Almost Perfect: Why I Love Baseball

I didn’t think I’d be making any posts here about the Texas Rangers this season. However, this baseball fan can’t help but comment on last night’s amazing performance by Yu Darvish. The drama that unfolded last night summarizes everything that is amazing about the game of baseball. I was watching the Dodgers game and generally winding down the day, when Vin Scully commented that Darvish had thrown seven perfect innings. With apologies to Mr. Scully, I immediately searched the DirecTV guide and switched to the Rangers’ game. In general, it wasn’t much of a game. The Rangers rapidly pulled ahead to a 7 – 0 lead. However, Darvish was “poetry in motion”. When I turned the game on, he had thrown something like 107 pitches, of which 74 were strikes. Wow.

Soon enough, he had sent 26 batters back to the bench in the order he saw them. He had struck out 14 of those. We were down to the last batter, Marwin Gonzalez, and then there it was: a hard single right up the middle – between Darvish’s legs, in fact. I joined all baseball fans in our nation-wide group scream. I felt awful for the guy, but dang, what a performance!

But then, this is why I love baseball. You can have edge-of-the-seat suspense, waiting with the possibility of ultimate perfection. Then, you can have the range of emotion, from Darvish’s smile of relief after the hit to his look of utter devastation in the dugout after he left the game. And this morning, the bittersweet look back at what it could have been and what it was. And what was it? One of the best pitching performances you will ever see, and some of the best drama ever performed before an audience.

Thank you, Yu Darvish!

After last night, I am now even more convinced that the 2013 season is going to be one of the best baseball seasons ever.

Bottom Line…

Here is the bottom line about the Norfolk Tides’ prospects for the first part of the new season: the bench depth right now in Baltimore means that the Tides are going to field a team that could beat many major league teams. Take a look at the players that have been sent to us over the last few days:

  • Jurrjens (RHP)
  • Hendrickson (LHP)
  • Dickerson (OF)
  • Garcia (RHP)
  • Hoes (LF)
  • Pridie (CF)
  • Jackson (RF)
  • Robinson (OF)
  • Gausman (RHP)
  • Ishikawa (1B)

They are joining what was shaping up to be a strong roster earlier in the spring. This is the best team we’ve seen since at least 2005. The other good news is that I don’t believe we’re going to see the “revolving door” that we came to know last season, with 75 different players and 25 different pitchers coming through Harbor Park during the course of the year. All in all, we Tides fans have a lot to look forward to in 2013.

And on the sixth day…

So here we are, six days away from Opening Day at Harbor Park.  (Well, six days, five hours, and fifty-two minutes, but who’s counting?) New season, new blog. I have 6-4-3 all loaded up on my tablet and ready to go, and will be buying my ticket for Thursday night online so I don’t end up with another hour-plus wait in line at the ballpark like last year.

This year at Harbor Park is going to be one of the best yet. I was just going over the roster and noticed that L.J. Hoes will be back in the outfield, and we’ll get a look at Travis Ishikawa at first. And, lefty Daniel Schlereth (son of Mark for you Redskins and/or Hill and Schlereth fans) will be starting the season with us, fresh from his trade from Detroit. I know he’d rather be in Baltimore, but selfishly, I’m looking forward to some good publicity for the Tides from his dad’s radio show.

Nothing much going on today…but that will soon change. I’ll post a link to the opening day roster as soon as I get it.