By Special Contributor Bob Golon
I hope everyone is having an enjoyable and safe
summer. I’m sorry I haven’t written in the past few weeks, and I will readily
explain why. I have found myself to be in a “bad place” recently concerning the
topics that I normally write about. Every motivation that I’ve had to write has
been the result of anger; anger at the way money and greed is ruining the
game(s) that I love, anger at the ongoing steroids saga in Major League
Baseball, anger at the boorish behavior of some of today’s athletes, and so on.
Quite frankly, I’d rather withhold my anger and not burden you, the reader,
with it.
Oh, there have been some bright spots. Seeing “the
Franchise,” Tom Seaver, throw out the first pitch at the All-Star game at Citi
Field was a treat and a wonderful trip down memory lane. Seeing “the Captain,”
Derek Jeter, hit a home run on the first pitch he saw on returning from the
disabled list this past Sunday is a reminder of just how much we’re going to
miss him when he finally hangs up the spikes. And, he certainly trumps some of
the recent actions of his more inglorious teammate, Alex Rodriguez.
Vin Scully |
A native of the Bronx, Scully joined the Brooklyn Dodgers broadcast team as a mere 23-year-old in 1950, at the invitation of the great announcer Red Barber, and has been spreading the joy of baseball to his audiences for 63 years since. Scully is credited for the success of the Dodgers in Los Angeles after their move from Brooklyn in 1958, as the early LA fans used to bring transistor radios in to the
park and listen to Vin Scully “teaching” them the game of major league baseball. His is quite a legacy, and he is quite a man, as Kay’s interview attests to.
Thanks Vin!
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