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COMMENTARY: IN DRIVE TO DRAW FANS, PUT SERIES IN NEUTRAL.


Byline: Bernie Lincicome Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Chicago. The Tribune is one of the leading U.S. newspapers and long has been the dominant voice of the Midwest. Founded in 1847, it was bought in 1855 by six partners, including Joseph Medill (1823–99), who made the paper
 

Two words. Neutral site. Two more words. Right now.

Pardon me while I shiver. Brrrrrrr.

No matter how ch-ch-charming baseball is as a winter sport, the novelty is hardly worth the discomfort.

``Thinking that you can just move the World Series to a neutral site is absolute folly,'' said Bud Selig Allan Huber "Bud" Selig, Jr. (born July 30, 1934 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is the Commissioner of Major League Baseball (MLB). He was previously the team owner and administrator of the Milwaukee Brewers. , baseball's ersatz er·satz  
adj.
Being an imitation or a substitute, usually an inferior one; artificial: ersatz coffee made mostly of chicory. See Synonyms at artificial.
 commissioner.

Well, if Selig is against it, maybe it has a chance.

It is not just the frigid and game-altering conditions of this place to consider, although the bats for Game 4 may have come out of a box labeled Mrs. Paul's. Snow spit on Jacobs Field Coordinates:

    [
 from rush hour on Wednesday, mocking the silly folks playing the game, those witnessing the game, those covering the game.

If baseball can survive without the Yankee Clipper a clipper ship built in the United States. See clipper .

Joe DiMaggio erson>; - a nickname for the player who was a prominent member of the New York Yankees baseball team in the 1940's.

See also: Clipper Clipper
, it certainly can survive the occasional Alberta Clipper An Alberta clipper, also known as a Canadian Clipper, is a fast moving low pressure area which generally affects the central provinces of Canada and parts of the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes regions of the United States[1]. .

What should be a more serious concern is the humbling reality that baseball has become a local story and TV ratings of this Series certainly bear that out. They are the lowest ever.

``I pore over TV ratings,'' Selig said. ``Believe me, everybody's ratings drop, every sport, all programs. I mean, we started on a Saturday night, the lowest-rated night of the week.

``The two teams are, well, let's be candid - Florida is a surprise and Cleveland didn't get the attention that New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and Baltimore did. I mean, last year you had the team from the largest market (New York) playing Atlanta, America's team America’s Team is a term often used to describe the Dallas Cowboys franchise that plays in the NFC East of the National Football League.[1] The term is recognized and often used by media outlets, including ESPN [2] and Yahoo! [3] . . Sure, we would be off a bit.''

Selig is missing the point, as usual.

What America is telling baseball is that the World Series is just not an event that can stand alone, a special festival of baseball, if you will, able to involve more than each team's own constituents.

What our incredibly shrinking national pastime needs is a national stage.

A warm-and-ready national stage. San Diego, for example. New Orleans. San Antonio. Is the Final Four smarter than the World Series?

The hype never escapes the city limits of two places that are decided only a few days before, for which neither is ever properly prepared. Here, for example, conventions clutter and challenge the services of a town used to being undercrowded.

In my hotel, no less than seven companies take up most of the space. My favorite being Dyneon, ``Rockin' the Flouropolymer Industry Since the 50s.'' Rental cars are rarer than Series tickets.

In Florida, my hotel was more concerned with making delegates to a giant computer convention happy than humoring those of us there for the Series.

Baseball, even the World Series, becomes just another visitor to its hosts, and a tardy tar·dy  
adj. tar·di·er, tar·di·est
1. Occurring, arriving, acting, or done after the scheduled, expected, or usual time; late.

2. Moving slowly; sluggish.
 one at that.

The Super Bowl, the Final Four, the Olympics, the World Cup, all are put up for bids and anchored well ahead of time. Plans can be made.

Tradition is strongest when tradition has an address in advance. I give you Churchill Downs, Augusta, Wimbledon. Pasadena.

``You just couldn't take this away from Cleveland,'' Selig said. ``You just have to walk the streets of the city to see what this means.''

I am guessing that I do a lot more street walking than Selig does, and what I've found is the usual cheap hustle and self-serving boosterism boost·er·ism  
n.
The highly supportive attitudes and activities of boosters: "the civic pride and heady boosterism that often accompany rising property values" New York. 
 (Go Tribe Sez Wally's Shoe Repair and Sticky Buns).

My own informal, teeth-chattering poll on the matter reveals the following: 2-1/2 out of seven Cleveland fans, who are the most devoted in sports, would like the Series someplace some·place  
adv. & n.
Somewhere: "I didn't care where I was from so long as it was someplace else" Garrison Keillor. See Usage Note at everyplace.
 else, the half being a couple whose marriage might not last until the next time the Indians are in a Series.

Putting the Series in a neutral site would not deprive communities of celebrating their teams because there would be two playoff levels before the Series, just as there are in football before the Super Bowl.

The reward is getting there, and if the there is worth getting to, everybody shares.

It is the event itself that becomes special, rather than who is in it, or how adorable they look in ski masks.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:SPORTS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Oct 23, 1997
Words:672
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