[Vision2020] You Make the Call
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Fri Aug 11 11:55:11 PDT 2006
>From this week's "Life of Reilly" column by Rick Reilly of the Sports
Illustrated -
Once you have completed reading the article, please respond to the
one-question survey I have posted at the end.
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You make the call
Is it good baseball strategy or a weak attempt to win?
By Rick Reilly
This actually happened. Your job is to decide whether it should have.
In a nine- and 10-year-old PONY league championship game in Bountiful, Utah,
the Yankees lead the Red Sox by one run. The Sox are up in the bottom of the
last inning, two outs, a runner on third. At the plate is the Sox' best
hitter, a kid named Jordan. On deck is the Sox' worst hitter, a kid named
Romney. He's a scrawny cancer survivor who has to take human growth hormone
and has a shunt in his brain.
So, you're the coach: Do you intentionally walk the star hitter so you can
face the kid who can barely swing?
Wait! Before you answer.... This is a league where everybody gets to bat,
there's a four-runs-per-inning max, and no stealing until the ball crosses
the plate. On the other hand, the stands are packed and it is the title
game.
So ... do you pitch to the star or do you lay it all on the kid who's been
through hell already?
Yanks coach Bob Farley decided to walk the star.
Parents booed. The umpire, Mike Wright, thought to himself, Low-ball move.
In the stands, Romney's eight-year-old sister cried. "They're picking on
Romney!" she said. Romney struck out. The Yanks celebrated. The Sox moaned.
The two coaching staffs nearly brawled.
And Romney? He sobbed himself to sleep that night.
"It made me sick," says Romney's dad, Marlo Oaks. "It's going after the
weakest chick in the flock."
Farley and his assistant coach, Shaun Farr, who recommended the walk, say
they didn't know Romney was a cancer survivor. "And even if I had," insists
Farr, "I'd have done the same thing. It's just good baseball strategy."
Romney's mom, Elaine, thinks Farr knew. "Romney's cancer was in the paper
when he met with President Bush," she says. That was thanks to the
Make-A-Wish people. "And [Farr] coached Romney in basketball. I tell all his
coaches about his condition."
She has to. Because of his radiation treatments, Romney's body may not
produce enough of a stress-responding hormone if he is seriously injured, so
he has to quickly get a cortisone shot or it could be life-threatening.
That's why he wears a helmet even in centerfield. Farr didn't notice?
The sports editor for the local Davis Clipper, Ben De Voe, ripped the
Yankees' decision. "Hopefully these coaches enjoy the trophy on their
mantle," De Voe wrote, "right next to their dunce caps."
Well, that turned Bountiful into Rancorful. The town was split -- with some
people calling for De Voe's firing and describing Farr and Farley as "great
men," while others called the coaches "pathetic human beings." They "should
be tarred and feathered," one man wrote to De Voe. Blogs and letters pages
howled. A state house candidate called it "shameful."
What the Yankees' coaches did was within the rules. But is it right to put
winning over compassion? For that matter, does a kid who yearns to be
treated like everybody else want compassion?
"What about the boy who is dyslexic -- should he get special treatment?"
Blaine and Kris Smith wrote to the Clipper. "The boy who wears glasses --
should he never be struck out? ... NO! They should all play by the rules of
the game."
The Yankees' coaches insisted that the Sox coach would've done the same
thing. "Not only wouldn't I have," says Sox coach Keith Gulbransen, "I
didn't. When their best hitter came up, I pitched to him. I especially
wouldn't have done it to Romney."
Farr thinks the Sox coach is a hypocrite. He points out that all coaches put
their worst fielder in right field and try to steal on the weakest catchers.
"Isn't that strategy?" he asks. "Isn't that trying to win? Do we let the kid
feel like he's a winner by having the whole league play easy on him? This
isn't the Special Olympics. He's not retarded."
Me? I think what the Yanks did stinks. Strategy is fine against major
leaguers, but not against a little kid with a tube in his head. Just good
baseball strategy? This isn't the pros. This is: Everybody bats, one-hour
games. That means it's about fun. Period.
What the Yankees' coaches did was make it about them, not the kids. It
became their medal to pin on their pecs and show off at their barbecues. And
if a fragile kid got stomped on the way, well, that's baseball. We see it
all over the country -- the over-caffeinated coach who watches too much
SportsCenter and needs to win far more than the kids, who will forget about
it two Dove bars later.
By the way, the next morning, Romney woke up and decided to do something
about what happened to him.
"I'm going to work on my batting," he told his dad. "Then maybe someday I'll
be the one they walk."
---------------------------------------------------------
Simple Survey:
Would you -
A) Pitch to the slugger (Jordan)
B) Walk the slugger
Thanks,
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving
safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in
sideways, chocolate in one hand, a drink in the other, body thoroughly used
up, totally worn out and screaming 'WOO HOO. What a ride!'"
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