Out of Left Field: Baseball is too slow, yet quick enough to fight crime

MlbHlSqSo, are attention spans shortening, or is baseball getting more interminable? First, this timely (geddit?) quote from umpire Joe West, on Red Sox/Yankees games: “It’s pathetic and embarrassing. They take too long to play.” Then this week, those old foes got some competition from the Dodgers and Diamondbacks, who took just short of five hours to finish an 11 inning game, with appearances from a mighty 16 different pitchers. That’s some full-on bullpen action right there.

Bud Selig has weighed in on the issue with “It isn’t the time of game, it’s the pace of the game. That’s my only comment. It’s something we will review.” Which I kind of understand. While umpire supervisor Steve Palermo didn’t hold back at all:

“We’ve got a couple teams — I’m not going to name names, but I think everybody knows who they are — and they’re arrogant. They don’t think this pertains to them. I had a president of one of those ballclubs tell me the system is flawed. I told him, ‘Then how did the 28 other teams conform to what we’re asking except for you and your next-door neighbor that you have a rivalry with?'”

You tell ‘em Steve!

Funny thing is, I can watch a comparable sport like cricket for five hours, no problem (although I suppose at least you get decent breaks every couple of hours). But baseball is a whole lot better when it doesn’t veer into Ben Hur territory. If a game has to be long, it should be because it is an epic, seesawing struggle, not purgatory in sporting form. I’m a busy guy, I don’t think I can often spare five hours for anything. Anyway what’s going on here – are these guys paid by the hour or something?

If watching the Dodgers has the potential to be dull, there’s now also less opportunity to have fun before the game, with the LAPD and security officers now looking to outlaw tailgating prior to games. Opening Day parties in the Dodgers’ parking lot were dispersed, even when alcohol was not present, in an understandably unpopular move. Call me a cynic, but is this a law and order issue, or is this a ‘let’s get people in the stadium quick, and have them spending money on food and drink there’ issue? Answers on a postcard, addressed to ‘Dodgers fleecing fans competition’…

Meanwhile Milton Bradley was in trouble this week for gesturing to Texas Rangers fans that there was one out left in the inning. I mean, that’s what he was doing, right? Right? You mean…? No! But those baseball players are such nice fellows with their slow, easy pace of life, aren’t they?

And finally, a feelgood story. It’s off the field, it’s in the minors, but what do we care? We love some baseball heroism in this fair column, and so we particularly enjoyed this story. Pitcher Curt Petersen, in awesome style, averted a robbery of a woman, April Dixon, in his local Walmart. Petersen takes up the story: “This guy came up behind her and grabbed her purse and her keys. She was yelling, ‘Help! Help! Help!’ I thought maybe it was just a joke. … I thought maybe they were messing around. But then she got knocked down, and I knew it wasn’t a joke.

“I was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And he said, ‘I’m taking her car.’ And I was like, ‘No, you’re not.’ I had a hold of him, and he threw the keys back to the lady and said, ‘All right, all right, just let me go.’ And I said, ‘I don’t think so.’”

And then the glorious final quote. “It was interesting, I just went to the Walmart for toilet paper, and then all this happens.” Curt, we salute you.

Apologies (not least to Matt and the other more reliable writers here) for the column failing to appear last week. With impeccable timing, just as the season began, real life reared its ugly head and before I knew it I just wasn’t going to get anything written. Do note, I am now sat in the corner of the BaseballGB classroom, writing ‘Must try harder’ 50 times. See you next week.

2 thoughts on “Out of Left Field: Baseball is too slow, yet quick enough to fight crime

  1. Matt Smith

    Hi Steve. You are forgiven. Until your team wins our fantasy match-up this week that is. I’m down 3-7 and I’m personally responsible for Prince Fielder going homer-less so far this season. Sorry to all Brew Crew fans out there.

    I have sympathy for Joe West’s comments, but the next time he’s behind the plate for one of either teams’ games and makes a borderline call against them, I’m guessing he’ll regret making them.

    Mark this down as a rare occasion on which I agree with Bud. It’s the time wasting (Jeter making everyone wait etc) that gets annoying, not a long game due to lots of action taking place.

    As for Curt Peterson, no doubt he was grateful for that toilet paper after the event.

    Reply
  2. Steve Keene Post author

    How about your man Ubaldo, though? I can’t believe I’m anywhere near contention this week, with half my team on the DL, but have got lucky with who I picked up in their place, certainly. There’ll be a condundrum of who to drop when men get fit again.

    I really hope the time-wasting gets stamped out. It just doesn’t help the sport at all, and in the current climate baseball needs to guarantee bums on seats, not put them off with snoozefests.

    Fair point on Peterson too!

    Reply

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