The Mets come to town tomorrow, and this is no mere home opener. As I'm sure you know, we got crazy beef with the Mets thanks to that time Pedro Martinez and assorted New York relievers were permitted to pelotically assault as many Nationals as they desired, while the one attempt by the Nats to respond was greeted with ejections and suspensions. It was -- and here I step out from behind my ironic blogging facade -- a goddamn travesty, and MLB is ensuring that it's only getting worse.
Major League Baseball's vice president of on-field operations, Bob Watson, said the teams will be aware that no further incidents will be tolerated."There is a heads-up in place," Watson said. "But there's no conversation with the clubs. It's the normal provisions in place for a situation like this, but we expect them to just play ball."
What that means: this series with the Mets will have a preemptive warning on it. Which is to say, the first guy throw at someone gets ejected and suspended. This means the Nats will never be able to even the score except by pulling off a sweep, and I'm not willing to cling to that vague hope. Not to mention the fact that some 5,000 paying fans plus the Vice President of the United States of America are going to miss out on what should have been a rad beanball war. And while we don't really go in for topical, Bill Maher-style political commentary here at Distinguished Senators, I think we can all agree that that seems like the kind of thing Cheney would enjoy.
So what we have here is Bob Watson and the stuffed shirts at Major League Baseball preventing what has to happen and what everyone wants to see. I wonder if there's a bit of specious, infernal gnomic wisdom that would apply to such a situation . . .As the catterpiller chooses the fairest leaves to lay her eggs on, so the priest lays his curse on the fairest joys.
William Blake, ladies and gentlemen! Give him a hand.
3 comments:
pelotically assault
That's freaking brilliant.
"The Nationals aren’t a real team; they’re wards of the state, orphans. They’re owned by 29 men who benefit from their failure. Their TV rights are controlled by Orioles owner Peter Angelos, the one person who has the most to gain from fan disinterest. The current management team, waiting for the inevitable pink slips that will accompany new ownership, performs with no incentive, and it shows. A rich rival’s rich prima donna pitcher slaps you around and the umps just stand there and let it happen? They punish you when you dare to fight back? It’s all part of being the Orphans – everyone but you knows how helpless you are."
I've never seen it said so spot-on. It's like the entire DC baseball community is being taken for suckers. Makes me hope against hope that the antitrust exemption gets overturned, but given how weak antitrust law has become in America how likely is that?
SPECIOUS, BY GOD.
--The Editor
Post a Comment