So, I am on a bit of
a vacation. I have had the opportunity to go to both the Baseball Hall of Fame
in Cooperstown, NY, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, OH. I had been
to Cooperstown before when I was younger, but it has been about 20 years. I had
never been to the Pro Football Hall of Fame before. Both of these current
experiences were great. Seeing the history of the two major sports in our
country and walking down the long, sometimes difficult paths that were followed
by each sports’ athletes is not something that I will soon forget. It got me
thinking a lot about tradition in sports. History and tradition are not
mutually exclusive. While football has a lot of history, the traditions have
been fluid. Baseball has both a long history and traditions that stand the test
of time. That is not to say that football is devoid of tradition. I remember
every Thanksgiving, going to watch my town’s high school play their last
regular season game of the year and then coming home and camping out in front of
the TV to watch the NFL games while waiting for Thanksgiving dinner. It was our
Thanksgiving tradition. But if I were to ask a broad spectrum of people what
the traditional way the umpire starts a baseball game, any baseball game, I
have the suspicion that just about anybody, no matter their age or background,
would respond with “Play Ball!!”.
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Red Grange |
Football has a long
and storied history. It is sometimes tragic, sometimes inspiring. The rules
were changed and then changed again. If your average football fan were
transported back 100 years, I doubt any of us would recognize the game that we
love. Even in the modern Super Bowl era, the game that I watched as a kid is
vastly different from the one we watch on Sundays in the fall. There are
traditions that overshadow this changing history. Thanksgiving Day games being
the primary one that comes to mind. The coin toss, what many believe to be a
staple of the game has even morphed into different iterations over the years.
So football…long on history, but with fluidity in tradition. This is not a bad
thing.
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Marshawn Lynch |
It speaks to the lasting power of the game and also to its resurgence in
popularity over that past couple of decades. They understand where they came
from and can adapt to changing times in order to stay relevant. It is a game
which is able to mirror the tendencies of the populace and give us what we want
to see. More defense, then more offense, touchdowns, more contact, less
contact…it remains valid through injury concerns and a need for us to witness
the cathartic violence that is inherent in the game. There is a reason why
football is the most popular game right now and the traditions are sometimes
sacrificed on the altar of approval.
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Ty Cobb |
Baseball, on the
other hand, is both long on history and holds, almost fanatically, to
tradition. The equipment has changed with technology, but the game that Honus
Wagner played is virtually identical to the game we see all across the country
today. The home team bats in the bottom of the inning, the mound is 60’6” from
home plate. The call of “Tinker to Evers to Chance” could very well be heard on
the MLB network or through the musical baritone of Vin Scully, instead of
happening over a century ago. The bats and gloves may have changed, but baseball is the one sport where you can statistically compare, with accuracy, Ty Cobb and Mike Trout. Baseball is a time machine. We are able to examine our history through this simple game. To quote the late actor Trey Wilson in Bull Durham: “Baseball is a simple game; you throw the ball, you hit the ball, you catch the ball”. You go to any sandlot or little league ballpark or minor league stadium or major league cathedral, you see the same game, being played by the same rules and with the same reverence. I once saw some kids act out the 7
th inning stretch of a sandlot game. They went so far as to have
one of the kids do a, reasonably spot-on, Harry Carey impersonation. This type
of tradition, for purists, is what keeps baseball at the upper echelon of
sport. Even with popularity lagging in the last few years, baseball remains our
national pastime.
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Mike Trout |
Neither of these
makes one game better than the other. They are two sides of the same coin. The
fabric of our collective story. Providing us with exciting moments that we can
relive in our yards, as children and then with our own children. I just
consider myself lucky to have been brought up loving both of these great games.
I am even luckier to have been able to see both of these halls in the same
week, and to be there with my son.
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