The Four

Ninety nine Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1353/nin.2023.0010
Cary Heinz
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

The Four Cary Heinz (bio) It was spring. I love spring. One of the things I like most about spring is the return of our national pastime. Baseball. Listen to the speech by James Earl Jones in Field of Dreams. If you’re reading this, those words probably give you goose bumps. The problem was, it was the spring of 2020. Baseball wasn’t the only thing missing. We were trapped in our homes, many working from there, staring endlessly at computer screens. The NCAA tournament was canceled (my college roommate and I had a thirty- four-year annual bet paused), and the NBA postponed their season and finished it in a “bubble” in Disney World. Spring training stopped, and a shortened sixty- game season followed in late July without fans. It was surreal. With no live games, I turned to the MLB channel, noting they were filling time with any baseball content imaginable, including old movies and documentaries. Robert Redford broke a lot of lights that spring. One night after working remotely numbed my brain, I sat down on the couch with a cold beer and rewatched Ken Burns’s Baseball. I was a happy man. I am on record stating he could make a documentary explaining how Q-tips are made and it would be interesting. When this first appeared in the fall of 1994, it was much like his 1990 work The Civil War. It was long, it was interesting, and it was really good. Watching it now, as I approach the age of sixty, I am a far different man then when I viewed the original broadcast. During the episode “The Seventh Inning,” which covered the 1950s, the black- and- white ghosts, men I grew up watching now appeared in color. An amazing photograph appeared on my screen: Henry Aaron, Ernie Banks, Willie Mays, and Frank Robinson, the icons of my youth. Their faces were printed on cardboard rectangles, statistics on the back. These artifacts were the foundation of my baseball card collection I saved from my mother. She gave a treasure trove of comic books from the 1960s, which I’m sure would have little value today with the popularity of superhero movies. Excuse my sarcasm, but it still hurts. All these years later, however, I still have the cards. [End Page 104] These aren’t just four ghosts from baseball’s past; they had a remarkable amount in common. All were first- ballot Hall of Fame selections, four of the first eighteen chosen that way since 1936. Each of them hit five hundred home runs, four of the first eleven to do so. All were an MVP twice (except, inexplicably, Aaron), won at least one Golden Glove, lived past the age of eighty, and were awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor. Banks, Mr. Cub, even had the distinction of being presented his medal by a White Sox fan, Barack Obama. I coincidentally thought of four words, all beginning with C, to describe each: Aaron, consistency; Banks, cheerfulness; Mays, charisma; and Robinson, competitiveness. Each word matches their temperament and playing style. Their statistics are legendary, especially when looked at in a Street & Smith’s Official 1978 Yearbook, the first published after their careers had ended. That was a different era, and in that context and perspective their numbers are better appreciated. At the time, all were in the top ten in home runs, hitting a combined 2,513 dingers. They played 11,626 games and created 15, 558 runs (runs scored and runs batted in). Their cumulative total base numbers added up to thirty- nine miles. They rapped out 12,580 hits and 2,082 doubles. All but Banks stole over two hundred bases, and they appeared in sixty-four All- Star rosters. Each was an All- Star more than ten times.1 Today, with the baseball that’s been played since Henry Aaron and Frank Robinson retired after the 1976 season, it’s difficult to appreciate just how good they were. In the past forty-five years, we have had a steroid era and baseballs that many have accused of being juiced. There now are twenty- eight players who...
这四个
加里·海因茨(传记)这是春天。我喜欢春天。我最喜欢春天的一件事就是我们的全民娱乐活动的回归。棒球。请听詹姆斯·厄尔·琼斯在《梦幻之地》中的演讲。如果你正在读这篇文章,这些话可能会让你起鸡皮疙瘩。问题是,那是2020年的春天。棒球并不是唯一缺少的东西。我们被困在家里,许多人在家里工作,无休止地盯着电脑屏幕。NCAA锦标赛取消了(我的大学室友和我有一个三十五年的年度赌注暂停),NBA推迟了他们的赛季,并在迪斯尼世界的一个“泡沫”中结束了它。春训停止了,在没有球迷的情况下,一个缩短了的60场比赛的赛季在七月末开始了。这是超现实的。由于没有现场比赛,我转向MLB频道,注意到他们正在用任何可以想象的棒球内容填充时间,包括老电影和纪录片。那年春天,罗伯特·雷德福打碎了很多灯。一天晚上,在远程工作让我的大脑麻木之后,我坐在沙发上,喝着冰啤酒,又看了一遍肯·伯恩斯的《棒球》。我是一个快乐的人。我在声明中说,他可以制作一部纪录片,解释棉签是如何制作的,这将会很有趣。当这本书在1994年秋天首次出现时,它很像他1990年的作品《内战》。很长,很有趣,而且非常棒。年近六旬的我现在再看这部剧,与当初看这部剧的时候判若两人。在讲述20世纪50年代的《第七局》(the Seventh Inning)一集中,我从小看着那些黑白相间的鬼魂和男人出现在了彩色画面中。一张惊人的照片出现在我的屏幕上:亨利·亚伦、厄尼·班克斯、威利·梅斯和弗兰克·罗宾逊,他们都是我年轻时的偶像。他们的脸印在长方形硬纸板上,背后是统计数字。这些文物是我从母亲那里保存下来的棒球卡收藏的基础。她送给我的是20世纪60年代的漫画书宝库,我敢肯定,随着超级英雄电影的流行,这些漫画书在今天已经没有什么价值了。原谅我的讽刺,但还是很伤人。然而,这么多年过去了,我还留着这些卡片。这不仅仅是棒球历史上的四个幽灵;他们有很多共同点。所有人都是名人堂的第一轮投票,自1936年以来的前18位中有4位是通过这种方式选出的。他们每个人都打出了500支本垒打,是前11名中的4名。他们都是两次最有价值球员(令人费解的是,亚伦除外),至少赢得过一次金手套奖,活过80岁,并被授予总统自由勋章,这是美国平民的最高荣誉。班克斯甚至有幸被白袜队(White Sox)球迷巴拉克•奥巴马(Barack Obama)授予了勋章。我碰巧想到了四个词,都以C开头,来描述每一个:Aaron,一致性;银行、快乐;梅斯,魅力;罗宾逊,竞争力。每个单词都符合他们的气质和演奏风格。他们的统计数据是传奇的,尤其是在1978年Street & Smith的官方年鉴中,这是他们职业生涯结束后第一次出版。那是一个不同的时代,在那种背景和视角下,他们的数量更受欢迎。当时,他们都是全垒打排名前十的球员,总共击出了2513个扣球。他们共打了11,626场比赛,创造了15,558分(得分和跑垒)。他们的总基数加起来有三十九英里。他们打出了12580支安打和2082支安打。除了班克斯之外,所有人都偷了200多个垒,他们出现在64个全明星名单上。每个人都有十次以上入选全明星今天,自从亨利·亚伦和弗兰克·罗宾逊在1976赛季后退役以来,棒球一直在进行,很难欣赏他们有多好。在过去的45年里,我们经历了一个类固醇时代,许多人指责棒球是果汁。现在有二十八名球员……
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