"MODERN TIMES"
GIVING
OUR SECRETS TO THE RUSSIANS
Lloyd
Garver
It's happened again. There's been a serious
national security leak. This time it's
the Russians who are the recipients of some of America's deepest secrets. And
it's all happening out in the open! It's hard to believe, but some Americans
are bringing one of the greatest symbols of our country to Russia. They're teaching the Russians baseball.
Our "National Pastime" in the
former Soviet Union? A generation of
Cold Warriors must be turning over in their bomb shelters. What's next? Teaching China how to make peanut butter and
jelly sandwiches? As Major League baseball considers an international draft,
scouts from professional teams have invaded Russia to try to promote baseball
and develop some potential stars. The sport hasn't exactly caught on yet. The best Russian athletes go into soccer,
hockey and basketball, leaving the leftovers to pick up a bat and glove. Fewer
than a dozen fans attend a typical game. But if the Montreal Expos could
sustain a team for so many years with similar attendance, who knows what will
happen in Moscow?
Conspiracy buffs are probably asking why
this happens to be going on during the Bush administration. They may feel it's
not a coincidence that news of the Mudville-Moscow connection has come out just
when there is so much discussion about Major League baseball players using
steroids. Maybe it's an attempt to deflect attention from the drug issue. After
all, President Bush was the owner of the Rangers while Jose Conseco was in
Texas using steroids and becoming slightly larger than the Alamo. They might
wonder aloud, "What did George Bush know and when did he know
it?" But I think it's quite a
stretch to try to involve the President in this controversy -- although it
wouldn't be the last time that some people who worked for him had too much
testosterone and not enough common sense.
Professional basketball has been
internationalized in the last few years, and I think that's great. It's been
fun to watch players from all over the world play with and against each other.
Part of my enjoyment probably comes from my naïve, corny view of sports. It's
that same mushy feeling that some of us get during the Olympics: "If people can get along so well on the
playing fields, maybe we can all get along in the real world." So, why didn't I greet the news about trying
to teach baseball to the Russians with the same enthusiasm?
I think it's because baseball seems
uniquely American, and it's so much a part of our history. It's the Grand Old Game. Wartime soldiers
used baseball terms as tests to tell if a stranger were an enemy or a friend.
The President of the United States throws out the first ball of the season. And
just about every American has played some form of baseball at some point in his
or her life -– even if just taking a few swings or tossing a ball around.
Deep down, I know spreading baseball around
the world is a good thing. It'll just take me a while to get used to it. It's
also going to take the Russians time to learn the game. Baseball may look
simple, but there are all kinds of nuances that players must learn. For
example, simultaneously spitting and crotch-scratching doesn't come easily.
They'll also have to learn to say, "I'd play the game for free" while
asking for tens of millions. The terminology might be difficult for foreigners
to grasp: In baseball, "stealing" and "hitting" are good
things, and a "screwball" is not just that shirtless guy who writes
the team's name on his belly.
So, I figure by the time there are Russians
in the Major Leagues, I'll be so used to the idea that I'll greet them with a
standing ovation. In the meantime, I'll just try to imagine the vendors in the
Russian stadiums crying out, "Hot dogs! Peanuts! Borscht!"