Day seven of the most miserable weather in Short
Pump, Virginia in recent memory happens to be Columbus Day. That means that the
banks are closed, the mail doesn’t run, and the government is shutdown. No,
wait, the government is already shut down. Does that mean that when it reopens,
the union will demand an additional day off as compensation for missing one of
their nine paid holidays?
The only thing that redeemed this past weekend was
last night’s baseball game between The Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox. I
watched the game, I saw what happened, and I still can’t believe it. Through
the first 16 innings of this series the Tigers pitching staff had made the Red
Sox look like an American Legion team. Between Anibal Sanchez and Max Scherzer,
30 Red Sox hitters had struck out. I can’t remember a more dominating pitching
performance in the post season. Down 5-1 in the eighth inning after losing game
one, the Sox were on the verge of being swept in their own ball park and
looking awfully bad doing it. But there I was watching the Sox somehow load the
bases. Tiger manager Jim Leyland then brings his fourth pitcher of the inning
in from the bullpen, while David Ortiz strides to the plate looking bored,
almost disinterested in the proceedings. Fenway was rocking, the fans were
going wild, but Big Papi looks like a man who would rather be back in the
clubhouse watching Breaking Bad. Reliever Joaquin Benoit decided to throw Ortiz
a changeup on the first pitch, and when the ball ended up in the mitt of the
Boston bullpen catcher, Fenway Park was transformed into a madhouse. Big Papi,
as he’s done 15 times in the post season, rounded the bases slowly, zero
emotion registering on his face, while his teammates jumped up and down like a
Little League team after beating the Taiwanese. One inning later, The Sox win
on a walk off single by Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who no one will remember twenty
years from now. This night was about Big Papi and the magic of one swing, a
grand slam home run that brought Boston back from the dead.
Yes, I know that most of America was watching the
Cowboys and the Redskins playing a meaningless football game. Yes, I get it
that baseball is a shell of its former self, that it has fallen far behind
football and maybe even basketball in the imaginations of American sports fans.
But for me, nothing in sports can match the sheer emotional drama of one
pitcher and one batter going toe to toe with the game on the line. It is ironic
that in this most emphatically team sport, the issue so often comes down to an individual
match up, the balance of a game, even a season comes down to one pitch, an
ill-advised changeup launched into the night by the most clutch hitter in Red
Sox history.
God bless baseball.