By Lisa Fabrizio on 6.17.09 @ 6:05AM
Sloppy runs, hits, and errors in the modern Interleague era.
This past week saw the second round of Interleague baseball and,
as usual here in the New York metro area, the sparks as well as
the horsehide were flying as the Yankees and Mets faced off. Now,
I'm not the biggest fan of Interleague play as, in my opinion, it
further dilutes the game's uniqueness, in that prior to 1997 it
was the only one among the four major sports that respected
league integrity. Not to mention that the artificial rivalries it
attempts to create are sometimes dull.
But I must admit, that is almost never the case when these
clashes take place in the Bronx or Queens. The latest meeting at
the new Yankee Stadium, though, was not so much a showcase for
chills and thrills as a primer of how the game should and should
not be played.
As all the baseball world knows, Met infielder Luis Castillo
dropped an easy pop fly on Friday night in the bottom of the
ninth, handing the Yanks an unexpected victory. Now, pop-ups and
fly balls and grounders have been muffed since the first pair of
baseball knickers was donned back in the middle of the 19th
century; and as many Mets fans remember, the agony of one Bill
Buckner can become the joy of millions. This is baseball, and
part of the reason we love it so.
But that one play was a terrific example of the difference
between the way the game is played today, and the way it was
always played until a few short decades ago. As anyone who's ever
played the game -- organized or on a sandlot -- knows, every fly
ball is to be caught with "two hands!" And although I'm sure this
mantra is still shouted every day on Little League ballfields
everywhere, it is clearly ignored by most Major Leaguers.
So too, are other baseball adages like: never let the ball play
you; always get in front of a grounder; never make the first or
third out at third base; and run hard on every play. This last is
still done by some in baseball, most notably by Mark Teixeira on
the aforementioned Castillo error. But the fact that this is
notable speaks to what is wrong with baseball: the declining
quality of play is hurting the game.
Again, physical miscues have always been a part of baseball;
indeed, they're built into the scoring process. But every day in
nearly every Major League game, mental errors abound. The sorry
fact is, half of today's players seem to lack knowledge of the
fundamentals of the grand old game while the other half simply
have no respect for them. And the game has suffered.
One often hears claims that such and such old-time ballplayers
could never compete in today's game because its players are
bigger, stronger and faster; that modern training methods are far
superior to those of the past. Similarly they point to the
specialization of relief pitchers, or claim that expansion has
necessitated coast-to-coast travel that is much tougher than in
the past.
All of this is poppycock. If the hitters are bigger and stronger,
so are the pitchers; and as for modern training methods, I'd love
to know the average days spent on the DL for today's players as
opposed to those only 30 years ago. Relief pitching? Does anyone
who's ever read the history of the game seriously think that
owners like Charles Comiskey or Frank Navin would pay five
pitchers to just sit around in the bullpen? And I don't know
about you, but I'd rather play a ballgame after a five-hour plane
ride in first-class than after a 30-hour train trip with no
air-conditioning.
No, the sad truth is that most players simply cannot execute what
even a light-hitting, backup infielder had to do to stay in the
Bigs years ago. Rare is today's hitter who can consistently hit
behind a runner or get a butcher-boy knock out of a bunting
stance. How about the noxious state of outfield arms? Not every
player can be a Bob Meusel or a Dave Parker, but watching some of
these guys hurl themselves to the ground while delivering a five
hopper to the cutoff man is one of the most painful yet common
sights in the modern game.
Does anyone who ever saw film clips of Ty Cobb or Joe DiMaggio
execute a plethora of slides really think that more than a
handful of today's players can actually run the bases properly?
You have to hold your breath when a runner launches into the
obligatory and often ineffective head-first lunge toward home,
for fear of season-ending injuries.
As for me, I'd take a team filled with a bunch of under-sized
old-timers whose baseball fundamentals were impeccable over a
team of muscle-bound lugs who, were it not for a postage-sized
strike zone, the prohibition of pitching inside and a new
tightly-wound baseball served up on every pitch, would barely
break the Mendoza line.
Two hands, fellows!
Note: This column will not appear next week due to
the upcoming nuptials of its author.
topics:
Major League Baseball