60'6" And Other Ponderables



60’6” & Other Ponderables

....... Oct 12; ’12:
  Like all subjects involving sports, individual likes/dislikes are totally subjective.  That I prefer a certain sport or certain high profile athlete is nothing more than one guy’s favorite barbecue joint or Bond girl.  The only difference is I have a hugely popular website bully pulpit to trumpet my favorites.  That said..... I’ve always been "A Baseball Guy”. ........

Baseball has always been “my sport” of choice.  It was the one competitive team sport I played with enough level of (marginal) skill to appreciate the nuances of being “really good” at it.

In my small town growing up era we transitioned seamlessly thru “the big three” sports from age 9 thru 15-16.  Not unlike birds migrating and snakes shedding their skins, everyone simply “knew” instinctively when you put away your glove and bat to pick up a football to pass or punt and then move indoors (or to the driveway court) to dribble and play H-O-R-S-E.

There were always a few who dabbled in “the country club sports” of golf and tennis and a handful of swimmers but our neighborhood herd migrated like caribou and wildebeast with “the big three” seasons.

We had an excellent city recreation department that offered well-managed competitive leagues and fine facilities.  But we played unorganized "sandlot ball" on vacant lots as much as in "leagues".  Alas, it was pre-CRA so they were separated by race.  I can attest that our town did operate recreation programs and facilities for all its citizens.... but they were “separated”.   As a 10-year old I had little influence on such weighty societal ponderables.   It would be many decades before I would become a modern-day Thomas Paine – crusading cyber pamphleteer changing the course of mighty rivers by the power of my keyboard.

ASIDE:  Just twenty-four miles away a certain “Putz” was also growing up.  That our lives would later intersect is yet another testimony to Lady Luck and “whattayaknow”.

There were no “select” teams or AAU traveling all-star squads.  There were a few kids who specialized in one or two of “the big three” but most of us just played whatever was in-season.  Kids who were naturally better athletes separated themselves pretty early.   In seasonal pick-up games, the pecking picked order usually saw the same kids go early regardless of the sport.

The politically correct movement was many many years away.  We “kept score” and we all knew who the better players were.  There were bullies..... and girls.  Girls played with dolls or whatever girls played with.  “Girls” were a generally mysterious gender.  Not that I ever heard the word “gender” in those days.

We also had several town characters.  One of my growing-up “play ball with” buddies – “Butch” - got really screwed-up on drugs and alcohol and conked in the head with a tire iron in his early 20s and became an Ernest T. Bass-like character.  He disappeared about 10-15 years ago.  God only knows.  His father was “postal” before we knew what that meant so “Butch” was probably pre-destined to his fate.  The drugs, alcohol and tire iron upside his head simply precipitated it.  Your town probably had “a Butch” too.

For a middle-class white boy in the small-town South, I rather believe mine was a mid-twentieth century Huck Finn / Tom Sawyer life.   We even had a river on the edge of town but it was “yucky” with zero recreational value.

Mickey Mantle, Duke Snider and Willie Mays were the pro athlete heroes.  For reasons referred to above, most of my crowd leaned toward The Mick, The Duke, Al Kaline, etc.

Our town had a very popular Class A minor league baseball team.  The team’s GM – Lou Gorman - lived across the street from me.   Mr Gorman later became GM of the Red Sox.  I got my social security card in order to hawk peanuts and cracker jacks at “the ballpark”.   That’s probably where my love of Baseball comes from.

The current MLB playoffs are fascinatingly wonderful for me.  The no-clock chess-game dynamics of the sport.  It literally is not over 'til the last man's out.  Last year’s Game Six still gives me goosebumps to think about.   It seems every game of these playoffs is a nail-biter.  ..... Is it just me or are the players getting younger and younger.  The kid playing third base for the Orioles is FIVE YEARS YOUNGER than our “Kid”.   I can’t begin to wrap my brain around THAT!

I love watching college football despite the glaring hypocrisy infecting the whole enterprise.... but “baseball” is just special to me.  I have no idea why the pitcher’s mound is 60’6” from home plate.  It just is.

This week on The Good Sports.... Art and I interview a real live “compliance officer”.

>>><<<
 
Bill Friday -  RIP  10/12 2012
 
"Kindly Old Bill" Friday died today.  He was 93.  Yes, on a Friday.  The odds were always "one in seven".... same with Tuesday Weld.  Yes, that was my very first thought when I heard. 

Our society specializes in putting people on pedestals so they can knocke'em off those same pedestals.  Bill Friday may be among the last of the pedestalized persons to never be completely de-pedestalized.  You all know he was "The UNC System".  He built the darn thing - aka "the UNC system" and became synonynmous with it.   

Mr Friday and I likely cancelled one another vote in national elections over many years.  He was indeed "a liberal" and a strong proponent of academia.  He also was a very out-spoken critic of the escalation of Big Time college sports.  He and I agreed on that.

He hosted a popular interview show on WUNC for many years.  I never met him but I know many who knew him well.  They all liked him a lot.  I think I would have liked him too.   He actually looked like my Dad.  He lived a very rich, full and productive life and leaves a strong legacy.... at a rather inappropriate time by coincidence.  He leaves still atop that pedestal.  That says A LOT these days.   RIP Mr Friday.

>><<

 
Posted: October 12, 2012 at 3:08 PM by SaidWHATMedia | with 13 comments
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Comments
woofer85
Baseball comments are spot on with my youth too. I will say my kid still plays the sandlot style games with his buddies.

However, I do have a column for you or just a deep thought maybe. How has TV ruined baseball for the young ones? It is all pitcher and catcher and who hits the 'bomb'. A 2D strike zone when the zone is 3D. There are no nuances to the game showed. No pawn, knight, or bishop moves explained. No showing the shortstop or second baseman dancing around trying to keep the runner on second from being halfway down the line. So I ask, how would you show baseball on TV?

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BL: On BobLee TV there would be far fewer "nose hair" close-ups of pitchers. Tim Lincecum's pores are boring.
10/19/2012 10:01:37 AM

Lakepacker
Your description of our hometown is dead on. It is a shame the youth of today will never again get to experience the innocence of going to Fairfield or riding your bike all day and being home by supper. And, we did it without cell phones.

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BL: I think it was more of an era than simply one community. We were fortunate indeed.
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10/14/2012 9:19:07 AM

58 Wolf Kennel
Simply first, William Friday was a great man in every sense of the word. Ninety two years is a full life, and he made them all count for integrity and for North Carolina.
Rest in Peace and God Bless the family.
Baseball also is a life long love. When I try to analyze its strength, I believe it is simple in concept but complex in execution. Size or strength are not prerequisites. Intelligence helps, but only in anticipating an event, not in the execution - that has to be instinctual.
Bill Friday loved baseball also. He was, what else, a catcher. In 1996 when we threw a Friday, Friday, Friday honoring of him and Ida by all alumni in the UNC System, I gave him a 1956 baseball (year he became UNC President) painted with the colors of all 16 public universities sitting inside an old cathcer's mitt. He loved it.
Maybe not as much as you loved the ending of last night's Cards/Nats game, however. Don't know how they keep doing it, but it is impressive.

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BL: I bet Bill Friday was a Stan Musial fan!

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10/13/2012 9:33:30 PM

Vegaswolffer
2nd comment. Years ago I was doing some upgrades to the Charlotte Knights Triple A baseball park during the off season one year. We finished as scheduled a few days before opening day. As part of the contract we stayed thought the 5 day opening stand to be sure all the upgrades worked properly. Thursday thru Monday. Thursday night Stadium packed beyond the 10,000 person capacity with the hills and anywhere someone could sit or fit filled with parents and laughing children everywhere the eye could see all having a blast, Friday night the same, Saturday afternoon the same, Sunday afternoon "crickets could be heard chirping" Possibly 500 people in attendance. We could not figure out what was the reason for this? Was there a NASCAR race that pulled all the people away from the Baseball Game on a beautiful Sunday perfect for watching a baseball game? No not that. So we finally asked the Assistant GM and he explained the laws in SC where the Stadium is located and for most of SC. No alcohol on Sunday. Monday night the place was a rockin again. What did I take away form the experience? If the parents can't take their family to a baseball game and drink and drive home they will not go.

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BL: As a non-drinker I can't judge the impact of beer on attendance but assume it IS a factor with many.
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10/13/2012 4:30:55 PM

Vegaswolffer
Two comments. Loved Baseball when I used to go watch the Orioles in their old Stadium. Reserve duty put me in Annapolis, MD a few time a year and we would drive to Baltimore for $6.00 upper deck tickets and $2.00 draft beers. Those were the days. I wish all would boycott all professional sports for a year and then we would see the prices come down to a reasonable level and paychecks and profits too. But in the great capitalistic society that we live in, if the prices survived the great recession when prices dropped and most true values were revealed, then the prices must be where they belong? 2nd comment next post.

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BL: I now judge sports as a totally TV experience as on-site prices are unreasonable. I would not attend coll FB if I had to buy a ticket.
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10/13/2012 4:17:01 PM

YogiNC
Bobby, to find out where 60.5 feet came from is an interesting read in Wikipedia on baseball field. It is something I've always wondered about but never took the time to look it up until now. The center point between home plate and second base is 63' 11" and logic would have put it at that point one would assume. Why it wound up where it is has NOTHING to do with that type of logic although the derivation itself was logical and came about as the game evolved.

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BL: Now we move on to why a pitcher can bluff a throw to 2nd or 3rd but not to 1st. ???
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10/13/2012 8:38:02 AM

unctarheel1984
Good stuff today. Very sedate. I need that after last night's debate/schoolyard brawl.

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BL: Yeah, I was going for "sedate" for various reasons. :-)
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10/12/2012 8:17:56 PM

Babs
Sad to hear about Bill Friday - glad he had a great life, deserving of a great individual.

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BL: The latest lingering trauma had to depress him. He had a rich life.
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10/12/2012 7:24:36 PM

NCSU68Grad
RIP, Dr. Friday. Yes, we, too, had our political differences, but there was NEVER any question about Bill Friday's love of NC and his contributions to the entire state.

It is sad that he has passed away, but as folks have been known to say, maybe it was a blessing. His stewardship built UNC to what it was, in its REAL flagship days. However, that re*****tion is tarnished beyond belief. As the stories leak out, they do not seem to defile the very principles that he held so dearly.

Maybe, he grew tired of reading about it. Maybe the sadness overwhelmed him. Who knows, but it is sad, indeed, that he is gone.

My FIRST thought, when I read your article (I'm currently on a motor home sabatical to the south and finished the Natchez Trace and am cooling it in Vadila, LA), was that he probably watched the VP debate last night and was so embarassed by our current VP that he went to sleep and didn't have the strength to handle another day of the current administration.

He was a REAL leader.....and we need more like him, regardless of their political persuasion.



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BL: Joe Biden broke Bill Friday's heart. I can go with that.
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10/12/2012 6:54:46 PM

Monroe
Baseball.... I loved it. I was a living, breathing, statistic recitin’, personal-scorecard keepin’ true believer until the billionaires and millionaires cost me my World Series...what was that...’91?

Anyhow, I haven’t watched a total of nine innings combined of pro ball since, and never will.

Me’n the elephants have long memories...and we do just fine on Saturday and Sunday afternoons with TCM, AMC, and MGMHD movies


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BL: I appreciate that show of contempt for the degradation of such a pure game, but I never felt that level myself.
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10/12/2012 4:49:36 PM

Ken Tingen
Bill Friday...an esteemed graduate of "State College" from Gastonia, NC.

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BL: Lots of confusion re: Mr Friday's alma mater and allegiances.
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10/12/2012 4:11:37 PM

fayettewuf
Baseball guy too. Eastern NC watching the Game of the Week on television with Pee Wee and Diz and playing Little League made me one. My current favorite team is the Orioles. You have to love a professional sport in which a small market team can challenge a team with triple its payroll. Go O's.


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BL: Jim Gentile and Gus Triandos live forever !!
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10/12/2012 3:52:18 PM

TarHeelGuy80
RIP Dr. Friday. Note that today is also University Day.

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BL: YIKES!
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10/12/2012 3:44:46 PM

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