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Ichiro was really happy last night..............
but the intensity really shows.......
Photo by Pool-Getty
Photo by Kevork Djaneszian- Getty |
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I had intended to skip the World Baseball
Classic finale. I was too
aggravated by the lousy balls and strikes calls in the U.S. loss to
Japan to really enjoy the whole extravaganza anymore.
But….there
was nothing else to watch on a Monday night, not for me anyway, and
this game was really intense. You could tell by just watching. The
crowd was electric. The Japanese pitching was great. Both defenses
chipped in with beautiful and unlikely double plays. There was a great
outfield assist. It was a tight game. All the way……
The Japanese
pitchers seem to have better stuff and more stuff in terms of pitch
variety. They also attack the hitter very intelligently. They’re good
at the technical things, too, such as holding runners on. They have
very good control.
The Japanese on offense were like an Angels
team on steroids. Lots of contact, lots of hits, lots of peskiness on
the bases. But not too much in the way of power. But if you like
sacrifices, and moving the runner over, Japan is your team.
If
Japan was like the Angels, Korea was like the Yankees, but with a way
better defense. The pitching was good but not great. But they had some
big guys who could put the ball over the wall. And did.
The
game’s recap today by most accounts focused on Ichiro’s hit in the
extra inning to drive in two. But that wasn’t the story of the game at
all. Not really. There had been a lot of baseball playing on both sides
before that.
A few plays come immediately to mind, Ichiro’s
perfect bunt laid down the third base line, the Japanese left fielder’s
perfect short-hop stop, wheel and throw to second to nail a very
surprised Korean. There were some very timely double-plays by the
Koreans.
The Japanese presence on the bases all night long was
all too evident. But they couldn’t do anything with it. Those Korean
defenders were stout and stalwart every time they had to be. Meanwhile,
the Koreans couldn’t get anything going early.
But Korea hung
tough and finally tied it in the fifth when the monster Choo powered
one over the wall. After falling behind again, they came within one
when another big fella hit a looong sacrifice fly. And they finally
tied it in the ninth on a two-out clutch single through the hole by one
of the Lee’s.
If there’s anything that’s hard to really follow
about Korea, it’s the number of Lees. I’m pretty sure there were four
of them, and most of them did something important in the course of the
game. There were also two Kims. I guess it’s no different than our
Smiths and Joneses but I can’t recall seeing 4 Joneses and 2 Smiths in
a game. I could be wrong.
The disappointing thing is that we’ll
all have to read accounts of how we have fallen behind the Asians, and
to a lesser extent the Latinos, in our national pastime. And I don’t
think that’s true, or at least, not totally true.
We didn’t send
our best players but the players we did send could have been better
prepared to play if the Classic wasn’t held in March. On the pitching
side of things especially, our guys looked raw. Peavy got creamed and
so did Oswalt. I don’t think that’d be happening in October.
There
was no Matt Holliday or Lance Berkman either. There was no Derrick Lee.
I would have loved to have seen Joba out there on a few occasions.
There are a heck of a lot of pitchers we could have used, but how many
of them would have been any good in March? The timing of this thing is
just really inconvenient.
While I think MLB would rather have
this thing just go away, I don’t think that’s going to happen. And it
shouldn’t happen. We can adjust our schedules every three years to make
sure we’re prepared to field a team in March, selecting not only our
best players, but also our most prepared players.
After the
World Series in 2011, we select the team we plan on fielding in March.
We keep them in shape, targeting March as the period of their best
conditioning. We work these guys on playing as a team. We make sure
they know all about hitting the cutoff man, bunting, hitting to the
right side, you know, the things nobody in American baseball cares
about anymore.
That doesn’t mean we’d win necessarily, but we’d
have a hell of a lot better shot. We were a called third strike away
from beating Japan the other night. We had to play a utility guy,
DeRosa (who did a hell of a job by the way) at first base because we
couldn’t find another. That’s obviously not optimal.
If
there’s anything good about it, it makes it rather obvious this Classic
didn’t have our full attention. So what have we really lost? But I’m
sure our opponents don’t feel that way, nor do their fans. To them,
Japan is the best baseball team in the world.
And that’s why we
can’t just ignore the Classic anymore. As painful as it may be to
change our ways and our timing, we have to treat the Classic as if it
were the Championship of the World. The World Series sadly is just an
American affair.
Besides, overall, we still have the best
baseball in the world. If we didn’t, we wouldn’t have guys like Ichiro
playing with the Mariners or Dice K, the MVP of the Classic for the
second time, playing for the Red Sox. Beltran, Delgado, Santana,
Reyes…..they’d all be playing at their respective homes.
Whatever
the truth may be, and the truth is sometimes too elusive to even take a
guess at, there can be no doubt whatsoever that this Classic has added
a new dimension to baseball, as much as we may dislike the notion. Be
happy!
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