For the Love of the Game
Copyright May 2015
(Pictures by Leslee Mitchell-Marilou Woods )
There was a time in America when life was different. Kinder. Gentler. When the world didn’t revolve around the latest craze, or the healthiest bottom line. When companies bore with pride the names of their creators proudly: Ford. Rockefeller. Disney; instead of being orphaned behind a nameless, faceless, board of investors--and wall street and main street, were the same street.
And it was a time when sports were different. When players weren’t driven by multi-million dollar contracts and market shares and TV ratings, but somewhere along the way the world changed. We, as a nation, forgot the joy of playing sports simply for the love of playing sports, and in many ways, we lost a part of our innocence in the process. Winning at any cost became the mantra; we learned about steroids and cheating and getting ahead at any cost; and it became the means to an end, rather than about sportsmanship and competing with pride.
The great baseball strike of 1981, driven mostly by greed of the owners and players alike, did it for me. I never recovered my love of the game, something I never thought could happen. I grew up with baseball. Back then it was the national sport and people would stop everything to watch the games. I remember growing up in a two room school on the backroads of Illinois where the teacher brought in a portable TV and on a warm summer’s day, with the windows open and the fans humming; we stopped everything to watch the World Series, and on those days life was perfect. Now those days are gone. Or are they?
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