As
included in What Baseball Means to Me
edited by Curt Smith
By Marty Appel
What can we say about a game in which spring training begins every
winter and the Winter Meetings are held every fall?!
For one thing, you can set your watch to it, and if you are lucky,
you can set your life to it.
I was born nine
days before Babe Ruth died in 1948. When I turned 50, people kidded
me about getting
old, but
when you have devoted a life
to being a baseball fan, getting older is a joy! It means you have personally
catalogued so many memorable experiences with this National Pastime of
ours, you possess the ability to speak first hand of them. That’s
a gift.
I remember going
to Yankee games in the mid-‘50s and overhearing
fans talk about the old timers. I came to have a bit of envy for those
who could talk about seeing Ruth or Gehrig or DiMaggio. I was always
particularly fond of people who could remember Ruth playing the outfield
or sliding into a base. It meant more than the recollections of those
who invariably said “….and the Babe hit a home run that day!”
As a baby boomer,
I was treated to the game in new and exciting ways. Baseball cards,
for one, brought
the
player images to full color, right
in the palm of your hand, and when collecting became all the rage, we
got to know every player by his card. Mention “Ted Klusewski” to
any fan over 50 today, and the image of his muscleman Topps card runs
through the mind. Same with hundreds of others. Baseball cards have been
the gateway to the game for generations now, but mine was the first.
And, mine was the first to have baseball on television.
Television not
only let me see the long legs of Ted Williams and the running style
of Jackie Robinson
(side-to-side,
arms flailing, hands
out flat, recklessly accelerating), but the “low home” camera
let you see the rising fastball of Sandy Koufax, and the center field
camera, introduced in 1958, let you appreciate how Whitey Ford and Billy
Pierce could work the corners.
And replays! They
came in ’59 and forever changed the way we watched
baseball. Imagine, that in 1951 viewers saw Bobby Thomson’s homer
only one time before they saw the replays in theater newsreels weeks
later!
I love it when
I can tell a younger fan about the Boys of Summer, and Don Larsen’s
perfect game, about the Hollywood glamour of Mickey Mantle, with his
12 World Series
in
his first 14 years. Or the move west
by the Dodgers and Giants, the Maris-Mantle home run chase, the original
Mets and the Miracle Mets. And Mays, Aaron and Clemente in the same N.L.
outfield for the All-Star Games.
I went to games at Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds. And at old Yankee
Stadium you would exit via the running track and walk through the bullpens,
where Ryne Duren had been throwing just minutes before.
And the Washington Senators, boy, were they awful.
The game, you
see, belongs to the fans more than to the players or the owners. They’re only passing through. You say Rickey Henderson
played in 23 seasons? Big deal. I’ve had 45 seasons as a fan! 175
new Hall of Fame inductees in that time! Forty-five World Series (all
right, 44), and each one still conjures up memories of the Gillette theme
song with Sharpie the parrot overlaid on the screen, (“To LOOK
sharp…..”) and how good the players looked in their long-sleeved
sweatshirts.
Baseball serves as a perfect gauge for measuring the milestones of
my life.
I was 28 when Hank Aaron retired. He was my last active player from
my first year as a fan. I was 29 when Maury Wills’ son reached the majors! I was
32 when the first player born after Maris’ home run record reached the
majors. I remember when I first knew all the managers as players. I was 33.
Or when Ray Boone’s grandson played in the bigs. I was 44.
I was 47 when Mickey died. That was what is called a reality check.
Some say the
beauty of baseball is that it isn’t played by the
clock. But there is a timepiece governing it, and it is the timepiece
of our lives. And if we are to measure our journey by the memories we
store, the joy of the game on the field has given us plenty. Even Cubs
and Red Sox fans would agree.
Thank you, Abner Doubleday, or Alexander Cartwright, or George and
Harry Wright, wherever you are.
Marty Appel, a
former Director of Public Relations for the Yankees, is the author
of 16 books, including
his
autobiography, “Now Pitching
for the Yankees.” He is also President of Marty Appel Public Relations
and lives in Larchmont, N.Y.
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