Tuesday, August 30, 2011

A Moment of Glory

Sports writers tend to be cynical men and women who ridicule athletes and coaches for speaking in rah rah platitudes and clichés.  They call it “coach speak,” where you ignore the truth of the situation and throw out inspirations and positive hope against the reality of the situation.  This is of little value to the hardened sports writer who needs a lead story with guts to it for a pending and ever closer deadline.  I often wonder if these bitter writers ever had a moment of glory of their own, or if they only wrote about the glory of others.

I was a young boy of eight years when the U.S. hockey team captured Olympic gold in Lake Placid while Al Michaels asked, “Do you believe in miracles?”  Really, that’s the reason we watch and play sports.  We are after that one miracle, that moment of glory.  This is a story of a moment of glory.  It’s not really my story, even though I was a part of it and your narrator.  It’s really about team, effort and well rah rah platitudes and clichés. 

It was my junior year of high school football and it was homecoming.  We were going to face Saginaw High who was ranked #1 in Michigan.  As I walked across the courtyard from my first hour class, Mark LeVasseur a senior trumpet player in the marching band stopped me to talk to me.  He asked me to get a victory.  He told me that we had never won a homecoming game while he was in high school and this was the last chance.  I looked at him, smiled and said, “We’ll do our best and get a win for you Mark.”  In other words, I lied!  I turned to an athlete’s last hope, rah rah platitudes and clichés.

No matter what you may think, athletes are not mindless idiots who live on hopes and dreams.  They are realistic of the challenges they face and put forward anything positive that they can cling to in order to succeed.  In my heart that morning, I thought we would lose that evening.  I wasn’t going to tell Mark that though.  I wasn’t going to tell him, because then I would have been telling myself that.  Sometimes you have to lie to yourself to overcome your fears.  When you overcome your fears, often you will be amazed by the outcome.

I was a starter, but I really don’t remember doing anything special that evening.  I showed up, got taped up, went through the pregame warm-up and prayer, then worked hard and did my job.  Everybody on the team did.  When the first half of the game was over, we were not only in it; we took a lead into the locker room at the half against the #1 team in the state.  Homecoming halftimes are long, so the coaches did their best to keep us calm and then build us up to go out for the second half.

When we came out of the locker room, it was a sight that I couldn’t have imagined.  The student section had come out of the stands to form a human tunnel for us to enter the field through.  There was an electricity that could be felt, as if something great was about to happen that night.  I was so amped up; I would have run through a brick wall to win that game.  We continued to hold on to our lead, and then we mounted that final drive.  It was a slow, grinding, long drive that could seal the victory.  With each first down, the impossible seemed more possible.  There was unity in the huddle and quarterback Eric Hayhurst was our leader taking us to victory.  It was a moment of destiny.

We did it!  We beat Saginaw High.  We won our homecoming game.  Mark would get to celebrate one homecoming victory while he was in high school.  The student section poured onto the field, it was complete mayhem.  The chaos was hypnotic and for a moment we were on top of the world.  It was a time of celebration, joy and victory!  As luck would have it, that was the only homecoming victory of my high school career.  The next year we lost a heartbreaker to Saginaw Arthur Hill by one point in overtime. 

The lights have faded away.  So too have most of those memories except the few I shared with you today.  There are one or two memories that I kept for myself.  Some things you should hold on to and keep as your own.  The world did not change that day.  There was no life altering experiences, no Hollywood ending.  We won a high school football game, nothing more and nothing less.  Albeit, we won a game that we were suppose to lose against the #1 team in the state.  It was one small moment of glory.

There is a point to this story, a reason that I would take the time to share it with you.  As we get older, it is increasingly easy to become cynical.  We live in a nation that is divided and sometimes the world can seem hopeless.  That’s why we hold on to our successes, those small moments of glory.  There is a lesson to be learned in every one.  You see, there are a million reasons to quit and stop trying.  There will be doubters who will fill your ears along the way and tell you it can’t be done.  But there is only one reason to keep going.  That reason is because sometimes, even against all odds and expectations, you actually succeed.  And that is the only reason we ever really need.  “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!”

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Lions Report: Nick Fairley meet Ndomukong Suh

Something is very different in Detroit this upcoming football season.  People are talking about the Lions in a positive light and not just diehard Lions fans.  I have even heard the words Lions and playoffs in the same sentence.  Much of the talk revolves around third year quarterback Matthew Stafford.  He has shown strong leadership when he has been on the field, but his first two seasons have been cut short by injuries.  Many people think that if Stafford remains healthy the Lions have a good chance of making the playoffs for the first time since 1999.

Certainly Stafford’s health, leadership and play will be extremely important to this year’s Lions season.  However, Detroit’s success is more likely to be determined on the opposite side of the ball.  According to John Clayton of ESPN, Nick Fairley should be matched up with last year’s AP Defensive Rookie of the Year, Ndomukong Suh sometime in September.  Fairley has the potential to win the award this year if he is able to get and stay healthy for the regular season.  This pair can be a dominant force and are already bringing fear to opposing quarterbacks.


With a ferocious defensive center, the Lions can shut down the running game and make teams one dimensional.  Fairley and Suh have the athleticism to create pass pressure right up the middle, directly into the quarterback's face.  Dominant defensive line play can make the secondary better, force more turnovers and give the Lions’ offense a shorter field to work with.  A shorter field will help keep Stafford upright and healthy and the Lions playing with a lead.  Remember offense fills the stands, but defense wins championships.  Along with Stafford and Calvin Johnson on offense, Fairley and Suh are the foundation for the Detroit Lions.

Fairley and Suh bring a nastiness that can take over a game.  Of course this is the Lions and with the kinder, gentler NFL rules, what was once considered great defense may now result in 15 yard penalties and fines for the defensive duo.  Unwarranted penalties for great hits could limit their effectiveness.  Fairley and Suh will anchor a defensive line that could show the greatness of the Monsters of the Midway, the Steel Curtain, the Fearsome Foursome and the Purple People Eaters.  That would mean great times for Lions fans this year and in the future.  However if Fairley and Suh are penalized for hits that would make Dick Butkus, Mean Joe Green, Deacon Jones and Carl Eller proud, the Lions could see defeat snatched from the hands of victory. 

It’s my opinion that Nick Fairley and Ndomukong Suh will be able to keep the nastiness factor high within the Brady / Manning era of softhearted NFL rules.  Fairley’s presence will make Suh even more dominant than his rookie season.  So it’s time for preseason predictions.  I have high hopes for this Lions team, but they still have some more building to do.  Regardless, I have the Lions going 10 – 6 and winning their first playoff game in twenty years.  However that is as far as they will go this season.  After twenty years though, Detroit fans may give them a parade for a playoff victory.  OK, that may be going a little too far!  Still, Lions fans have a ton to be excited about this 2011 season.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Baseball is a Place for Dreams, Not Politics

Men cry when Ray Kinsella has a game of catch with his dad in the movie Field of Dreams.  On September 27, 1999, there was not a dry eye in the place as each light standard went forever dark at Tiger Stadium with every pause of Ernie Harwell's poetic voice. Every fall we watch fully grown men show the exuberance of little boys when they celebrate a World Series Championship.  The reason is simple.  Baseball is a child's game wrapped in childhood memories and child like dreams.

The primary purpose of At The Corner is to celebrate the purity of baseball and the love of Detroit, its teams and their fans.  It speaks out against the selfish politics of the game that have kept Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell out of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.  However, there should be nothing more pure in baseball than the Little League World Series.

For many true baseball fans, Williamsport is more sacred than Cooperstown.  Attendance is still free to attend the Little League World Series and a hot dog and a pop won't cost you $9. Everyone who works at the Little League World Series is a volunteer and pays for their own travel expenses; including the umpires.  The Little League World Series is baseball in its purest form.

Unfortunately this year the world of politics has stained the purest form of the game that we love.  The United States Department of State refused visas for the Ugandan Little League team that earned their way to this year's Little League World Series.  This will keep the first Little League team from Africa to qualify for the Little League World Series from participating with their peers in Williamsport.

Sports are suppose to reach beyond borders, race, religion and poverty.  Humanity should always take precedence over politics. Sports should always be a game and never a negotiation.  At the Corner believes that the Ugandan Little League team's absence from this year's Little League World Series is a true tragedy. These boys have overcome extreme poverty, worked hard and done everything to earn their tickets to Williamsport.  They won their right to play and they earned it on the field!  Baseball is a place for dreams, not politics.


To learn more about this story, please go to the links provided below:


Baseball in Uganda


Ugandan Baseball Team Strikes Out on US Visas


Ugandan Team Denied U.S. Visas


Saudi Arabia Headed to Little League WS


Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Things Remembered

"Michigan seems like a dream to me now!  It took me four days to hitchhike from Saginaw..." ~ Simon & Garfunkel:  America

There are some things that bring happy memories to every Michigander.  Summers were magical and adventure was only a few minutes away, no matter where you lived in Michigan.  Picnics were a main stay of summer with coolers filled with Faygo and Vernors while Koegel's hot dogs were on the grill.  "Everybody Ready?" 


This 1970's commercial was recorded on one of the Boblo Island Boats.  I've been to Boblo Island and I've been to Coney Island and one thing is for certain.  Boblo Island is the one that should still be open today.

Boblo Island was an amusement park, as the name suggests on an island south of Detroit at the mouth of the Detroit River, from 1898 until it closed in 1993.  Unlike Coney Island, where you get off the F train and walk across the street, the Boblo Island adventure began once you boarded one of the Boise Blanc Steamers.

Gracefully chugging down the Detroit River, you floated with anticipation to the amusement park with beautiful vistas of the Detroit skyline.  No matter the condition of Detroit and its economy, Detroit always looks amazing from the Detroit River.

Once you reached the dock at Boblo Island, you were transported in time and space to the magic that only an amusement park can provide. There was the Ferris Wheel, the Dance Hall, Falling Star, Wild Mouse, the Midway and of course roller coasters.  There was Nightmare, Screamer and Sky Streak if you dared. Your adventure could last until the night time.  Just make sure that you caught the last boat back to Detroit.

The best part of the Boblo Island experience was the boat ride there and back.  Filled with excitement, you would meet new friends and plan your riding adventure once you arrived at the park.  On the way back you would reminisce with those same friends about one of the best days of your young lives.  No matter when you went, it was a joy for all. 

The laughter, the lights and the thrills are gone now.  If you had the chance to be there at Boblo Island, you know how lucky you are.  Detroit needs to reinvent itself in the 21st Century.  With the same spirit that made Detroit the manufacturing capitol of the world, Detroit can rebuild itself.  Hopefully when Detroit is a thriving metropolitan once again, the laughter, the lights and the thrills will return to Boblo Island.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Why Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker Should be in the National Baseball Hall of Fame: Strictly by the Numbers

One could argue that simply by compiling a combined 2819 double plays with only 424 combined errors over 19 years together with the Tigers more than qualifies Detroit’s dynamic duo for induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

However, the Baseball Writers Association of America’s members consistently tell us that certain players do not have the numbers to justify enshrining them into Cooperstown.  Let’s take a look at the greatest double play combination in baseball history strictly by the numbers:

There are 21 shortstops in Cooperstown and 18 second basemen.  These are two extremely exclusive fraternities. 

Batting Average: Alan Trammell has a career batting average of .285, better than 11 Hall of Fame shortstops and tied with a 12th, Robin Yount.    Lou Whitaker has a career batting average of .276, better than 4 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Hits: Alan Trammell has 2365 career hits, better than 12 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker has 2369 career hits, better than 8 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Home Runs: Alan Trammell has 185 career home runs, better than 17 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker has 244 career home runs, better than 15 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Runs Batted In: Alan Trammell has1003 career RBIs, better than 12 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker has 1084 career RBIs, better than 9 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Are you beginning to notice a pattern here?

Runs: Alan Trammell scored 1231 career runs, better than 9 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker scored 1386 career runs, better than 9 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Stolen Bases: Alan Trammell stole 236 career bases, better than 11 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker stole 143 career bases, better than 6 Hall of Fame second basemen.

On Base Percentage: Alan Trammell has a career OBP of .352, better than 11 Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker has a career OBP of .363, better than 7 Hall of Fame second basemen. 

Slugging Percentage: Alan Trammell has a career slugging percentage of .415, which is a higher slugging percentage than all Hall of Fame shortstops.  Lou Whitaker has a career slugging percentage of .436, better than 10 Hall of Fame second basemen.

Strictly by the numbers Detroit’s all-time leading keystone combination have better offensive numbers than current Hall of Fame players at their perspective positions in all eight major offensive categories.  Maybe it’s the intangibles perhaps.  Let’s take a look:

Alan Trammell has a career .977 fielding percentage.  That is only 1 percentage point behind Ozzie Smith, who is considered by many to be the best fielding shortstop of all time. 

Lou Whitaker has a career .984 fielding percentage, which is the same fielding percentage as Hall of Fame second basemen Roberto Alomar and Nellie Fox.  Ryan Sandberg has the highest fielding percentage .989, among Hall of Fame second basemen.

Whitaker and Trammell were the foundation for the 1984 World Series Champion, Detroit Tigers.

Alan Trammell:
·        1984 World Series MVP
·        6 time American League All Star
·        4 Gold Gloves
·        3 time Silver Slugger
·        Received American League MVP votes 7 times

Lou Whitaker
·        1978 American League Rookie of the Year
·        5 time American League All Star
·        4 time Silver Slugger
·        3 Gold Gloves
·        Received American League MVP votes in 1983

Whatever criteria you consider, Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker are among the best at their positions in Major League Baseball history.  This begs the question; what criteria is the Baseball Writers Association of America using?  Why are these two Tiger greats not already in the National Baseball Hall of Fame?  Why did Lou Whitaker not receive the 5% of votes necessary to remain eligible for Cooperstown after his first year of eligibility?  Strictly by the numbers and any other possible consideration, Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker deserve to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. 

What would be most fitting is if they entered the Hall of Fame together.  Strictly by the numbers, in Detroit #1 and #3 just go together.  As Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell would say, “Two for the price of one!”


Click Here if you believe that Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker belong in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY.