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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1094>
<link 94TO0175>
<title>
Aug. 22, 1994: Cover:Sport:The Only Game in Town
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER/SPORT, Page 76
The Only Game in Town
</hdr>
<body>
<p> If it's baseball pure and simple, fans can find it in Pittsfield,
Peoria or Rancho Cucamonga
</p>
<p>By Paul A. Witteman
</p>
<p> The rain arrived in a rush, sweeping out of the hills and across
the wooden outfield fence at Wahconah Park in Pittsfield, Massachusetts,
obscuring the sign that proudly proclaims the Berkshire Medical
Center the OFFICIAL HOSPITAL OF THE PITTSFIELD METS. The grounds
crew, so to speak, sprang into action. There was nothing big
league about it. The soot-gray tarp, patched in several places,
did not cooperate with the motley squad of Mets employees in
baggy shorts who gamely attempted to pin it to the ground like
frenzied wrestlers.
</p>
<p> The tarp won. Infield red clay turned to instant ooze. Game
called. Ten grand or so in gate receipts and hot-dog sales down
the drain. "That's life in the minor leagues," said one of the
vanquished, assistant general manager Richard Lenfest, as rain
ran down his legs and into his sneakers.
</p>
<p> No problem. Fans got two games for the price of one the following
night. This week life in the minor leagues is all that baseball
fans in serious need of a fix are going to get. Venal owners
and petulant players in the majors should take note. This is
baseball the way the game is meant to be played: on intimate
terms. It is baseball virtually free of mortifying drug scandals--no player making $1,000 a month can afford a cocaine habit
for long. It is baseball on a human scale. When Peoria Chiefs
designated hitter Alex Cabrera was fined $50 this month for
illegally grooving his bat, he complained that it was "too expensive."
A carpenter or a schoolteacher can relate to that. Fifty bucks
is a lot of money. By comparison, the average millionaire in
the major leagues seems to be laboring, or not laboring, in
the far reaches of fantasyland.
</p>
<p> In the minors this week there will be few millionaires but no
shortage of baseball. The 222 teams competing in the 20 leagues
sprinkled across the landscape from Portland, Maine, to Rancho
Cucamonga, California, are scheduled to play more than 500 games
during that seven-day stretch. The games in the rookie leagues
may draw as few as 500 fans; in Triple A the crowds average
between 5,000 and 7,000. "The minors are not a get-rich-quick
scheme," says Bob Sparks of the National Association of Professional
Leagues, which oversees all but one of the leagues. The minors
are on track to draw 32 million spectators this season, buoyed
in part by the attendance explosion in Birmingham, Alabama,
where Michael Jordan has mastered the craft of striking out.
</p>
<p> As in previous strikes, some minor league games will find their
way onto TV, but most will not. Nothing wrong with that; baseball
is a feast best served alfresco. And the minor leagues dish
it up in refreshingly affordable portions. The last time a grandstand
seat in the major leagues cost $3.75, Willie Mays was still
patrolling center field at the Polo Grounds. At Pittsfield's
Wahconah Park, which is celebrating its 75th anniversary this
year, a $5 bill buys not only a hot dog but also a seat less
than 40 ft. from home plate.
</p>
<p> From that vantage point spectators can watch the wondrously
gifted Jay Payton's attempt to match Ted Williams' feat of batting .400 for an entire season. Williams was the last major leaguer
to do so, in 1941, finishing at .406. Payton has a .403 batting
average as the Pittsfield Mets begin their pennant-stretch run.
He's facing pitchers from the minors, sure--but the lighting
around the New York-Penn circuit is bush league too, giving
the pitchers an edge. In addition, Payton and every other hitter
at Wahconah has to deal with a delightful idiosyncrasy. In 1919
Wahconah was laid out with day baseball in mind. Home plate
faces west--precisely the wrong direction for Mets games that
now begin at 7 p.m. As the sun slips toward the horizon, it
slides into the line of sight between pitcher and batter. This
is the only instance in organized baseball when an umpire can
be accused, without rebuttal, of being blind. But more to the
point, the batter too is blinded. At that juncture the umpire
decrees a sun delay, and sunny songs issue forth from the park's
loudspeakers. The game resumes as soon as the offending celestial
body disappears behind a linden tree.
</p>
<p> Before and after the game, young fans can badger players for
autographs to their heart's content. The players, innocent as
yet of the trappings of celebrity, happily respond. They may
even know their admirers' first names, since players live with
local families during the summer. (Can you imagine Dwight Gooden
living with you?) Fans at Wahconah this season get an added
bonus--an opportunity to chat with the member of the Presley
family who, in Pittsfield at least, is the second best known
after Elvis. That would be the King's third cousin Kirk, 18,
a right-handed pitcher whose sizzling fastball usually sends
opposing batters skulking back to Heartbreak Hotel.
</p>
<p> Presiding over this brood of prospects and scufflers is manager
Howie Freiling, 28, who never saw the Bigs. "I had a cup of
coffee in Triple A," he says with disarming candor. "I was a
first baseman who didn't hit for power. The fact that I was
a well-below-average runner didn't help." Pitching coach Dave
LaRoche did make it to the Show, compiling a 65-58 record in
a career that lasted 14 seasons. Yet the minors attract him
on a gut level. "If I wasn't in baseball," LaRoche says, "I
would live in a town with a minor league team so my kids could
go all the time."
</p>
<p> That's a sentiment shared by Bill Gladstone, former chairman
of Ernst & Young, who persuaded four friends to join him and
buy the team for $850,000 in 1992. This is a pittance compared
with the macroeconomics of the majors, where teams sell for
$150 million and up. "Buying a major league team was out of
the question," he says. "My friend Peter O'Malley, president
of the Dodgers, suggested that we look at the minors, where
the cost is more reasonable and you have the same amount of
fun."
</p>
<p> This week Gladstone is having far more fun than O'Malley. Gladstone
has a team in the thick of a hot pennant race. O'Malley has
an empty park. "Minor league baseball is not a microcosm of
the big leagues," says Gladstone. For that, fans should be eternally
grateful.
</p>
BEST TEAM NAMES
<list>
Brevard County Manatees
Madison Hatters
Sioux Falls Canaries
</list>
MOST COMMON STADIUM NAME
<list>
Memorial* 10
Municipal* 8
</list>
<p> *The Reading Phillies of the Eastern League play in Municipal
Memorial Stadium
</p>
<p>LARGEST ATTENDANCE (1993)
</p>
<p> Buffalo Bisons (American Association-Triple A) 1,058,620
</p>
<p>SMALLEST ATTENDANCE (1993)
</p>
<p> Elizabethon Twins (Appalachian League-Rookie) 18,422
</p>
<p>POPULAR PROMOTIONS
</p>
<p> August 19--Clip the Clippers Night. (Pittsfield Mets)
Barbers give fans haircuts for free.
</p>
<p> September 1--Dynamite Lady Night (Beaumont Bullfrogs)
Dynamite Lady climbs into the Coffin of Death and then blows
up coffin.
</p>
<p> All Season (Saint Paul Saints)--Trained pig delivers balls to home plate umpire whenever supply
runs low.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>