engulf
him are symptomatic of modern baseball itself. But the greed,
egotism, cheating, phony charges of racism and even disdain for the
fans are not exclusive to either the players or the owners.
Greed is defined as "an excessive or insatiable desire for
wealth or gain." Depending on who's acting on that desire, greed is
either one of the seven deadly sins or the engine of the American
Dream. The tired charge that baseball is only recently "all about
money" speaks of an ignorance of its history. I suggest reading two
books: Eight Men Out by Eliot Asinof and Ty Cobb's
autobiography, My Life in Baseball: The True Record.
The truth is, in the earlier days of the game the greed was all
one-sided. Though individual players have staged holdouts for
higher pay almost since the game's inception, the owners ruled with
an iron hand until 1965 when the Major League Baseball Players
Association was created.
Former steel unionist Marvin Miller's MLBPA leveled the playing
field, bringing collective bargaining to the game. He used
arbitration to break baseball's reserve clause, thus enabling free
agency; an event that changed the face of American sports
forever.
But by the time of the advent of free agency, a much greater
innovation had already changed the face of America itself forever:
the television set. And while it is easy to blame either the owners
or the players union for escalating salaries, one need look no
further than the influence of the idiot box.
Imagine that you were a bank teller in the late 1940s and one
day someone decided that your fellow citizens around the country
would enjoy watching you ply your trade and pay great sums of money
for that privilege. How should that windfall -- which costs neither
you nor your employer a dime -- be distributed between you?
And for those who still decry the eight-figure salaries of some
players, one wonders why similar outrage is not directed at other
entertainers like Oprah Winfrey, Tom Cruise or Paul McCartney who
earn even more? Again, those who themselves pursue the American
Dream and celebrate its attainment by some, seem to resent it when
it is achieved by those in the sports world.
Perhaps one reason is the degree of egotism displayed by those
like Mr. Bonds and others of his ilk as they play a game most of us
enjoyed in our youth as one that is team-oriented. But this type of
selfish play is also an offshoot of TV money and free-agency, as
huge contracts with personal incentives undermine the notion of
teamwork so essential to baseball.
This shift in the way the game is played is only one example of
the disdain shown by both owners and the union toward baseball's
fans. This disdain is manifested in many ways; from the
schedule-busting nonsense that is interleague play, to the
meaningless and contrived World Baseball Classic, the powers that
be have dulled the beautiful symmetry of the game "in the interests
of baseball."
Equally fan-friendly has been the elimination of the regularly
scheduled doubleheaders so loved and remembered by baseball
aficionados across the land, which were sacrificed at the altar of
union demands. Gone too are those sun-washed, languid afternoons
spent watching your favorite team play two after a rainout,
replaced instead by the insidious advent of the day-night twinbill
designed by the owners to grab the most cash.
Worse yet, Major League Baseball switched its schedule maker in 2004 with the
awful result that both the Yankees and the Mets were off on
Memorial Day last year; nor did the Yankees play on Labor Day.
Unforgivably, in the New York metropolitan area, home of the "boys
of summer," the holidays that bookend that glorious span saw those
ballparks dark.
In his farewell to the game, only weeks before his death, Babe
Ruth famously said, "The only real game -- I think -- in the world
is baseball." To paraphrase Ben Franklin who spoke similarly of our
republic: Yes, if you can keep it.
topics:
Trade, Television, Sports, Books