Editor in chief: Jack Clifford Associate Editors: Jonathan Allen, Jeff Smith Newsroom: (541)346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: ode@oregon.uoregon.edu Thursday July 13,2000 Volume 102, Issue 7 Emerald Jeff Smith Jack Clifford Memories and baseball are the fields of dreams The time had come. It was the day where I was to venture out of the comforts of my home and into the unpredictable future of the University of Oregon. My parents were being strong, | holding back the emotion of let ting their eldest son go. I looked over in our jam packed garage and spotted my dad’s baseball glove. I brought it out, along with mine, and said rather softly, “Hey Dad, you wanna have a catch?” With a simple nod he agreed and there we were. In the back yard of our home with my mom watching on with a smile. A big change was about to take place in our family, but at that mo ment, the future was put on hold while a father and his son evoked memories of the past. Of the times where my dad and his friend would spend countless hours in the backyard in San Diego playing intense games of whiffle ball against their two six-year old sons. Of the many nights spent at Jack Murphy Stadium watching our beloved San Diego Padres play. Not many words were spoken between my dad and I during our 10-minute catch that day, but no words were necessary. The memories that filled our mind were enough. In the purest sense of the Emerald photo illustration Baseball, shmaseball — pastime is past its time Was baseball’s All-Star game on Tuesday night? Oops, missed 1 it. Had to clip my nails and wash my hair. And, um, what ever else to preoccupy my time. Not to say that baseball is a boring sport. OK, it is to say that baseball is a boring sport. But I respect those who have found deeper meaning in America’s “pastime.” I just haven’t found those Zenesque qualities yet. And I’ve tried. I remember watching Atlanta when they re ally sucked — and not just when they played the New York Yankees in the World Series. We’re talking back in their early Turner Broadcasting days, when Dale Murphy was roaming the outfield and Buddha Bob Horner — an anti-athlete in body shape if there ever was one — belted the occasional mon ster home run. I was even living in Atlanta in 1995, when the team won its first world championship in 38 years, although it was the first one since the franchise moved from Milwaukee. The score in the sixth and final game? 1-0. Really now, does that sound like a captivating game? Fans of the sport would re spond with a resounding “yes” to that question. What can be more exciting than a game hang ing in the balance until the final fly ball is gloved and then se cured, sparking an all-out rush to the pitcher’s mound by the winning team, fans in the stands going wild and grown men seen word, this was our way of ex pressing love. This “Field of Dreams’’-type father-son bonding is one of the many reasons why baseball will always truly be America’s fa vorite pastime. The great thing about baseball is that it has remained a signifi cant part of American culture and life. No other sport can boast the rich history of base ball. A history full of stories so legendary that they seem fic tional. It has always been a game where the impossible seems possible. The love of the game is a sensation that can’t even come close to being described in words. The sad thing is, no matter how many people love the game, there seem to be equally as many people who just don’t understand it. Too slow they say. Too boring. Not enough ac tion. Fine, I respect your opinion. But the people who say that are missing the point. Baseball has been around for some 160 years and will continue to be around for 160 more. The future of the game is in its ability to captivate the young players who will car ry this game in their hearts long after they stop playing. It is a perfect symbol for the American cul ture because it goes beyond the sim ple sport of it all. It delves deep into the heart of each and every person who lets it in and has the amazing ability to open up a childlike pas sion in an 80-year-old that a 10-year-old can understand. But so often people don’t let it in. They complain about sum mers because basketball season is over and football season seems so far away. But that’s just the problem with the United States today — it’s too hectic. Always hustling and bustling around with no apparent desti nation. Which for me has always been the biggest appeal to base ball. It forces an easy-going pace on you and makes you wait nine innings for that delicious mo ment when, “with Jimmy safe at second, and Flynn a-huggin’ third, the mighty Casey at long last, advances to the bat.” And sure, as in the poem “Casey at the Bat,” sometimes there may not be joy in Mudville because Mighty Casey has struck out. But what is per haps the greatest thing of all about baseball is that there is al ways a tomorrow, always a dif ferent day to start anew. I will leave you with a fa vorite quote of mine from for mer baseball commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti, who passed away in 1989. A quote that uniquely identifies what it is about the game that leaves peo ple enchanted. “It breaks your heart. It is de signed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone.” Jeff Smith is an associate editor for the Oregon Daily Emerald. His views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. He can be reached at Smitt side@aol.com. crying in the dugouts? Well, how about last year’s Super Bowl, which ended on a thrilling note, with Tennessee receiver Kevin Dyson ending up 6 inches from the goal-line as time ran out on the Titans’ chances for a trophy? Or how about the plethora of basketball games that Michael Jordan end ed with his patented jump shot? What’s the most charged up moment on the diamond? When someone cracks a home run. Then he jogs around the bases. And what about some of the more common baseball jargon? Slow rollers, drag bunts, lazy fly balls. Makes a person want to commit a suicide squeeze. I understand baseball’s whole connection to the father-son re lationship. Yes, it is a nice feel ing to get those pitching point ers or fielding tips from Dad and then put them to use in a game. No doubt that there are many more fathers teaching their kids how to turn a double play than ones who are showing their youngsters the best way to slam an opponent to the turf. That, I think, is at the core of why baseball is so revered. Be cause we can all go to the local playing field and fantasize about being Chipper Jones or Ken Griffey, Jr., without too much effort. Try to hit a hole in the offensive line the way Ter rell Davis does or jam a ball with the same intensity as Kobe, however, and the magic just doesn’t appear as easily. Another one of baseball’s drawbacks is the season’s length. One hundred and sixty two games to decide a division winner? Wake me up after the 150th game and let me enjoy a good pennant race, but please don’t expect me to pay attention to a full season of 2-1 ball games. (OK, in all fairness, the basket ball season is just as long and la borious to get through, but each game in the NFL season has dra ma related to the final stand ings.) For some fans, baseball sea son has this numbing effect on them and they begin to talk in this strange language — “Well, you know, when pitching in an east-to-west direction, Randy Johnson had a 1.12 ERA against right-handed batters that have last names beginning with the letter Q.” The Elias Sports Bureau is not my friend. Fans also try to paint baseball as the perfect sport because of its structure: with no time limit and at least 51 outs needed to com plete a game, a game of infinite length is always a possibility. Just imagine, an endless num ber of pick-off attempts. Wow. Jack Clifford is the Oregon Daily Emer ald’s editor in chief. Thumbs To George W. Bush The presidential candidate declared that “strong civil rights enforcement will be a corner stone of my admin istration” in a speech at the NAACP annual con vention. Despite facinga skeptical audience, Bush made his points To a promising Alzheimer’s vaccine The vaccine revers es some damaging effects of the dev astating brain dis order in animals and appears safe in the first tests on people. The vac cine, which is ex perimental, sparked excite ment as a new ap proach to treating the incurable dis ease. To Notre Dame The South Bend, Ind.,school is try ing to steal our basketball coach from his beloved alma mater. Not only did Ernie Kent guide the Ducks to only its second NCAA Tournament appearance since 1961, but he also has a recruiting class coming in that was ranked No. 1 in the West. So, Notre Dame, look elsewhere! You haven’t Ern-ed the right to call him your coach. To a second attack on abortion doctor A doctor who was once shot by a sus pected anti-abor tion activist was wounded in his of fice Tuesday by a knife-wielding at tacker. The as