A Voice in the Wilderness In Defense of "Mere Conservatism"

9Jun/10Off

Merry Strasmas

Strasburg08_jpg_692721gm-aThe Washington Nationals (a baseball team for those wondering) drafted a 20 year old pitcher from San Diego named Stephen Strasburg exactly one year ago today.  The hype surrounding this kid has been Lebron-like for nearly 12 full months.  Before ever throwing one professional pitch, Strasburg received the highest contract of any draft pick in Major League Baseball history ($15.1 million).  He has also garnered almost nightly national attention on ESPN's Sportscenter and Baseball Tonight.

With so much pressure mounting on such young shoulders, I kind of assumed he would crash-and-burn in his debut against the Pittsburgh Pirates last night.

I was wrong.

Sports columnist Dave Sheinin of the The Washington Post put it this way:

If it was possible to live up to that hype, the tall, sturdy kid with lightning in his right arm and the hopes of a beleaguered fan base in his hands did it, pitching magnificently for seven innings in a 5-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in his major league debut. The strikeouts piled up -- 14 of them in all, a Nationals team record, each raising the electricity level in the stadium -- and the innings rolled by. Only one slip-up, a two-run homer in the fourth inning, marred the scorecard.

"Everybody is impressed with what this kid did today," said Iván Rodríguez, the Nationals' veteran catcher and a presumed future Hall-of-Famer. "He completely dominated."

When the team announced in the middle of the seventh inning that Strasburg had set a Nationals team record for strikeouts, the sell-out crowd of 40,315 demanded a curtain call, and Strasburg obliged, climbing the dugout steps and doffing his cap to all sides, his buzzcut hair glistening with sweat.

"It was a great atmosphere," Strasburg said later. "I definitely felt everyone pulling for me."

Never had the nation's capital, or perhaps the nation itself, seen a professional athlete debut with so much hype and media saturation. The team handed out more than 200 media credentials -- equivalent to a late-October playoff game -- as an otherwise pedestrian early-June game was transformed into the most singular sort of Washington event.

I know this is site dedicated primarily to cultural and political issues, but in my world, baseball is still America's past-time and this young pitcher is the biggest story in baseball today.  If you haven't seen any highlights of the kid, do yourself a favor and watch this video of Stasburg's 14 strike-outs.

Comments (2) Trackbacks (0)
  1. Hi RJ–I am a baseball fan, too. It seems to me the hype on this guy was very great because he is from an eastern team–not fly over country. The other one I remember that was this big was Carrie Woods with the Cubs. That never did pan out like many thought it would.

    By the way, the link to the video is a bust. The video is no longer available.
    Roy in Colorado.

  2. Kerry Wood had hype, and was good for a while…too many injuries.

    Here’s another link with better shots from the game: http://washington.nationals.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20100608&content_id=10944784&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=was

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What is “Mere Conservatism”?

The basic ideas, ideals, and values that generally define and characterize the central tenets of what today might be termed "modern conservative thought."

We believe that a proper understanding of history, economics, and theology leads to certain conclusions. Many of these are the same conclusions our Founding Fathers arrived at in constructing a "more perfect union."

All ideas and opinions are welcome; not all are correct.

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