Some time ago my love affair with baseball began a long
slide that ended just short of complete indifference.
Most of the boys in my northern Wisconsin hometown
participated in “America ’s
pastime” as players, dedicated fans, or both. A major league franchise didn’t
arrive in Milwaukee
until we were teenagers, so we supported various teams. We had ties to Chicago through tourism, thus
Cubs fans probably were in the majority. Quite a few St. Louis Cardinals
backers lived in my neighborhood. I bucked the trends by supporting the White
Sox, after briefly being enamored with the Detroit Tigers.
We didn’t have Little League baseball, but a summer sports
program offered early organized playing opportunities. I started as a catcher at
age 11 on the team that competed against nines from other cities. Later, I
donned “the tools of ignorance” (face mask, shin guards, chest protector) for
high school, American Legion, and county league teams.
When the Braves franchise moved from Boston
to Milwaukee , Wisconsin went baseball crazy. Normal
business activity ground to a halt in Brewtown when the local heroes took the
field. Every adult was in the ballpark or glued to a radio listening to the
action. Interest was only slightly less elsewhere in the state. I joined the
crowd as a rabid fan.
I'm catching some baseball once again |
My passion began to wane during college days. My agenda
became filled with more interesting activities than two- to three-hour sessions
beside a radio or in front of a television set when half the time consisted of
lulls between pitches and innings.
Later, following baseball became more of a chore than an
entertainment. I was forced to watch lots of games. As a weekly newspaper
editor, it was necessary to report on local contests. However, it was possible
to avoid some of those time-consuming tasks by writing stories using scorebooks
supplied by team managers. I became quite adept at creating descriptions of
games I never saw.
But as sports editor of The
Daily Tribune in Wisconsin Rapids
I had no way to avoid baseball overkill. Rapids had a Minnesota Twins farm team
in the Midwest League. Interest was high in the games played by the young
professionals. I was required to attend nearly every home game (a reporter
would fill in for me in extreme emergencies). There were 62 home games each
season, almost all of them night games.
Covering minor league ball had interesting moments. It also
forced me to watch some error-filled contests that lasted far into the night. Often
it was midnight when I got to the office to compile the statistics and write my
story for the next day’s paper.
My regular work hours started at 7 a.m. or earlier, six days
a week. My enthusiasm about baseball
soon began its long slide downward. Later, other things pushed it further out
of my life.
Business and family matters became much more important than following
what I had come to view as dull athletic contests. Pro football began to
replace baseball as the national pastime. It seized the American sports
imagination, including mine. In retirement, I caught the golf bug. Had I still
cared about baseball, time to follow it was seldom available.
Just as I my interest in baseball was nearing zero, we moved
to Michigan .
Since our arrival, pro football excitement waned-- the Detroit Lions seldom won
a game. The Tigers won lots of games, and their fan base expanded. This year,
home attendance topped 3 million. Anyone who follows news as I do had trouble avoiding
stories about the Tigers. To learn directly what it was all about, I tuned into
a few games on the tube. Unfortunately, I usually lost interest and moved on to
something else well before the contests ended.
Now the Tigers are deep into the playoffs. The team features
two of the best pitchers in the game and some powerful hitters. Not watching
games right now causes people to be left out of a lot of conversations. I don’t
like to be lonesome, so I’ve been watching the playoffs on television.
Unfortunately, even the playoff games strike me as less than
thrilling. A few descriptions of strategies developed since my days as a player
and fan have been interesting, but nothing has changed about the boredom
fostered by the same old frequent periods of nothing much happening. I was
close to ending my brief stint as a resurrected Tigers enthusiast.
Happily, I accidentally discovered a way to enjoy watching
baseball on the tube. I was reading an intriguing book when a Tigers’ playoff
game started. Feeling a bit lazy, rather than switch activities completely, I
just stayed where I was and switched on the TV. I saw every bit of the baseball
action and finished 70 pages of a good book during the dead times in the game.
Chances of running out of interesting books are low; I’m staying on board as a Tigers
fan, although not exactly a full-time one.
5 comments:
I just wish I still had all those baseball cards I collected years ago. Yes, I remember when the Braves moved. So long ago. Dianne
LOL
I live in NE Ohio and grew up with the Tribe. It's a strange relationship but I still follow them.
As a kid, I played a little baseball and softball. And I collected baseball cards, but only because I liked bubble gum. And because Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris were from Oklahoma, my home. But as a spectator sport ... yawn! Except for when the Rockies got into the World Series a few years ago and played some Series games here in Denver. Getting son and grandson into a once in a lifetime World Series game seemed mandatory, even for us non-baseball fans.
I rarely watch tv and do nothing. but with any sport but perhaps Broncos football I definitely have a book, my laptop, or knitting or a crossword puzzle going at the same time.
Alas! The only time I've been interested with baseball was when our son pitched for his little league team. The Cubs never won when I attended a game.
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