Baseball has always been a primarily exclusive sport. The MLB, team managers, coaches, scouts, and players have a complex understanding of the inter workings of the game, the decisions, and the controversies on which the media loves to feed. Although this privacy has probably decreased over the years with expanding media coverage and insiders, the public will never be able to know all the secrets of this "Underworld". Sports writers, announcers and the media love to front as if they know and understand the decisions being made, but the fact is that they don't. They often present this information as a single narrative or with a loud mouth opinion, but the secrecy of the organization remains.
The Ryan Braun controversy has been exhausted over the past few weeks. Everyone has their beliefs and suspicions, and have found ample "evidence" to support their knowledge. A recent comment by Braun's teammate, however, snaps us back to the realization that we don't know anything, and can't know everything about the people in the game. As Neyer explains in his blog yesterday, it of course makes sense that Braun would share more information with his teammates than the public, but this nonetheless continues to frustrate everyone with the idea of more unknowns. Lucroy said in the Times earlier this week that " I am not going to get into details, but if you knew what we knew, people would be like 'Wow'". Lucroy continues to say "And honestly, if some of the things came out, it would be a lot more negative than positive" The ambiguity of Lucroy's comment creates a drive to know what Braun said in the locker room to his teammates, and a frustration in the fact that we don't have such access. Neyer exhibits this limbo by stating " Braun can't have it both ways. Either his urine, fresh out of his penis, was loaded with ungodly amounts of testosterone, but there were good reasons for that, or his urine was perfectly fine until something strange happened to it". He's right, there is one objective truth to what occurred, but Braun can have it both ways in terms of who he tells what.
This secret knowledge of the people within this underworld, as highlighted in Dilillo's novel Underworld, fuels the public's desire for knowledge, to find an "in" somehow. By the recent comments by Braun's teammates remind the world that secrecy is yet another tradition of the sport, only those who have been accepted in the inner circles can understand what the media claims to know. As much as we would all like to know what the hell exactly happened with Braun's steroid test, we don't get to know. We just get to watch the game.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
A's New Stadium Conquest
The Oakland Athletics' desire to follow the people and money to a new stadium is proving to be a difficult task. This week the A's were unable to secure a stadium in San Jose due to the Giants' territorial claim on the area. Rob Neyer reports that the Yankees and Mets will further prevent the A's from settling anywhere near Brooklyn or New Jersey. In pursuit of this new high tech stadium, A's managers Lew Wolff and John Fisher are being presented with obstacles of territory, tradition, fans, and money.
Stadiums are considered the "home" of a particular baseball team. The surrounding city further aligns itself with a particular team, making the idea of a new stadium in the area seem like a slap to the traditions of the currently residing team. Fans enjoy the feeling of being in the team's home stadium, and home city. Home games instill a sense of pride, come with unique traditions, and increase the fans faith that their team can win. The A's search for a new location seems primarily a business move, yet the obstacles preventing this new "home" seem largely based on tradition. There is however, the economical and business issues in rising a new stadium. Although with time new fans could become accustomed to a new team and stadium, it would take years to build such a new tradition. As Neyer points out, even if there is no strong territorial claim by a particular team, there are certain areas where a baseball stadiums would simply not be lucrative or successful, as in Portland or Las Vegas.
Roth's Great American Novel displays the similar struggles that the Rupert Mundays face in not having a home stadium. Because their stadium was taken to use in the war effort, the Mundays struggle with identity as who they are as a team. No matter how statistically good a team may be, there is still some necessity to the traditional aspect of their own stadium, the need for The Game not just the game.
Like the Mundays, the A's desire to revolutionize their team in the traditional and business aspect is exhibited in their quest for a new stadium. The current out of date and run down stadium in Oakland will no longer suffice as a traditional home or beneficial business location.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)