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TIME - Man of the Year
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CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
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1993-04-08
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THE WEEK, Page 24CULTUREThe Baseball Barons' Bread and Circuses
The sport's owners contend with hard times, racism and sudden
death
Is baseball still the national pastime? Sure, if the sport is
meant to reflect the greed, rancor, farce and tragedy that can
be found -- along with the athletic grace and thrill of
competition -- in real life.
The grace and thrills come on the field between April and
October. All the other stuff was on display at the owners'
winter meetings in Louisville, Kentucky, where baseball's barons
went on a daft pre-Christmas shopping spree for talent --
including $43 million for six years of outfielder Barry Bonds'
services -- while moaning they were near bankruptcy.
Suicidal profligacy was the least of the owners' sins. The
Cincinnati Reds' Marge Schott scrambled to apologize for slurs
against "Jew bastards" and "million-dollar niggers." (Jesse
Jackson called the phrases "shots heard around the world" and
promised further protests.) The moguls also voted to try
renegotiating the players' union contract, though a spring
lockout would cripple already ailing attendance. In a horrifying
climax, Florida Marlins president Carl Barger suffered an
aneurysm during the owners' final meeting and died a few hours
later.
Another fatality may be baseball's unique antitrust
exemption, which a U.S. Senate panel, in separate hearings, was
threatening to revoke. But would a lifting of baseball's
monopoly be enough to stir sufficient rowdy capitalist
competition to save the sport? The owners have made the game
such a tragicomic disaster area that one hardly knows whether
to call in the Marines or send in the clowns.