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Many of us can remember sneaking a transistor radio to school to catch the World Series. Now they probably watch it on their Smart Phones.
The White Sox announcing team of Harry Caray and Jimmy Piersall (circa 1980) was the most entertaining collaboration I've ever heard. It was pee in your pants funny.
I was actually going to write the same thing! Even Bill Murray's stint as Cub's guest announcer when Harry took ill wasn't as funny as Harry and Jimmy.There was never anyone like them before or since.
One thing that sets baseball apart from all other professional sports is the sublime quality of its literature. Fifty one years ago today, Ted Williams played his final major league game, hitting a home run in his final plate appearance -- and author John Updike was part of the small crowd at Fenway Park for the game. He published his impressions of the day in the 10/22/60 issue of the New Yorker, in an essay that's gone down as perhaps the most highly-regarded piece of baseball writing ever.
Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu
I'm a Giants fan, born and bred, but after reading several books about ball in the Era, I think my favorite player would be Bobby Doerr (Red Sox).
This, I believe, explains a lot of its appeal to the intellectual classes - writers in particular. The bright, awkward, sheltered white boy from the big city finally had a sport to call his own, even if he couldn't run without falling in a heap or even see a ball coming. He found his heroes thru the worship of knowledge - stats - and only indirectly thru their prowess and strength. And it so happened that that kind of boy, grown to a man, loomed very large in the literary firmament of the mid-to-late 20th century.Also, baseball is very statistics-oriented, much more than any other American sport. Fans, broadcasters, and those in the print media can -- and do -- geek out on the most arcane and esoteric of stats.
ISTR reading that Doerr was Teddy's stoutest friend - the only guy Ted would never rank on, and the only one who could ever tell him he was out of line. Who wrote that? It was in some slick magazine.
I never cared much for Joe DiMaggio. He was a prima donna......from basically causing Mickey Mantle's devastating knee injury by not waving him off a ball in the outfield until he was sure that he could make an elegant catch......to demanding to be introduced as The Greatest Living Ballplayer at any baseball related event he attended. I recall an interview (Dick Cavett?) with Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle and when the subject of Joe D came up Mick bit his tongue but Willie ripped him a new one.