Sports Pundits Wax Epically Over Sosa’s Corked Bat
Possible cheating incident fuels passionate scenery-chewing  

WHIT PISTOL
The “bat cracking heard ‘round the news room,” launching hour after aural hour of blithering repetitive “insights” on the future and past of baseball.

The fallout from Tuesday night’s corked bat incident involving Sammy Sosa has been fast and harsh. When the Cubs player was found to have taken a corked bat into the game, he was ejected from the game; Friday the Major League Baseball Commission handed down an eight-game suspension to the home-run hitter, who in 1998 was neck-in-neck with Mark McGwire to set a new home-run record. But the more unbearable fallout is continuing with no break in sight: Sports columnists and reporters and their never-ending assessment of the situation.

“What a shame,” said Denver Post Sports Editor Thad Griswald. “This guy, he’s a player. He’s a good player, and before this there was no doubt he was a Hall of Famer. Now, even if he goes into the Hall of Fame, there’s going to be an asterisk by his name. The next time he hits a homer… nobody may say anything, but everybody’s going to wonder.”

Statements very much to the same effect and with equally melodramatic tones have echoed throughout the week. Sosa’s intention to cheat, or his innocence of the charge, have given the fading sport’s many pundits an opportunity to talk with misguided passion about something other than salary caps and free agency.

ESPN 2 late-night commentator Art Biederbeck: “The sad thing is that at this point it doesn’t matter if Sammy meant to cheat or not. He will always be remembered for this as much as his race with McGwire for the record—did he or didn’t he? It will always accompany the name of Sammy Sosa. He may not even make the Hall of Fame now. And if he does, mark my words, folks, there will be an asterisk there.”

Mortals everywhere who had been only vaguely following the sport of baseball as national interest in the sport wanes for more clock-oriented, fast-paced sports like football and basketball, now find themselves driven away from even catching box scores out of fear they’ll catch another diatribe about Sosa and his mystery bat.

“It’s criminal that everyone leaps to conclusions about Sammy Sosa’s entire career on the basis of one bat,” complained D.C.-area WRBI sportscaster Cory Alvin. “They checked 76 of his bats, all in perfect condition, but this one is going to haunt him. Out there, someone’s always going to wonder if every homerun in his career was from an illegal bat. And that’s the real tragedy of all this.”

As the story snowballs, with Sosa planning to appeal his 8-game suspension next week, no end is in sight to the over-dramatization of the story. Sports shows on network and basic cable, as well as 24-hour sports channels, are expected to roll out sports authorities one after the other, including broadcasters, former Hall of Famers, and current players to deliver the same basic positions over and over again, rather than conclude Major League Baseball will make a decision and allow it to stand as the official position. The best hope for relief from the continual coverage of the story is the death of a Major League player, like Reggie Jackson or something, especially from a horrible disease or even murder.

“It’s a real problem with sports commentators,” said baseball fan and author Max J. Hartley. “Nothing new has been said about the sport in at least 20 years, maybe more, and a lot of these guys aren’t well versed on other issues, so a lot of passion gets channeled into these seeming non-issues. But what they don’t realize when they go on television all hangdog or write a real melancholy column with this Sosa bat story, it’s going to stick in people’s craw. They may make a good observation down the road, something really original about the state of baseball’s popularity or the real free agency problem, but people will always think of this in the back of their minds, this pretentious posturing about an incident that was in all likelihood an accident, or at worst an attempt by a player past his prime to cheat a few runs. It will dog them for their careers. If they ever get a shot at the Sports Broadcasters Hall of Fame, even if they get in, there will be an asterisk by their names.”

the commune news is not guilty of corking its bat, but we do like to bat a cork around the room on occasion. Mordecai “Three-Finger” Brown is our resident baseball expert as well as our expert on all-things afterlife.

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