Tag Archive | "Football Season"

Sermon for Today

It is Super Bowl Sunday.  This year on I-70 we will mark the end of the football season, which is subsequently the beginning of the baseball season, with guest posts from various writers.  The writers will provided with one subject to write about: Why Baseball Is Better Than Football.

What follows is a submission from Steveo Sama from The Baseball Enthusiast.

“Have no anxiety at all, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, make your requests known to God.” – Philippians 4:6

Throughout the ages, anxiety has been that emotional state of mind that tends to taint our lives in often undesirable ways.  Anxiety leads to confusion, confusion leads to stress, and who doesn’t know how stress can get in the way of that which we are all longing for in our world, in our society, and in our lives…peace.

In modern times, not so much to capture a sense of nostalgic equilibrium but to harness the core essence of the sport itself, we tend to summarize what is true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, gracious, and excellent about the game of Baseball in terms that usually evoke literary handles such as “pastoral,” “bucolic,” and my personal favorite, “idyllic.”

When I say “we,” of course I mean baseball fans.  The rest of the world may read the essence of the game described by these terms, but may not necessarily subscribe to their meaning.

In terms of pop culture, what could be more “pastoral” than The Andy Griffith Show?

In what I certainly believe to be more than just a coincidence, for many years Superstation TBS would run an Andy Griffith episode marathon on Super Bowl Sunday.  In my household, for nearly as long as this was a TBS programming staple, it was tradition for us to enjoy the pastoral throes of several consecutive hours of The Andy Griffith Show in lieu of participating in any Super Bowl Sunday programming whatsoever.  The citizens of Mayberry and their well-loved adventures (and in a greater sense, the Mayberry way of life itself) were truly the antithesis of Super Bowl hype and hoopla, and indeed the antithesis of the game of Football itself.

…and Baseball, in many ways, is the antithesis of Football.

Consider, if you will, Episode 100: “Sermon for Today.”  This is arguably one of the most popular Andy Griffith episodes ever, as it cuts to the core essence of the Mayberry Mythos in a series of perpetual comedic circumstances the occur around the central theme of how one’s strive for inner peace can be usurped by the villainous tentacles of anxiety.  What is crucial to one of the many points of the episode is the irony of the struggle for inner peace, among the perception of anxiety.

In the episode, a visiting pastor (Dr. Harrison Everett Breen, coincidentally “from New York City,” more recognized for Baseball lore than Mayberry) captivates the parishioners at All Souls Church with his inspirational message from the pulpit entitled “What’s Your Hurry?”

“As I stood there during the singing of the hymn, I asked myself ‘What message have I to bring these good people of Mayberry?  And I was reminded of an instance.  A young man came to me recently and said he: ‘Dr Breen, what is the meaning of it all?’  And I said to him, ‘Young man, I’m glad you asked.’  My friends, I wish more of us found the time to ask that question.  Whither…whither are we headed and why?  Why this senseless rush, this mad pursuit, this frantic competition, this pace that kills?

…Consider how we live our lives today.  Everything is run, run, run.  We bolt our breakfast, we scan the headlines, we race to the office.  The full schedule and the split second: these are our gauges of success.  We drive ourselves from morn to night.  We have forgotten the meaning of relaxation.  What has become of the old-fashioned ways, the simple pleasures of the past?

Who can forget…the old-fashioned band concert at twilight on the village green.  The joy, the serenity of just sitting and listening.  This is lost to us, and this we should strive to recapture, a simple innocent pleasure.

And so I say to you, dear friends, relax…slow down…take it easy…What’s your hurry?  What indeed, friends, is your hurry?”

As the episode goes, the Taylor family has their brains firmly wrapped around the idea of how relaxing that band concert does sound, and as we know, they spend the rest of the episode rushing around quite anxiously to make this event happen in a few hours.  They meet with failure, and as they are gathered on Andy’s porch, exhausted from their fruitless labor, continuous quarrelling, and other disasters (“Look at this…mildew!  You can’t expect me to do anything about mildew!!”) Dr Breen stops by on his way out of town, and infamously assesses the situation, commenting how relaxed everyone seems, as if they had just enjoyed a band concert on the village green!

Baseball fans understand the correlation I’m making here; I could have launched into any number of humorous comparisons or methodical reviews of why Baseball is better than Football, but it didn’t take long for me to go to this episode, this event, this lesson.

In his excellent book The Way Back to Mayberry, author Joey Fann emphasizes the well-understood notion that Mayberry is the epitome of a simpler life.  Addressing this episode in particular, Fann cites these events as a vivid illustration of the trouble we go to just to slow down our lives.  The older I get, the more I realize on a personal level, how Baseball adds years to my own life, as well as its intrinsic value of tangible peace.

The pace of Baseball is the pace of life; the pace of Football is a destructive path towards an event that ends unequivocally with the running out of a clock…the “pace that kills.”  The folks in Mayberry, even as they lounge listlessly on their front porches, or in front of Wally’s filling station, exemplify the potential kinetic energy of Baseball…you are waiting patiently, almost peacefully, for an event that may occur, and time literally freezes during that period.  A Baseball fan who wholeheartedly subscribes to and involves themselves into the pace of the game as its played knows full well that when the game is over, 3 or 4 hours may have passed, but to the fan it never feels quite that long.

The pace of Baseball is the pace we’d like to have in our lives…we need relaxation, we need inner peace…we need to know that runners can cross the plate as many times as they like as long as there aren’t 3 outs.  We don’t need anxiety.  We don’t need to know that there are only 30 seconds left, so hurry up and do something…I can feel my blood pressure change just thinking about it.

When Paul wrote his letter to the Philippians, he did it while he was in prison.  The offseason is the Baseball fan’s prison, the Football season and Super Bowl itself is what occurs during imprisonment.  We look forward to the advent of Spring Training, we look forward to the return of the sunshine and the green grass, we look forward to our release from the prison we are in, against our will…where the journey to inner peace is obfuscated by the full schedule and the split second…where the simple, innocent pleasure of Baseball is lost to us, if only temporarily, due to the imprisonment of Winter and the Football season.

There are many words to guide us; and we do have hope…Spring Training is really, really just around the corner.  Super Bowl Sunday proves this!  Soon, pitchers and catchers will report and we’ll return to Mayberry…even if TBS isn’t running an Andy Griffith marathon on the 5th, we can dwell on the message Paul had for the Philippians:

“Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” – Philippians 4:8

I am thinking about these things now, on Super Bowl Sunday more than ever.  Football be darned, Baseball is almost here!!!

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Our Season Is Almost Here!

It is Super Bowl Sunday.  This year on I-70 we will mark the end of the football season, which is subsequently the beginning of the baseball season, with guest posts from various writers.  The writers will provided with one subject to write about: Why Baseball Is Better Than Football.

What follows is from Rob Harris of Blue Batting Helmet.

Today there’s snow on the ground, and the air is cold. Winter is a tolerable season, but hardly much more than that for me.

I can understand why football fans love this time of year. There’s the NFL playoffs, topped off by the Super Bowl and all of the hype that surrounds it. Football is certainly king on this day, just as it is on Super Sunday every year. And this year’s marquee matchup of Brady vs. Eli Manning makes the drama that much more compelling.

Right now, at the end of all this buildup, there is exactly 60 minutes of play left in the entire football season. No Super Bowl has ever gone into overtime, and it probably won’t happen this year, either. But baseball–on the other hand–is just about to awaken from its offseason hibernation.

Spring is the annual time of rebirth, for nature and for baseball, and it will be here before we know it. Football fans, however, will soon have a long offseason ahead of them. I know whose shoes I’d rather be in tomorrow.

I can sum up why baseball is better than football in three words: “Who’s On First”
–David Henderson

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Space Oddity: Or Why Baseball Is Superior To Football

It is Super Bowl Sunday.  This year on I-70 we will mark the end of the football season, which is subsequently the beginning of the baseball season, with guest posts from various writers.  The writers will provided with one subject to write about: Why Baseball Is Better Than Football.

What follows is a submission from Michael Clair of Old Time Family Baseball.

Space Oddity: Or Why Baseball is Superior to Football

If you were to bring a space alien without any previous human contact to a football game, he would quickly understand that men in one colored shirt are trying to get a ball to one side of the field while the men in the other colored shirt were trying to do the reverse. But baseball’s a weird game, a surprisingly popular cultural oddity. Baseball, unconcerned with linear storytelling, features one man throwing the ball to another man carrying a large stick, with eight other people wearing the same shirt as the thrower standing around. And sometimes the guy with the stick doesn’t do anything and other times he swings and if he hits the ball then the men standing around run after it and…you get the point.

Unlike football, baseball is not about hurling your strongest guys at each other and seeing who emerges from the pit. Football is all about aggression, while baseball is about patience and stillness suddenly breaking into moments of chaotic movement.  It lends itself to careful study and a thoughtful approach before all that proper preparation is lost to a double in the gap. It’s why players like Miguel Batista can get away with thinking about poetry while standing on the mound.

Since baseball’s rules are weird, it’s only natural that the players be bizarre as well. Tom Brady is considered a rags to riches story after being selected in the fourth round (to say nothing of his possible Expos career) but just look at his perfectly sculpted cheekbones which now grace Ugg Boots billboards and that story quickly falls apart.

But while baseball has plenty of physical specimens that could don spandex and fight crime, there are also your David Ecksteins with skin so translucent you could see through to his vital organs. Tim Lincecum just earned himself a $40 million contract and not only does his hair weigh as much as his body, but his pitching motion defies the known laws of physics. Sam Fuld became an overnight sensation last year as a 5’10” Jewish diabetic who graduated from Stanford. Last I checked, those kinds of players don’t make it to the NFL. And yes, teams want pitchers who can muscle the ball into the high-90s, but baseball also has a rich history of Niekros and Wakefields, men who spit in the face of conventional thought and the aging process by hurling up mid-60s knucklers that dance and dart and land anywhere except where they’re aimed.

When the players aren’t eccentric, they’re outright crazy. Mark Fidrych captivated the nation for talking to the baseball; Doc Ellis pitched a no-hitter while high on LSD; and Fritz Petersen and Mike Kekich traded families as members of the Yankees in the early 70s. But no one compares to Kevin “Touch Me, Touch Me” Rhomberg.

Christened as such by Mike “The Human Rain Delay” Hargrove (who earned his nickname for the time it took him to step to the plate), Rhomberg was compelled to touch back anyone who came into contact with him. Armed with this information, his Indians teammates would torment Rhomberg by finding ever unique ways of brushing against him. If Rhomberg was touched while using the bathroom stall, he would have to run around the clubhouse, tapping everyone just to be sure the offender was repaid. Once, the umpires had to tell the opposing Yankees team to stop touching Rhomberg because it was interfering with the game. Football, with its built-up machismo, would never have room for a player like Rhomberg.

In the end, it’s baseball’s mentality that lends it this quality. Football is all about that one big game, that “forget everything except Sunday” meme. Played every day through the warm, lazy summer months, baseball is too much like life to take this approach. The weirdos mix with the cool kids, success battles against the mathematical certainty of failure, and each game is shrugged off in deference to the endless forward march of time.

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Taking A Look At The Cardinals’ Final 2 Games And The Playoff Picture

The Cardinals never said they were making this easy. They didn’t force anyone to get back on their bandwagon a couple weeks ago when it had all but emptied with the start of football season and a seemingly insurmountable deficit in the National League Wild Card race.

On September 11th, with the St. Louis Rams kicking off their season just a few blocks away at the Edward Jones Dome, only 39,710 watched on as the Cardinals closed out their series with the Braves… nearly 2,000 fewer fans than the previous Sunday (and even that was an inflated number as the Cardinals gave away thousands of tickets to military members, police officers, paramedics, and fire fighters). Still 5 ½ game back, chances of getting back in the race still looked bleak.

Interestingly enough, that was the day the Cardinals capped their one (and now certain to be only) 5-game winning streak of the season. The lead was down to 4 ½ games, and people started taking notice.

A lot of things had to go just right (including that sweep of the Braves in mid-September) to give the Cardinals a chance. Lose any of those three games, and the Cardinals would’ve been eliminated from the playoff race with Monday night’s extra-inning loss in Houston. But while things have gone just right enough to keep the Redbirds in it, the list isn’t finished yet.

First, we’ll take a look at what needs to happen over the next 3 days to get the Cardinals into post-season play, and then take a look at how the Divisional Series could play out.

TONIGHT

The Cardinals, for the first time all season, will be in jeopardy of being eliminated from the playoff race. If Atlanta beats Philadelphia tonight and St. Louis falls to Houston, it’s over. So tonight, the Cardinals need to win, no questions asked. Jake Westbrook must bring his “A” game like he did last week against the Mets (we won’t talk about how that game ended). I would also argue that Atlanta must lose tonight to keep the Cardinals’ playoff hopes alive. Philadelphia, with 100 wins and nothing to play for, will most certainly rest the likes of Chase Utley, Ryan Howard, Jimmy Rollins, et al during the season finale Wednesday… if for no other reason than to take one last look at some bench players who are on the post-season roster “bubble” if you will. And rumor has it that a couple of young pitchers will be sharing the workload for Philadelphia tomorrow, not Cole Hamels. So with that in mind, the Cardinals can’t rely on much help from Philadelphia after tonight. This is the night St. Louis must catch Atlanta, with Roy Oswalt going for the Phillies… and hopefully a full lineup of Philly bats to support him.

TOMORROW

The Cardinals will send Chris Carpenter to the mound. We’ve already addressed what’s likely going to happen in Atlanta… so this hopefully will be a situation where the Cardinals are tied with the Braves coming in, and while it would be nice to get lucky and take the wild card outright, let’s not get too greedy. Cardinal Nation will gladly accept a 1-game playoff at home vs. the Braves.

THURSDAY

This should be interesting. Both clubs will be throwing their respective aces on Wednesday, leaving a matchup of Kyle Lohse vs Brandon Beachy for the win-and-you’re-in game in St. Louis. Beachy has a 3.68 ERA this season, and has only faced the Cardinals once back on April 30th, a 3-2 Cardinals win in which he did not take the decision after giving up 2 runs through 7 innings. Beachy has struggled a bit down the stretch, giving up 4 runs in each of his last 3 starts while failing to pitch past the 6th inning each game. Lohse, meanwhile, did not face the Braves this season. He’d take a 3.39 ERA to the mound with him as well as a 3-game winning streak. He wasn’t taken a loss since August 23rd, right before the Cardinals went on their dramatic run for the playoffs.

FRIDAY

The Cardinals, should they get in, would catch a bit of a break here with an extra off day before the NLDS Starts.

SATURDAY/SUNDAY

Games 1 and 2 at Philadelphia. Perennial Cy-Young Candidate Roy Halladay will take the mound for the Phillies Saturday. Edwin Jackson would likely take the hill for the Cardinals on schedule, though Jaime Garcia would be available on 3-days rest (and only went 4-innings last night, mind you) if Tony La Russa wanted to push it. At this point, I’d assume he’d go with the veteran Jackson, and let Jaime take game 2 vs Cliff Lee.

TUESDAY, Oct. 4th

With another off day Monday, Chris Carpenter will be able to go on full rest vs Cole Hamels in Game 3, a matchup that most would agree favors the Cardinals. If they can find a way to steal game 1 or 2, they’d be sitting pretty.

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY… Oct 5th and Oct 6th

If Tony wanted to push it again, he could think about Jackson/Garcia on short rest, or take his pick between Lohse and Westbrook. One of these 4 would pitch Game 4, with either Jackson or Garcia pitching Game 5 if necessary.

At that point, the Cardinals would have their rotation set up correctly should they advance to the NLCS… with Carpenter available for game 1, and either Jackson/Garcia ready for game 2. Obviously getting way ahead of ourselves, but the LCS might be a final showdown with the Milwaukee Brewers… and wouldn’t that be something.

But for now, the Cardinals have a lot of work to do (and need some help). The stars need to align tonight, or the team and fans will spend a long winter looking back at about a dozen games that got away this season if they come up 1 win short.

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The Royals Know It Is Football Season

If part of your Saturday includes sitting down to watch the Royals on television, you better enjoy this Saturday. This Saturday is the last Saturday the Royals will be on Fox Sports Kansas City for the season. Looking at the Royals September television schedule it’s easy to see what they’re doing. The Royals are yielding to football season. It’s even more evident when you look at their Sunday schedule. Tomorrow and Sept 4th are the only weekend games remaining that will be televised. Note, the NFL does not start until Sept 11th, but today is the last Saturday without college football.

This information isn’t surprising. I consider myself a decent Royals fan, and even I will be hard pressed to watch the Royals over weekend football games. This information isn’t really new. It’s been like this since Fox Sports Kansas City has had the television rights. The schedule released in late February was for 142 games. Have to eliminate 20 games some where. All of this got me thinking. Do other MLB teams yield to football?

I began by looking at our roommates here at I70 Baseball, the St Louis Cardinals. Nope, all games are on Fox Sports Midwest except those picked up by a national broadcaster. The Cardinals have an excellent fan base and had a good possibility of being in a play-off race. Bad Comparison. How about the Cleveland Indians? Not expected to contend, and have struggled like the Royals. Ohio State is perennial contender for the Big 10 Title and BCS Bowls. The Browns have a good following. Nope, all weekend games are on Sports Time Ohio. How about Houston Astros? Not expected to contend, and in a state so rabid about football the Rangers and Astros have to compete with high school football on Friday’s in September. Close, two Saturday games are not televised, but all Sunday games are. When misery loves company you look at the lowest common denominator in terms of fan interest and attendance: the Tampa Bay Rays. Sadly, even the Rays will have more weekend games televised than the Royals in September.

This isn’t a huge deal for the Royals or Royals fans. Like I mentioned above I’d be hard pressed to watch on a college football Saturday, but it would be nice to have a Royals game available to flip to. This is another symptom of how irrelevant the Royals are in the scheme of sports viewing. Just add this to the list of organizational goals during a building process. Get weekend games on TV in September and then take another step

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Bill White: Uppity

One of my 2011 New Years resolutions was to read one baseball book per month. As the calendar turned from March to April, I was afraid that I might be able to keep that resolution. Fortunately, a trip to a local Borders solved my dilemma for not only April, but May as well.

The selection for April is Bill White’s new autobiography, Uppity: My Untold Story about the Games People Play, and what a good choice it turned out to be. Bill White was always honest and outspoken as a player, and this book continues in the same manner. Over the course of 320 pages, you will never wonder where the former Cardinals first baseman stands on anything. His honesty is refreshing and the narrative is as comfortable as pair of your favorite slippers.

My favorite part of the book came early on when White said, “baseball was not my favorite sport. I didn’t love the game; for me, it was something to pass the time until football season started.” That’s an odd statement for a future six time All Star and seven time Gold Glove Award winner. After reading that, I could not put the book down until I understood what he meant. By the time I did, I was so engrossed in his story, that I kept turning page after page until the very end. It is that kind of book.

The book is divided into roughly three equal parts – White as a player, broadcaster and finally as the president of the National League. Most heartbreaking is when he talks about his playing days early in baseball’s integration efforts when the places he would play weren’t nearly as accommodating as the game that put him there. You will learn to admire his courage and determination, perhaps even more than his skills as a baseball player, which he downplays at every opportunity.

His life story would not be complete without at least some mention of the 1964 World Series team that he helped lead past the New York Yankees. Instead of dwelling on things we already knew or could look up in game stats, he talks about his relationships with Bob Gibson, Solly Hemus, Johnny Keane, Bing Devine and Bob Howsam. The revelations he shares on Howsam’s time running the Cardinals were blunt, fascinating and totally unexpected. All of that is eclipsed when he talks about his time working with former Yankees player and broadcaster, Phil Rizzuto.

To whet your appetite just a bit more, please read Mark Tomasik’s interview with Bill White over at RetroSimba. I can’t tell you how jealous I am that Mark was able to get some time chatting with a player that I grew up idolizing. He ran the interview in three parts which you can read here.

Bill White inteviewed about his autobiography

Bill White: We thought the Brock deal was nuts

Bill White: Cards wanted him as manager

If you enjoyed Bob Gibson’s 60 feet 6 inches, you will find Uppity to be an essential companion. And as with Gibson’s book, you will find yourself reading this one again. Often. I already have.

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