THEY GOT THAT WAY (Part I)
ALL-STAR GAME The idea was conceived in 1933 by Arch Ward,
Chicago Tribune sports editor. To give the fans a real rooting interest, Ward
suggested that they be allowed to vote for their favorite players via popular
ballot. In perhaps no other game do fans have such a rooting interest, although
there have been a few periods when voting by fans has been abandoned. Today it
appears that Ward's original principle will remain permanently in effect. The
American League won 12 of the first 16 All-Star games, but went on to lose 20
of the next 23 to the National League through 1978. Some memorable moments have
taken place in the contest often referred to as the Midsummer Dream Game. In the first game ever played,
Babe Ruth slugged a towering home run. The next year, New York Giants immortal
Carl Hubbell struck out Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx, Al Simmons, and Joe
Cronin in succession to make for some more baseball history.
AMAZIN' METS The first run
they ever scored came in on a balk. They lost the first nine games they ever played.
They finished last their first four seasons. Once they were losing a game,
12-1, and there were two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning. A fan held up
a sign that said "PRAY!" There was a walk, and ever hopeful,
thousands of voices chanted, "Let's go Mets." They were 100-l
underdogs to win the pennant in 1969 and incredibly came on to finish the year
as World Champions. They picked the name of the best pitcher in their history
(Tom Seaver) out of a hat on April Fools' Day. They were supposed to be the
replacement for the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants. They could have
been the New York Continentals or Burros or Skyliners or Skyscrapers or Bees or
Rebels or NYB's or Avengers or even Jets (all
runner-up names in a contest to tab the National League New York team
that began playing ball in 1962). They've never been anything to their fans but
amazing—the Amazin' New York Mets.
EIGHTH WONDER OF THE WORLD On what was
once
Texas swampland and a wind-swept prairie, the
Houston Astros once played baseball in the Astrodome, which many nicknamed the
Eighth Wonder of the World. Built at a cost of $38 million, the colossal
complex sprawled over 260 acres six miles from downtown Houston. The facility
had the biggest electric scoreboard and the largest dome ever constructed. It
was the largest clear-span building ever built and the largest air-conditioned
stadium ever. The Astrodome had 45,000 plush opera-type seats, from which fans
viewed athletic events in the additional comfort supplied by a 6,000-ton
air-conditioning system that maintained the temperature in the stadium at 72
degrees. The inspiration for the Astrodome was the Roman Coliseum, built circa
80 A.D., which prodded Judge Roy Hofheinz, president of the Houston Sports
Association, the owners of the team, to press for the creation of a domed
stadium.
"I knew with our heat,
humidity and rain, the best chance for success was in the direction of a
weatherproof, all-purpose stadium," said Hofheinz. Buckminster Fuller,
media-famed ecologist and inventor of the geodesic dome, served as consultant
to the project. Hofheinz said, "Buckminster Fuller convinced me that it
was possible to cover any size space so long as you didn't run out of
money." They didn't run out of money and even had $2 million to spare for
the 300-ton scoreboard, with 1,200 feet of wiring, that stretches 474 feet
across the brown pavilion seats in center field.
"I LOST IT IN THE
SUN" Billy Loes was a Brooklyn Dodger pitcher in the 1950's. Possessed
with a great deal of natural athletic ability, Loes never achieved the success
experts predicted should have come to him as a matter of course. At times he
was quicker with a quip than with his glove. During the 1952 World Series, Loes
ingloriously misplayed a ground ball hit back to the pitcher's mound. Later he
was questioned by a reporter who wished to learn what had been the problem.
Loes responded, "I lost it in the sun."
"I NEVER MISSED ONE IN
MY HEART" Long-time major league umpire Bill Klem's phrase was his attempt
to explain how difficult the job of umpiring was and how objective he always
attempted to be. Klem retired in 1941—according to him, after the first time he
pondered whether he had correctly called a play.
“IDIOTS ” Boston Red Sox manager Terry Francona
explained the name his players gave to themselves in 2004: "They may not
wear their hair normal, they many not dress normal, but they play the game as
good as you can."
"IF IT'S UNDER W FOR
'WON,' NOBODY ASKS YOU HOW” As a player
and a manager, Leo Durocher could invent more ways to tease and taunt and beat
the opposition than virtually any other figure in the history of baseball. His
was an aggressive, no-holds-barred approach to the National Pastime. The quote
attributed to him reflects his attitude toward the game.
"IN THE CATBIRD
SEAT" Red Barber beguiled Brooklyn Dodger fans for years with his Southern
voice, narrative skills, honest manner, and down-home expressions. His pet
phrase to describe when someone was pitching, hitting, fielding or just
functioning well was a reference to that individual as being in the
"catbird seat." Barber also used the phrase to characterize a team
ahead by a comfortable margin and virtually assured of victory.
"IRON MAN" Cal Ripken Jr., for breaking the consecutive games played in
mark set by Lou Gehrig. Teammates called him "Junior," as a
tip of the cap to Cal Sr., in Orioles' organization more than three decades.
IRON HORSE Lou Gehrig, a.k.a. Larrupin'
Lou and Pride of the Yankees,
earned his main nickname for playing in 2,130 consecutive games—a major league
baseball record that stood until Cal Ripken, Jr. came along. Day in and day out
for 14 years, like a thing made of iron, Gehrig was a fixture in the New York
Yankee lineup. He led the league in RBI's, 5 times and 13 years he drove in
more than 100 runs a season. The man they also called Columbia Lou—a reference
to his Columbia University student days—was admitted to the Hall of Fame in
1939.
“IRON MAN” Joe McGinnity pitched in the
majors from 1899 to 1908. He started 381 games and completed 351 of them. He
had a lifetime earned-run average of 2.64. McGinnity could pitch day in and day
out like a man made of iron. In 1903 he pitched and won three doubleheaders.
Winner of 247 games—an average of almost 25 a year—McGinnity was admitted to
baseball's Hall of Fame in 1946.
"IT'S NOT OVER 'TIL IT'S OVER"
This phrase, attributed to Yogi Berra, underscores the former Yankee great's
long experience in the wars of baseball. Berra, as player, manager, and coach,
has seen the game of baseball from many levels. A victim and victor of
late-inning rallies, of curious changes in the destinies of players and teams,
his stoical attitude to the National Pastime is the view of a pro, even though
it is expressed in perhaps not the most appropriate syntax.
Bookends:
KD by Marcus
Thompson II (Atria Books, 27.00) is timely, insightful, never boring as
Thompson gets up close and personal with superstar Kevin Durant to spin the
narrative that reveals so much about the star’s humanity and ferocity on the
baseball court. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
The World’s Fastest Man by Michael Kranish (Scribner,
$30.00) is an important and even ground breaking effort, carefully crafted effort
that brings back a time and world far different from today. Its focus - -as its
sub-title proclaims - -Major Taylor, America’s first Black Sports Hero. Set in
the 1890s when most of America was still
beset by unbridled racism, Major Taylor competed in the white world of cycling
and prevailed. He busted racial barriers and changed the way many thought about
black athletes. BELONGS ON YOUR BOOKSHELF
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