MY OLD FLAME

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WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. News & Comment by John F. Bailey. April 10, 2022:

She still looked the same. Beautiful as ever, I must admit. Able to hit the ball out of my heart’s park with one look, still after all these years.

Demure as always in the crisp dazzle spring sun, colorful, she is something to see she really catches the eye.

She is once again my personal fascination. The tingle is back. The high. The glow.

I did not want to fall again,  I was through with her after the way she treated me for years but after three shows Friday, and I knew it was Opening Day at the big ball park, the new big ballpark. She of course had changed, this first love of mine.

For years, whenever she came into my mist of memory, I dismissed her as her suitors made her change because they could never make enough money. Because they hated the players and wanted them to change the game. Favorite players left teams they had been with for years, as one suitor (baseball owner) usually with more money wooed them. Pennants were bought. The playoffs were created allowing more teams to appear to have a chance to win.

The suitors impaired her performance by condoning for a decade, steroids and players in their “Walk years” took steroids to bulk up have a tremendous year then go off the roids the first year of their new contract and somehow they were not as good. They forgot the best interests of her, (baseball my love), and put themselves ahead of the team like their own owners.

These handlers of hers changed her to no longer the love of my life. I did not watch games for years. Ignored the playoffs. Never watched an inning of the World Series.

Instead I helped my daughter develop her skills in the game, giving her the marvelous experience of playing the hardest game, where you have to overcome fear, deal with failure, put an error or strikeout behind you–and nothing like driving in the winning run.

“There’s no crying in baseball,” as Tom Hanks said in A League of Their Own.

But a strange force drew me to the YES Network Friday at 1:13 PM, in time to catch the first pitch of the Yankee Opening Day Game.

The beauty of the park in the sun brought tears to my eyes. And sure enough the juiced ball homers flew out of the park in the very first inning. The Yankee Starter was having trouble locating, the umpire behind the plate was squeezing both pitchers throughout the game by his inconsistency. 

But for some reason I could not turn it off.

On through the afternoon the game flowed. Strikeouts by undisciplined hitters swinging at amazing diving, darting pitches by a parade of 17 pitchers in 11 innings showed me something.

In the efforts to afflict pitching performances to juice not only the  baseball (so hot, you feel the rabbit’s heart beating inside when you grip it) that is like handgrenade exploding off the wooden bats jacking on lines to the not-too-distant stands to lowering the mound, envisioning a pitch clock  to keep each delay between pitches to 20 seconds, and keeping relief pitchers to pitch to three batters. (So many changes not explained explicitly by the announcers to the fans during the game.)

But the game wound on building in drama as the relief pitcher parade began. The Red Sox leftfielder saved 4 Yankee runs with two diving  one hand glove (“put a star in your scorebook”) catches in the  5th and 7th off Yankee hitters with bombers on the bases.

Then the Red Sox tied it on a homer. Into the 10th it went. Boston scored with a Red Sox player actually hitting the ball to the right side to move the “Ghost Runner” to second to third. And with runners at first and third  the Yankee manager brings the infield in, and the ball goes through. Putting Boston ahead. New York ties it up in the bottom of the 10th and  stops the Fenways in the 11th with the Yankees 8th pitcher. In the bottom of the 11th, Boston is forced to bring in a pitcher with only one game of major league experience. The first batter hits one through the infield which is in half way, an up the middle grounder, shortstop and second base diving to block it but missing and the Ghost Runner scoring the winning run

This was a great game I could not tear myself away from. What makes a great game?: Building anxiety.

There were chances every inning. Strikeouts from the undisciplined desire of hitters to hit the out.  The game lasted 4 hours with all the things that make baseball great. The homerun, because they are a cheap shot enhanced by the lively ball and the shrunken strike zone, has become an anticlimactic event. 

I saw the value of a great outfielder. The leftfielder playing shallow could have thrown out the Red Sox tying run at the plate because the left fielder’s  throw was long enough and ahead of the runner coming in but threw wide of the plate.

I saw a trend: pitchers are adjusting.

The commentators said consistently (from the mezzanine press box) consistently the strike out pitch or the ball that was hit was a “slider,” It was funny after while, I was seeing “sliders” that not only slid, nuit dropped sharply and to the left or right, swerved dipped rose, looking like pitches that had a lot on them, a lot of what I don’t know.

Baseball is always herself, she adjusts. Whole teams cheat.

Players adjust. Managers are successful when they know how to adjust. No one adjusts more than the pitchers.  Managers now know that shifts are going to be outlawed next year and they are going to have to compensate. Defensive ability (speed, agility, jump on the ball, and strong arm accuracy has to be there to throw out runners at the plate from the outfield).

Range of players on the infield has to improve, but you cannot depend on good field no hit infielders. Hitting weaknesses in the lineup hurt you. The Red Sox were held to 7 runs in two games by two games  where the starters only went 4 innings. This cannot be continued by teams throwing 17 pitchers a game. The Yankee bullpen with the terrifying Toronto Blue Jays coming to town may be done before the end of April

Baseball turned my head again, as she always does. No penalty flags or fouls called in the last seconds save you in baseball. You have to get them out. No clock saves you.

And you know, I fell for the sportswriters lines about baseball dying. They always say that. They said the same thing in the late 1960s about pitchers being too dominating, they brought in the Designated hitter; in the 70s the players won free agency thanks to Curt Flood and Lou Brock.

Everybody said it was terrible, but the wealthy teams purchased the good players. It is still happening. In the 20s and 30s they traded for the good players now they buy them.

I do not want to hear  about low-scoring games being boring. Or games being too long. Who says that? At 75 to 80 bucks a seat, you want long games.

The sportscasters, sportswriters, and columnists do not because they have to sit there.  The papers do not include box scores.  They write about soccer, golf, tennis, the NCAA basketball tournament and the Pro football league which has incredible inconsistency of officiating that too often decides games and bets.

Baseball showed me a lot in a game that had all the things people say is wrong about baseball on full display. But the game compensated. The players played hard. The pitchers pitched out of tight spots. Managers showed signs of learning to bring back the sacrifice, game situation strategy particularly in the starting a runner on second in extra innings.

The strategy of positioning players in in the infield, straightaway or shifted, changes. Managers should take in some fast pitch softball tiebreakers where the objective in the tiebreaker with the “Ghost Runner” starting on second is to DEFEND THIRD BASE,….prevent the runner from advancing to third when the ball is hit to an infielder on the ground and tagging the runner at third.

The other thing is to walk the first batter, setting up the infield fly situation, if the ball is popped up.

If the ball is hit into a double play try the DP by going to third first, and then back to second. Once you get to 2 outs and runner on second. You can return to the pitcher in charge.

Setting up the double play is a key to getting out of trouble in a runner on second nobody out situation.

Managers have become so out of touch with strategies of moving the runner, and leaning to statistics glorifying guys who strike out a lot, hit .220 or .250 and hit 40 homers (most with bases empty), that the ability to hit to the opposite field (as John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman tell you every game you listen to) or bunt to move the runner is not often used. Managers also have to do away with the pitch count curse that mediocre pitching coaches have invented to keep jobs in organized baseball.

You never forget your old flame. The passion is there. Ready to be inflamed again. I have not felt so GOOD in weeks, after watching that game Friday.

She’s different now that’s all.

The talent is better. The gloves quick. The drama is there. One swing of the bat and one big connection is always there.

So is the game-saving catch the greatest play you ever see and you replay the ones you saw in your mind when you see itl

All the thrill of the game is captured in my poem below.

I love being in love again.

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OPENING DAY: STILL THE BEST DAY OF THE YEAR

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WPCNR Press Box. April 10, 2022:  

They’re getting ready at the Big Ball Park.

Today the Bronx Bombers return to Yankee Stadium.  In the honor of Opening Day, WPCNR brings back this original celebration I wrote about why Opening Day is the best day of the year

OPENING DAY is better than Christmas Day,
When you look out  and know they’ll play,
Dreary gray or brilliant spring sunray
Opening Day means The Big Show is back today.

Decades past, Opening Day for fanatics starved,
Eager for  sharp crack of ash on horsehide carved;
Pennants snapping in northwest winds
Top ramparts of inviting walls arches  and sculpted friezes wistfully escarped. 

Fans lucky to get away with ducats
Marvel at flannels sharp whites pristeen,
To play in the warm zephyrs in NY blazened caps,
Dashing specks of white warmup on the greenest green.

Motor cars pant in  traffic jams on the Deegan,
DowYawkey Way, on 35th and Shields or Waveland’s jam.
The first glimpse of storied Park,
The place where ball is played, where ghosts of Ted, Babe, Duke
Mel, Spahnie, Whitey, Mickey, Willie, Yaz, Minnie and Sandy lark.

Pay a fortune to park, pass stogie smoking old men
at the same gates for a hundred years,

Now out into the street 

You go, aroma of roasting chestnuts, pungent cigars sweet,

Cries of “scorecard heah” “programs,heah” shout out, neath light towers to heaven.

Fans in cap and uniform, little boys and girls gawk in awe hoping to make the Anthem
Never seeing such sheer walls, topped with the legend “GameToday 1:30 PM.”

Clutching slim cardboard tix to Section 14 Upper Deck up to the turnstiles
Festooned with souvenirs more dear as diamonds, beyond, the lure of endless aisles.

Into  press of crowd, grizzled usher,

RIPS YOUR TICKET.
Turnstile turns, clicks, and into the cathedral of ball you go
Into the rotunda greeted with magic signs dazzling the senses —
UPPER LEVELS SECTIONS 1 to 39, 2 to 40

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Hawkers shout –Voices of Flatbush — colorful books in hand

“Yearbook heah,” “Dodger Yearbook here,” “Hot dog, heah,”
Assail  ears! Up ramps you climb to the sign “NEXT HOMESTAND”

Walking the catwalk,sliver of blue is first look of the magic sphere
Into the sunlight splaying the vast rake of the mighty stand.

Below are baseball knights of the diamond in white hues
Cavorting, snapping throws across immaculate red clay
As majestic fungo bats — CRACK! send white spheres soaring to filling bleachers a mile away,
Bunting flutter from the deck rails red, white and true blues.

Old Glory furls on  highest pole in centerfield
Colorful signage deliver the manly flavor of the only real game,
GILLETTE To Look Sharp, The Red Sox use Lifeboy, Schaefer It’s A Hit
Hey, Neighbor Have a Gansett, White Owl Cigars, Hit Sign Win Suit

From old friendly walls, to Gladys Gooding on the organ
Comfy old green scoreboard display
Today’s games in the bigs BETTER THAN CNN
CHI CLE BOS DET, CHI STL, NY WAS make you king for a day.
Two Bits for a scorecard, usher wipes your seat, ballpark fills your heart.

Penciling lineup 42 2B, 1 SS, 14 1B, 4 CF, 39 C, 6 RF, 23 LF 19 3B 36 P

Smell of beer, peanuts and pretzels.

Nippy air, warm rays sink into face feels nice,

Starters wheel,deal, kicking high on sidelines fueling expectancy

Men in blue, arms folded solemnly conduct the home plate regimen
Casey, Ralph , Walter, Joe,Sparky exchange lineup cards and knowing
Ground rules by heart, go over them for ritual’s sake.
Bob Shepard “The Voice of God” entones “Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Welcome to Yankee Stadium.”

“Please rise for the playing of our national anthem,”
Nancy Faust at organ note by note renders baseball’s theme song
Rising on the breeze, uniting do-rag and ball cap,
Fedora, ponytail and bouffant in the spirit of the great game.

Grass is never greener on opening days
Strikes are louder, long drives electrify alleys
Beers with whiter than white high creamy heads, Taste crisp cold mellow best brew you drink all year

Smashes laser through short in the gap in raucous rallies

Magicians without wands start 6-4-3s, (if you’re scoring at home)

Backhand sure hits losing their caps

“Oh what a play”s crackle on WGN with “CUBS WIN!”‘S

Jack and Mel, Vince, Red, Curt and Murph , Gussie, Marty, John and Suzyn , Ernie, The Gunner, are back at mikes turning mundane days

Into joy with a ninth inning elixir and “happy recaps”

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The Great Pete Rose, “Charlie Hustle” at the Plate,1975, Wrigley Field (Photo by John Bailey)

Thunderous ROARS AWARD the 2-out winner again creating big kids’ grins.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK MONDAY NIGHT THE APRIL 8 NEWS ROUNDUP AT 7:00 WITH GUEST ANCHOR WESTCHESTER TALK RADIO NEWSMAN BOB MARRONE ON FIOS CH 45 & IN WHITE PLAINS OPTIMUM CH 76 AND www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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THE 2022-23 CITY BUDGET STORY–WHAT WHITE PLAINS NEEDS TO KNOW
WHAT’S UP, WHAT’S DOWN, WHAT YOU’LL PAY THE CITY
THE WEEK IN COVID SO FAR IS NOT GOING WELL.
THE VOTING DISTRICT CONTROVERSY–AS IT STANDS TONIGHT
COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER INTRODUCES SCHOLARSHIPS FOR CHILD CARE
EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: WHITE PLAINS TV COVERAGE OF THE HARRIET TUBMAN STATUE ARRIVAL IN WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA
JOHN BAILEY AND BOB MARRONE AND THE NEWS ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK THIS WEEK MONDAY AT 7

PLUS BOB MARRONE ON THE HOMELESS MIRACLE THIS YEAR

WHY PEOPLE BECOME HOMELESS,

THE RUSSO-UKRAINE WAR AND THE AMERICAN ATTITUDE;

THE HARRIET TUBMAN STATUE ARRIVAL

MORE LOCAL “LIFT YOU RIGHT OUT OF YOUR CHAIR” NEWS THAN ANY OTHER 28 MINUTES YOU CAN WATCH

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GOVERNOR HOCHUL: WE HAVE AGREEMENT ON NY STATE 2022-23 BUDGET

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Governor Kathy Hochul today announced an agreement to address key priorities in the Fiscal Year 2023 New York State Budget. This bold and fiscally responsible plan makes historic investments in communities across the State that will bring relief to New Yorkers recovering from the pandemic and launch New York’s economic comeback.

The State’s reserves in this plan will increase to a record level of 15 percent of State Operating Funds spending by FY 2025, as proposed by the Governor in her Executive Budget.

“As we make our comeback from the COVID-19 pandemic we are embracing this once-in-a-generation opportunity to usher in a whole new era for New York, with a bold budget that brings much-needed economic relief to New Yorkers and looks to the future with historic investments in education, health care and infrastructure,” Governor Hochul said. “This agreement brings us closer to an enacted budget and makes good on our promise of a stronger, safer, more inclusive and more prosperous New York State. I thank Majority Leader Stewart-Cousins and Speaker Heastie for this collaborative process. I look forward to continuing to work with my colleagues in state government to enact a budget that delivers for all New Yorkers.”

The historic budget will include major priorities that deliver for New Yorkers, including:

  • Tax relief for middle-class New Yorkers and small businesses;
  • Suspending fuel taxes to tackle the high cost of gasoline which has surged in recent months as a result of the war in Ukraine;
  • Helping to support small businesses most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, like restaurants, by authorizing the sale of to-go alcoholic beverages;
  • Billions of dollars to rebuild the health care workforce, support home care workers, and build the health care system of the future;
  • A historic investment in education to strengthen our higher education institutions and support our teachers and school employees;
  • Increasing funding for and access to child care;
  • A historic investment in pandemic recovery funding;
  • A comprehensive housing plan to make living in New York more affordable;
  • A record-level investment in a five-year transportation infrastructure plan;
  • A record investment in clean energy infrastructure, climate resiliency and preservation;
  • Improving ethics oversight and restoring trust in state government by replacing JCOPE with a new Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government; and
  • Moving forward toward a safer, more just New York by cracking down on the trafficking of illegal guns, stopping the cycle of repeat offenders, protecting the victims of domestic violence and hate crimes, and investing in mental health infrastructure.

With a conceptual agreement in place the legislative houses are expected to pass bills that will enact these priorities.

Since the Governor proposed her Executive Budget in January, additional revenue has been forecast and surplus funds have been realized. The total budget for FY 2023 is currently estimated at approximately $220 billion, based on a preliminary assessment of the negotiated changes to the Executive proposal.

The spending plan will include the $2 billion for pandemic assistance that Governor Hochul indicated was available for use when the Executive Budget was released in January, but had not been included as a spending line-item.  

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WE MADE HISTORY TODAY: FIRST BLACK WOMAN SUPREME COURT JUSTICE.

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. April 7, 2022:

We just made history, John . Another glass ceiling was shattered today as the Senate voted to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court.

As a Black boy growing up in Orangeburg, South Carolina, I never saw enough government leaders who looked like me.

So today, I’m thinking of everyone who didn’t get to see this incredible day, more than 200 years in the making, come: My grandfather, who was born at a time when Black people were often denied the right to vote.

Constance Baker Motley, our country’s first African American woman to serve as a federal judge, who broke barrier after barrier. So many ancestors who fought for equal justice under the law.

Earlier today, I fought back tears as the Senate voted to confirm Judge Jackson — recognizing full well that this is the kind of history that’s only possible when we elect Democrats. That’s why I’m all in for the mission we have ahead. Because, y’all, it’s so important that we keep building on this progress.

Make no mistake: we have a lot of work to do, but if today’s vote proved one thing, it’s that when Democrats are in charge, we deliver results for the American people. That’s why the DNC is making historic investments in grassroots infrastructure, on-the-ground organizing, and voter protection to help protect and expand our Democratic majorities this November.

Jaime

Jaime Harrison
Chair
Democratic National Committee

Chair Jaime Harrison
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