Baseball – America’s Pastime!

On the TunneySide of Sports April 8, 2019 #738 Up next... Baseball – America’s Pastime!On the TunneySide of Sports April 8, 2019 #738 Up next… Baseball – America’s Pastime!

After further review… Since the 2019 Major League Baseball (MLB) season has begun as well as the colleges and high schools being midway in their seasons, let’s review “America’s Pastime.” Or is baseball considered in today’s sports world “America’s Past time?” Has this sport taken an upper-deck seat to football, basketball, soccer and other sports? Has the baseball season-ticket holder become disenfranchised with today’s MLB?

Let me say, first and foremost, baseball was my first love. As a youth in southern California, without any MLB teams available I would fall asleep each night listening to Marty Glickman, Mel Allen, and Red Barber radio broadcast the Yankees and Dodgers games. I was a fan of the Yankees with Joe DiMaggio, Lou Gehrig, Tony Lazerri, Red Ruffing and the rest. In fact, I wanted to pitch, like Ruffing, for the Yankees.

My dad went from a Loyola University baseball player to a major league contract with the Oakland Oaks, a major league farm T*E*A*M. He always told me to plan to be a pitcher since that’s where the best money was. (Note: dad never met Alex Rodriguez, Bryce Harper or Mike Trout.) As often as we could I would stand at one end of our front yard in San Gabriel and pitch to him across our front lawn. He would catch my best fastball bare-handed! I couldn’t break a pane-of-glass at that distance! However, that didn’t discourage me from dreaming of standing on the mound at (the original) Yankee stadium and being their starting pitcher.

When I became an NFL official and was assigned a New York Giants football game in that stadium, I walked in prior to the game, set down my officiating gear and walked out the tunnel directly to where the pitcher’s mound was and waited for PA announcer Bob Sheppard to announce me as the Yankees starting pitcher! Silence! I went in and got dressed.

Back to the MLB today. They have made some changes to speed-up the game, e.g., fewer coaches’ mound-visits, a clock on timing the pitcher (pending) and others. Now if they could just limit – or eliminate – batters constantly re-velcroing their batting gloves, which Gehrig, DiMaggio, and others never wore. Just apply some good ‘ol dirt and step into the batter’s box! Every major league sport is working hard to attract fans. Baseball is trying also. Or is it?

Will you offer some suggestions for improving MLB today?

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 To contact Jim, go to JimTunney.com or email Jim@JimTunney.com. Jim’s books are full of inspiration and interesting stories. Please visit his online store to learn more. Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports Be sure to get Jim’s book ‘Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports’ by clicking this link or using the email above to contact Jim directly. These TunneySides take issues from real-life situations and relate them as inspiration for the betterment of others. Jim is available for speaking engagements on leadership and T*E*A*M Building. His books are available for $20 which includes shipping and tax. The Tunney Bobblehead is available for $30. Please visit JimTunney.comThank you!

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Used to be a fan!

USC cheating scandal

On The TunneySide of Sports April 1, 2019 #737… Used to be a fan!

After further review… No this is not an April Fool’s joke! In my early years, ages 9 -13, I had the privilege as well as the honor to accompany my dad to football games that he officiated. As he progressed in his officiating skills and advanced to major college games (now called Division 1), I sat in the officials’ dressing room before and after his games and often sat on the home team bench during the game. One of my favorite venues was the Los Angeles Coliseum where both the University of Southern California (USC) and the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) both played. It was an honor to walk out of the dressing room, which, BTW, was at ground level in an area directly below the press box, not in the tunnel where it is today. We entered the field at about the 50-yard line! What a thrill!

In those years USC and UCLA were my favorite teams. The National Football League did not establish its presence in southern California until about 1947when the Rams arrived from Cleveland. To be able to sit on a major college bench and watch college players close-at-hand was the reason I wanted to attend either USC or UCLA. However, when I graduated from Alhambra High School in southern California, my level of athletic talent was far from what was needed at those institutions. I attended, played all three sports, and graduated from Occidental College – and glad I did.

After graduating from OXY, I attended USC for my master’s in education degree and later completed my doctoral work there earning an Ed.D. During that era, I admired USC and was delighted with its educational and athletic standings. However, I am dismayed, more like disgusted, with USC due to the recent scandal that puts them at or near the top of those colleges now in question of their admission standards. USC has lost this fan!

It is obvious that greed and hubris have befallen USC as well as other colleges. Of course, financing institutions of higher learning today is of a far greater need than it was many years ago. Is winning at any cost part of this equation? Has integrity fallen so far behind the need to establish a college’s place in the hierarchy of prestigiousness that we must lower – no, ignore – the standards that got them this far?
While my history identifies these southern California colleges, the same can be said for many of what we used to call the “best” colleges in our country. It is sad!

Will you log-in your thoughts why some colleges have succumbed to scandal?

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 To contact Jim, go to JimTunney.com or email Jim@JimTunney.com. Jim’s books are full of inspiration and interesting stories. Please visit his online store to learn more. Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports Be sure to get Jim’s book ‘Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports’ by clicking this link or using the email above to contact Jim directly. These TunneySides take issues from real-life situations and relate them as inspiration for the betterment of others. Jim is available for speaking engagements on leadership and T*E*A*M Building. His books are available for $20 which includes shipping and tax. The Tunney Bobblehead is available for $30. Please visit JimTunney.comThank you!

Posted in Current Affairs, Sports, Tunney Side of Sports Columns | 1 Comment

And All That Jazz!

On the TunneySide of Sports March 25, 2019 #736 Up next...and All That Jazz!On The TunneySide of Sports March 25, 2019 #736 …and All That Jazz!

After further review… Russell Westbrook, the point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder (NBA), was fined $25,000 by the league for his retaliation outburst toward a fan in Salt Lake City during a game when the Thunder played the Utah Jazz a couple of weeks ago. There is no disputing that Westbrook used vile language since it went viral vocally as well as in print. The fan who irritated Westbrook with his racial epithets was Shane Keisel, who now has been banned from all future Jazz games by Jazz President, Steve Starks. In banning Keisel, Starks said, “We all have a responsibility to respect the game of basketball, and more importantly, treat each other as human beings.” That last part is the essence of this piece.

Having been in football stadiums and basketball arenas most of my life, I, too, have had to contend with egregious fan behavior. The description of the word fan is often “fanatic” which may properly describe the behavior of the overly enthusiastic fan. There is no excuse for any individual, i.e., fan, to use racial or offensive words towards players – either on their team or opponents. However, in today’s society perhaps-we have allowed the use of the First Amendment to go beyond civility. Some will say, ”Yeah, yeah, yeah, but it’s my right.”

Maybe! Unfortunately, the use of social media has given a whole new meaning to behavior. Facebook, Instagram and the like have given individuals the opportunity to write or say anything they wish, short of slander and libel (and there is some doubt there as well).

My issue here is not with the fan, but with the player – any player. My dad taught me to not talk to opponents during the game and, moreover, never to fans. Have fans screamed at me with foul words? Of course. What would I have gained by getting into a vile shouting match with them? Players in any sport don’t deserve cruel epithets hurled at them. Fans have the right to “boo” poor physical performance and/or behavior, but it should stop there!

So, what can a player do to avoid what Westbrook did? Stadiums and arenas have uniformed security guards. When a fan becomes unruly, a coach needs to summon a security guard to quiet-down that unruly fan and, if need be, have that individual removed from the venue.

Will you please comment on how to deal with unruly fans?

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 To contact Jim, go to JimTunney.com or email Jim@JimTunney.com. Jim’s books are full of inspiration and interesting stories. Please visit his online store to learn more. Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports Be sure to get Jim’s book ‘Another 101 Best of TunneySide of Sports’ by clicking this link or using the email above to contact Jim directly. These TunneySides take issues from real-life situations and relate them as inspiration for the betterment of others. Jim is available for speaking engagements on leadership and T*E*A*M Building. His books are available for $20 which includes shipping and tax. The Tunney Bobblehead is available for $30. Please visit JimTunney.comThank you!

Posted in Sports, Tunney Side of Sports Columns | 1 Comment