Finally, a sports columnist has written the column that I think all of them should have written already. He acknowledges, with much embarassment, how he ignored obvious signs of what was going on (he actually quotes himself from an old article looking foolish in retrospect).
Here it is, and here is the best part:
"Then there is the Hall of Fame, which leaves me similarly ambivalent. The Hall instructs voters to consider not just playing ability, but also character, integrity and sportsmanship. I do not vote for McGwire because I am not convinced he meets those subjective standards. Yet I ask myself: Am I penalizing Big Mac because I was the fool?"I’ve been waiting for an article like this for over three years. I wish all sports writers were this self-aware.
He also does a great job of acknowledging how that summer, 1998, brought so many baseball fans back to the game. Because of that, it is hard to separate and understand our different emotions. I did fall in love with baseball again that summer, and it was because of McGwire. That can't be taken away. But I am so profoundly disappointed in how it seems he achieved it.
I wonder if I'll ever be able to reconcile these emotions.
1 comment:
This feeling "Am I penalizing Big Mac because I was the fool?" makes me think of something that happens in the classroom - when a teacher gives an overly harsh consequence for a child because the child has made the teacher feel bad about him/herself. It takes a lot to realize that is happening in the moment and correct your (the teacher's) actions.
Not exactly about baseball, but close...
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