Back in 2001 in the spring and summer I worked a project that took me all over
Northern California. Coming back home for the weekend the wife and I would often
stop at the Cattleman's Restaurant in Livermore. We liked it because the
atmosphere was cowboy and the food good and plentiful and there really aren't
any steak houses in vegan Santa Cruz. On this particular August evening we were
late getting in and the place had filled up. We were told it would be a half
hour and we could wait at the bar and they would call us.
The bar was
already pretty full and all the TVs were on the Giants game. I got a beer and
the wife a bloody Mary. A steady stream of folks entered and asked the bartender
'when is he up?'
The bartender would answer next inning
Bart
Starr Packers Jersey , third up or whatever the situation was. As
Barry went on deck the bar suddenly began to fill and I realized the patrons had
left their meals, purses, infants and whatever else and had come in to watch
Barry.
As usual in the sport of baseball there was first a ball and
strike and then a very loud crack and we could see the ball sail out of the
park. Everybody jumped up, including me. We were high fiving and doing all the
idiotic sorts of antics baseball fans do when their team hits a home run. This
particular home run was one of a record setting 73 Barry hit that season. What
excitement!
At that very moment the last thing any of us was thinking
was 'golly gee, this home run won't count.' Had I mentioned that thought to
anyone in the bar they would have thought I was nuts and not a prophet. Maybe
even thrown a punch.
I have watched baseball for about 50 years but had
never seen anything like Barry. The defensive shift to pull was like no other in
the history of baseball. It was more like four outfielders and three infielders.
During that time I also remember several times remarking that Barry at times
looked stiff and almost waddled. His neck seemed especially stiff. I didn't know
that his shoe size would increase over one whole size too.
Having read
about his extensive training and nutrition program I immediately attributed his
increase in bulk to training. Barry's off-season rigor was well publicized. I
even once remarked that Barry was such a hard trainer he actually grew muscles
on his scalp. Barry shaves his head so when he takes off his helmet he had what
looked like muscles. Later we were to learn that he increased one whole head
size.
But steroids weren't just what made Barry great as any minimally
informed baseball fan will know. Barry hit that many home runs because he seldom
swung at bad pitches. He walked more than any player in history. What was so
incredibly amazing about his 2001 stretch was his average nightly box score
would be a home run, a single and three walks. Repeatedly that season Barry was
walked in situations that no other player had ever been walked.
Who can
ever forget the home run race between McGuire, Sosa and Bonds? It had to be one
of the most exciting times ever for baseball fans and for that we are thankful.
Ironic how all three have been linked to juice...but not guilty until proven.
Barry was a competitor despite his unpolished character and arrogant
demeanor. Barry always played to win and for that we thank him for his
entertaining show. So now the greatest man to ever play the game has to wait and
watch as he enters a no-win trial. I hope he gets off. Barry played to win and
he did whatever it took to get that edge. And he knew other players were doing
it. Barry just couldn't let them have the edge.
If he's guilty, and he
may not be, slap him on the wrist, give him probation and let him age in peace.
Barry has to live with Barry and we have to live with the letdown. Of course
there will be those that want blood and those that want justice for all those
records he robbed.
My guess at least some of Barry's home runs will be
disallowed taking him back down below Hank and the Babe. Quite frankly whatever
the commissioner decides is fair and just won't sit well with the fans. No
matter what he does the boo birds will be following him around for some time. I
wonder if he will also disallow the walks as well as home runs. No one wins
here.
Say it ain't so, Barry. If you have to go down may as well go down
in a blaze of glory. Do whatever it takes to make amends and get back on that
field one last time. Let's not leave it like this...it's too personal.
And I know there will be a number of us standing and cheering once again
when you do.
Author's Resource Box
Jack D. Deal is a longtime San Fraccisco Giants fan and the owner of Deal
Business Consulting. Related articlesmay be found at http:www.jddeal and
http:wwweeandinquiringmind.typepad
An the United States goes up with the 1840s, but much of
other countries took and played the sport little then. To Cuba, the students who
fell under the system of education of the United States returned to the house to
the nation of island with a beater and a ball. The popularity of the play in
Cuba was so high as for are considered a part of the identity during the war for
independence during the late 1800s.
The Spaniards supposed that the
matter practice and the teams of baseball were right a cover-up so that the
preparation will make the war. In all the area of the Caribbean, the cuban
players drew aside their recently discovered knowledge which increased the
popularity of the play. They was two cuban brothers who carried the play to
Dominican Dominican Republic and Cubans in the country of Venezuela with the
nationals vnzuliens who had matriculated in the UNITED STATES brought the sport
to Venezuela, starting in 1895 and in the island of Puerto Rico in
1.