.406 and the Wussiness That Has Followed
Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2016 9:55 am
There is something sticking in my craw. Look, I don't even know where or what my craw is, exactly, so let me get out this rant and I'll feel much better.
The wussification of America just gets worse and worse. We're supposed to be the best country in the world.
With the best people in the world. Americans are not afraid to 'go for it' to do whatever is necessary to obtain our goals.
And, we even like to do it with an 'IN YOUR FACE' attitude.
So let me give you a backdrop to a story that makes us proud and then fast forward to modern times, where wussification reigns supreme.......
1941 Was one of the best baseball years ever. Joe DiMaggio's hit streak and the constant, "Did he get one today?" overrode and kept America's minds off what Hitler was doing to Europe.
We were only months away from Pearl Harbor happening.
Still, Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams garnered as many headlines as Hitler and Roosevelt.
While DiMaggio captured the imagination of people across the country with the hitting streak, Williams kept hitting.
He reached the last day of the season hitting .3996
The record books would round up for Williams and give him the magical .400
All he had to do was sit out the doublehader on the last day of the season.
You know the story.
Williams questioned whether it should even be counted as a .400 season were a player to avoid playing.
He played.
He went six for eight in the doubleheader and finished with that magical .406 batting average.
I loved it when Americans were fair minded and wussification was a bad thing that happened to other countries.
Now, we are wussified.
There is nobody in 75 years that has really challenged Ted Williams.
Sure, there were rumblings from George Brett, Rod Carew, and Tony Gwynn. But each of those reveled in Williams achievment after falling short.
On a far smaller scale is a batting championship. There have been 150 batting champions counting each league since Williams hit .406
Batting Champions come and go.
Still, a batting championship means enough to individuals and clubs nowadays to bring out the best in their wussiness.
Remember when Jose Reyes bunted for a base hit, then the Mets pulled him so he could get his batting championship?
And this week, DJ LeMahieu of the Rockies sat out the last four of five of his games so he can win the 'batting championship.
He did this knowing that Daniel Murphy was hurt and couldn't improve.
WUSSINESS!
Murphy pinch hit yesterday. If he'd of gotten a hit, he would win the batting title.
Unfortunately, he lined out.
I know that the record books will simply list fellas like Reyes and LeMahieu as batting champions.
Still, I'll remember HOW they got in those record books.
And appreciate Ted Williams even more.
The wussification of America just gets worse and worse. We're supposed to be the best country in the world.
With the best people in the world. Americans are not afraid to 'go for it' to do whatever is necessary to obtain our goals.
And, we even like to do it with an 'IN YOUR FACE' attitude.
So let me give you a backdrop to a story that makes us proud and then fast forward to modern times, where wussification reigns supreme.......
1941 Was one of the best baseball years ever. Joe DiMaggio's hit streak and the constant, "Did he get one today?" overrode and kept America's minds off what Hitler was doing to Europe.
We were only months away from Pearl Harbor happening.
Still, Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams garnered as many headlines as Hitler and Roosevelt.
While DiMaggio captured the imagination of people across the country with the hitting streak, Williams kept hitting.
He reached the last day of the season hitting .3996
The record books would round up for Williams and give him the magical .400
All he had to do was sit out the doublehader on the last day of the season.
You know the story.
Williams questioned whether it should even be counted as a .400 season were a player to avoid playing.
He played.
He went six for eight in the doubleheader and finished with that magical .406 batting average.
I loved it when Americans were fair minded and wussification was a bad thing that happened to other countries.
Now, we are wussified.
There is nobody in 75 years that has really challenged Ted Williams.
Sure, there were rumblings from George Brett, Rod Carew, and Tony Gwynn. But each of those reveled in Williams achievment after falling short.
On a far smaller scale is a batting championship. There have been 150 batting champions counting each league since Williams hit .406
Batting Champions come and go.
Still, a batting championship means enough to individuals and clubs nowadays to bring out the best in their wussiness.
Remember when Jose Reyes bunted for a base hit, then the Mets pulled him so he could get his batting championship?
And this week, DJ LeMahieu of the Rockies sat out the last four of five of his games so he can win the 'batting championship.
He did this knowing that Daniel Murphy was hurt and couldn't improve.
WUSSINESS!
Murphy pinch hit yesterday. If he'd of gotten a hit, he would win the batting title.
Unfortunately, he lined out.
I know that the record books will simply list fellas like Reyes and LeMahieu as batting champions.
Still, I'll remember HOW they got in those record books.
And appreciate Ted Williams even more.