|
Jim Bouton comes in from the cold
I dont know who said, "The personal is political," but it sure wasnt a sportswriter. While the official theme of Saturdays Old-Timers Day at Yankee Stadium was "A Celebration of the 1978 World Championship Team," the real story was Jim Boutons return to Yankee Stadium after 30 years in exile. And while there was a deliciously ironic connection between the two happenings, the media hordes missed it in the search for the perfect tearjerker sound bite.
You know Boutons story by now. The former 20-game winner had been explicity uninvited to the Old-Timers Day festivities since the publication of his controversial book, Ball Four. Last year, his daughter Laurie was killed in a car crash, and his son Michael, unbeknownst to Dad, wrote a letter to The New York Times on Fathers Day suggesting that it was time to let bygones be bygones and invite Bouton to the annual event. The Yankees agreed. That kind of human-interest story could push a building collapse off the front page, and last weekend saw reporters and news crews hanging on Boutons every word.
Bouton more than obliged, providing everything from self-deprecating tales about playing for Mommas Pizza in a fast-pitch league "It always discouraged me when the kids would warm me up without a mask" to a crafted-for-the-occasion Berra-ism about his former batterymate and fellow Old Timers Day exile. "If Yogi doesnt want to come, nobody can stop him." When he talked about the daughter hed lost and the gift his son had given him, there wasnt a dry eye in the clubhouse. But in a way, this easy mix of the glib and melancholy obscured the bigger story.
On one level, Boutons return was like "Sammy the Bull" Gravano chowing down at the Gotti family picnic. With Ball Four, Bouton broke baseballs omerta, but without a witness protection program. Forget about beaver shooting and Mickeys hungover home run, he wrote about the games last taboo: money. While it may be an exaggeration to call Ball Four a polictial manifesto, it wasnt the locker room pranks but its influence in helping to tumble baseballs reserve clause that landed it on the New York Public Librarys 100 "Books of the Century" list alongside the Autobiography of Malcolm X.
Bouton understands that his legacy transcends fathers-playing-catch-with-sons sentimentality and steered the conversation toward the M-word. Recalling that then commissioner Bowie Kuhn tried to browbeat him into signing a statement apologizing for Ball Four, he got to the heart of the controversy. "The owners and the commissioner were afraid that a judge or a congressman or an arbitrator would read it, and mabye theyd lose their antitrust exemption." But eveyr time Bouton talked about the big picture, down went the pens, off went the tape recorders.
On another level, Ball Four made the afternoons other celebration possible. If not for Bouton and his book, the free-agent spending spree that landed Catfish Hunter, Reggie Jackson, Tommy John, and Goose Gossage might not have happened, and the 1978 World Championship celebration wouldve moved to Fenway Park. And without Ball Four, there wouldve been no "Bronx Zoo," and the behind-the-scenes turmoil of that epic pennant race would have remained just that.
What would baseball be like if not for Ball Four and the owners pettiness that inspired it? Perched in the dugout, Bouton indulged in a little might-have-been. "They should have just raised the minimum salary from $8000 to $10,000 and then raised it a thousand dollars a year for the next 50 years," he suggested. "The ballplayers would have been happy. We never would have said a word and the football players and basketball players wouldnt have had an example to follow. And all athletes would be making sportswriter money today, which is what they made in the 60s."
Maybe that would make Bud Selig happy, but is sure wouldnt please the afternoons host. When it comes right down to it, has anyone benefited more from baseballs New World Order than George Steinbrenner?
In a more just and logical world, Jim Bouton would have returned to Yankee Stadium as a conquering hero, hailed by George and the Yankee millionaires who owe their nonsportswriterlike salaries to him. Instead Bouton got a short sitting ovation, overshadowed by the lustier cheers for Dave Righetti and Graig Nettles.
It was a nice day and a long time coming. But baseballs first Bolshevik arguably its last deserved better.
|