For one longtime fan, strike’s out
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I was 6 years old when my father took me to my first professional
baseball game, played in a ramshackle stadium that was the home of
the Fort Wayne Chiefs, a Class A farm team of the Philadelphia
Phillies. It was love at first sight that was transferred over the
years to the Chicago White Sox and California Angels, both of whom
stiffed me repeatedly without guilt and also without extinguishing
the flame that was lighted by the Chiefs.
Fort Wayne is halfway between Chicago and Cincinnati, and in those
Depression years, hitchhiking was a legitimate way of getting around.
So I would often take off with a school friend to hitchhike to Cincy
or Chicago and sit in the bleachers for a buck. I remember well an
entire night spent on a street corner in a small Ohio town before a
truck picked my friend and me up and took us to Cincinnati, where the
St. Louis Cardinals’ Dean brothers would be pitching a double-header.
I was so tired when we got there that I slept through most of the two
games but somehow took them in by osmosis.
When I went off to the University of Missouri, I was halfway
between Kansas City and St. Louis and hitched in both directions to
see as many games as my academic survival permitted. And when I left
college in my junior year to enlist in the Navy for World War II, I’m
sure my primary motivation was to save baseball.
Four years later, I returned to Missouri to finish my journalism
degree, and that’s when baseball first broke my heart. The St. Louis
Cardinals owner, Sam Breadon, and his general manager came to
Columbia to interview several dozen applicants for a publicity job
with the team, and I got it. The pay was lousy, and I had a wife and
child by this time, but my wife understood that the opportunity for
me to rub elbows with Stan Musial and Enos Slaughter superseded such
mundane matters as a decent living.
So I found my dream job right out of the box -- and it lasted
three months. The Cardinals front office was an arrogant, secretive,
confused mess with a management style right out of “Alice in
Wonderland.” Two examples: The guy I was working for didn’t know I’d
been hired and viewed me with understandable hostility. And I was
living at the YMCA because Breadon, who seemed to own half of St.
Louis, wouldn’t help me find housing to move my family there. So I
quit and went back to Fort Wayne to look for a real job. A telegram
from Breadon was awaiting me there. It said: “Have found you housing
in Pocatello. Please confirm.”
When I called and asked him what he was talking about, he seemed
surprised that no one had told me I was slated to be the general
manager of the Cardinal farm team in Pocatello, Idaho, the following
year. I declined, not only ending my baseball career but giving up an
opportunity to work a World Series press box, since the Cardinals won
the National League pennant that year. Maybe I could have been one of
Bud Selig’s tycoons today if I had just taken that job in Pocatello.
This history is offered up to establish my credits to speak to the
threatened strike of major league baseball players on Aug. 30. I am a
charter member of the Silent Majority not represented in the
negotiations to prevent that strike and get on with the season. I buy
baseball tickets in the outer reaches of the stadium not reserved for
the corporate expense account crowd, pay $8 to park, $6 for a glass
of beer, and stand up for the seventh-inning stretch and sing “Take
Me Out To the Ball Game.”
I’m not going to say that if this idiotic strike scenario is
played out I’ll never buy another baseball ticket. It wouldn’t be
true. And it’s because of this grip that the game has on so many
millions of us that baseball has become a public trust that should
never be put into the exclusive hands of people whose only
qualification for running it is that they are rich.
That’s why the first thing that needs to be done -- and quickly --
is to put baseball under the same federal anti-trust laws that govern
all other professional sports. Then the owners could be required to
open their books and prove the doomsday economics used as a
negotiating weapon -- and ridiculed by such friendly sources as
Forbes Magazine. It should also be pointed out to the owners that
they brought all these agonies on themselves by paying absurd wages
to mediocre players, and they are now asking the players’ union to
save them from their own bad judgment by accepting a salary cap.
Meanwhile, the players need to recognize that they have been set
up as the bad guys by taking the strike bait and that they are
playing into the hands of the most excessive and arrogant owners by
refusing a salary cap. They also need someone to tell them that they
aren’t going to get much sympathy from people who have to make real
sacrifices to afford to take the family to a ballgame. And to ask
themselves if that extra million of greed on top of other millions is
really worth destroying the game.
And both of them might reflect on the Silent Majority that has
been given no seat at these negotiations. We could really torpedo the
game if they finally push us to that place. Then the owners would
have to find a new toy, and the players would have to learn a
considerably less-lucrative trade.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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