Feigning on the pitch, far off Broadway

Italy's Francesco Totti getting sent off during World Cup 2002

It’s things like this that bring home just how hard it is for me to get into that “world’s sport” football, or as we call it back home (and in Japan), soccer: England captain David Beckham has admitted that he got a penalty on purpose so that he would miss his next game, a World Cup qualifier with Azerbaijan. Beckham, who knew he was going to miss the game anyway on account of a rib injury (and little matter, as Azerbaijan hardly posed a threat to England, though I did find myself hoping for an upset just to throw a spanner in the works), rather than having the threat of a one-game suspension in a tougher World Cup qualifiying contest hanging over his head, basically got the suspension “out of the way” with his deliberate penalty (he already was sitting on one yellow card and two yellows result in a one-game suspension).

I suppose we should at least commend Sir Beckham for coming forward with his admission, and to be fair he does seem to be taking a bit of heat for it, notably from England football hero Geoff Hurst, who went so far as to imply that Beckham should be stripped of his captaincy. But what got me was a poll on BBC’s web site that showed that out of 80,598 respondents (at time of writing), a full 61% of them thought that Beckham’s sin was admitting to the intentional foul. Indeed, only 18% of respondents actually think that getting deliberately booked was wrong (21% said Beckham did nothing wrong at all).

Granted, as the BBC elegantly but cryptically disclaims, “Results are indicative and may not reflect public opinion,” and no one would try to claim the poll was scientific, but what I’m wondering is if the poll indicates that England fans desperately want their team to win any way they can, or if this kind of foul play is treated as an accepted part of the game, sort of an open secret that Beckham foolishly blew further open.

You see, if there’s one thing about the sport that bugs me to no end, and that really makes it difficult for me to fully enjoy, it’s all the diving, you know the feigning of penalties and the laughable sight of grown athletes pretending to writhe in pain after suffering the equivalent of a grade-school wedgie. (Okay, so the fact that sponsors’ logos are ten times bigger than team logos on uniforms, and the loosy-goosy way of time keeping, also bug the hell out of me, but that I can accept as part of the sport’s makeup, just like how the varying ballpark dimensions in American baseball seem part of the character of the game).

Now I can hardly be accused of subscribing to the “real men don’t eat quiche” school of thought (hell, I’m practically a vegetarian and you know what they say about vegetarians), but seeing superstar athletes crying wolf or pounding the ground in agony after getting their pinkie toe stepped on — followed by the obligatory stretcher trip to the sidelines and the inevitable sprint back to the playing pitch two seconds later — my latent American machismo can’t help but kick into overdrive and I start to wonder if those are real men out there or drama queens gone missing from a Shakespeare production.

(In fairness, American football, the sport that shares a name with Association football but little else — no doubt to the rueful consternation of most fans of the latter — is not immune to diving, with punters being the usual culprit, trying to draw “roughing” penalties. I hope the irony of players called punters — incidentally only one of two positions in American football that actually put foot to ball — being inveterate divers is not lost on my British readers. Anyway, I’ve always hated punters, divers all of them, and wusses who can’t tackle either.)

It’s not like I don’t want to enjoy football/soccer. Growing up in seemingly the only part of the world that doesn’t take it seriously I always felt I was missing something. And while as a teen we had the North American Soccer League, and I guess I can claim some smidgen of football/soccer “cred” for having seen the great Pele play live when I was 11 (for the New York Cosmos, at Aloha Stadium in Hawaii), it seemed pretty clear that that wasn’t what all the fuss was about. But now that I get my fair share of access to world football, the game is on the whole more frustrating than thrilling, and indeed I can’t take it seriously. Not in the same way that I can’t take the WWF seriously, mind you, just that I will never be able to get past the feigning and flopping or accept it as “part of the game.”

Thinking on the 2002 World Cup, which was played (or co-played) in Japan, and which I watched nightly, the moment I still remember above all others, the moment that gave me the biggest thrill, was seeing Italian captain Francesco Totti — poster boy for whiny prima donna football players everywhere — sent off for diving against South Korea (later it was determined that there was contact in the play in question though I still contend Totti flopped). Rather a waste of fan support I know, but such is my disappointment with the sport that I end up decrying or praising referree calls rather than getting upset about the blown goal opportunities or cheering the spectacular goal. Try as I might, rather than viewing these shenanigans — oh, let’s just call a spade a spade, this cheating — as a distraction like I do similar antics in say, NBA basketball, I see them not as part of the game, but as the game.

Remembering Randy Bass:some thoughts on Ichiro and his pursuit of history

bass.jpg

I was watching the tube with the in-laws earlier tonight when the sports news came on, the lead story of which was Ichiro‘s pursuit of the Major League Baseball record for most hits in a season, which has been held for 84 years by George Sisler. Going into yesterday’s game, Ichiro needed 24 hits to tie Sisler’s mark of 257 hits. Alas, he didn’t get any hits in the game and remains on 233 hits, with just 16 games left in the season.

In the game Ichiro was intentionally walked twice, and this produced cries of kawaiisou from the in-laws (“kawaiisou” might approximate “you poor thing” or just “poor thing” in this case). I explained as best I could that Seattle’s opponent, the Anaheim Angels, were in the penant race and that an intentional walk was a legitimate strategy to win the game. Not that I like it mind you, obviously I want to see Ichiro get a chance to get a base hit like everyone else, but you can’t disparage the Angels for trying to win the game any way they (fairly) can. “But he’s going for the record,” they replied.

I then asked if they remembered what happened to Randy Bass some 20 years ago. Now, you’d have to be a fairly hardcore baseball fan, or to have lived in Japan, to know who Randy Bass was. In fact, there were two Randy Basses, the MLB Randy Bass, and the Japanese Pro baseball Randy Bass, and while they shared the same body that’s really where the comparison ended. After a bench-warming six-year career with 5 different teams, hitting a career .212, Bass quit the Majors and came to Japan to play for the Hanshin Tigers, one of Japan baseball’s oldest teams.

In six years for Hanshin, Bass (pictured here) tore up the league, winning two triple crowns, and leaving with a career .337 batting average and 202 home runs. 54 of those home runs came in the 1985 season, and the Tigers won their first penant in 20 years. The story of those 54 home runs, and why Bass didn’t perhaps have more than 54, was what I was asking my in-laws about.

Going into the final series of the season, sitting on 54 homers, Bass needed just one more to tie the Japan baseball single season record for home runs of 55, set by the great slugger Sadaharu Oh. The Tigers’ opponent for those final two games was the Tokyo Giants, their archrival, managed by none other than…Sadaharu Oh.

Did Bass see any pitches to hit during that final series of the year? Not a chance. In fact, in 9 plate appearances, he was walked 6 times. In the final game of the year, Bass was walked all four times he came up to the plate (though none of them were official “intentional” walks). At one point, with pitches being thrown so far out of the strikezone that it was as clear as day what was happening, Bass turned his bat upside down is disgust. The story goes that Giants’ pitchers had been warned that they would be fined if they gave Bass any pitches to hit. Who’s to say whether Bass would have been able to homer even had he had a decent chance to swing the bat. (I feel compelled to add, however, that Oh set the record in a 140-game season, while Bass was trying to break it in a 130-game season).

Whether Oh’s actions were motivated by personal reasons (“He ain’t gonna break my record as long as I have something to say about it.”) or a larger xenophobic one is beyond me to say. It’s complicated, to be sure (Oh himself is half-Chinese). Readers interested would be advised to seek out a used copy of Robert Whiting’s You Gotta Have Wa or Pico Iyer’s essay “Perfect Strangers” which appears in his book Video Night in Kathmandu.

One thing I know for sure: as the walks to Ichiro increase, as they surely will — after all, all of Seattle’s remaining games are against teams with a legitimate shot at the postseason, and Ichiro is Seattle’s biggest threat — so will the cries of “kawaiisou” and “kibishii” (idiomatically, “that’s harsh”) and “okashii” (“strange”). Perhaps there’ll be some idle speculation that Americans don’t want to see a foreigner break “their” record (a notion even I the cynic have no qualms about dismissing without a second thought). I can only hope that somewhere out there in the Japanese household, or on the various TV networks that serve them their news, some of them will remember Randy Bass.

~

As I’ve been writing this, the biggest Japan baseball story of this season has broke: the Japan professional players association has decided to go on strike, effective tomorrow (for now, the strike only effects games played on the remaining weekends of the season), for the first time in its 70-year history. The fans are overwhelmingly on the side of the players in this one: as I type this, one of the news shows is running a call-in poll on whether or not viewers support the strike or not. At the moment, 235,700 callers are in favor of the strike, while a measly 7,800 are not. There’s more to be said here of course, but I’ll save that for another day.

Blogging energy flagging

It has been a slow week here (on this blog, not my life). I started working this week, which as all work does occupied a nice chunk of my time. However, it really was mindshare that was getting used up in abundance, and so this week I haven’t felt very effusive.

Truth be told as well, I’ve been trying to assess exactly what I want out of this blog. I haven’t been entirely happy with how it has started out, and frankly I don’t have (especially now with employment) the energy to keep it going as some sort of political or news analysis blog. On the other hand, I haven’t been very comfortable with the idea of making it more personal, more like a diary. Lord knows there are plenty of those types of blogs out there, and most that I read bore me to tears when they’re not making me cringe out of embarrassment for the author. (To be fair of course, there are also plenty of politically minded web-rags out there that either bore me or make me cringe). I suppose we’ll just have to see where it goes….

Speaking of work, I went out for beers after my first day of non-on-the-job-training last Friday night, and ended up in a sports bar watching the second half of the England-Argentina game. I’ll admit I got more than a bit tipsy, and at 11:45pm found myself at a crowded Omiya station with a lot of other tipsy members of Japanese society waiting for the last train home. As I stood there on the platform in my salaryman suit and tie trying to stay balanced with my cellphone in hand and my thumb typing out an email to my wife letting her know that I indeed was on my way home, I had an epiphany: I had arrived in Japan. In some small very tiny way, I felt I belonged, that I had passed that grey demarcation line between tourist and resident.

The sports bar itself had been energizing. all these young Japanese inexplicably rooting passionately for England, many of them sporting painted red and white flags on their cheeks. I could have cared less about the outcome, but I found myself by the end rooting for the British side as well. After Beckham and co. came out victorious, I had my British by association hand shaken by a half-dozen or so Japanese who congratulated me on my victory.