“Sports are too much with us. Late and soon, sitting and watching - mostly watching on television - we lay waste our powers of identification and enthusiasm and, in time, attention as more and more closing rallies and crucial putts and late field goals and final playoffs and sudden deaths and world records and world championships unreel themselves ceaselessly before our half-lidded eyes.” WorldEyeSportsGoalAttentionHalfRecordsToo MuchFieldsTelevisionWasteLateSittingLaysFinalsEnthusiasmMotivational SportsCrucialChampionshipClosingIdentificationPlayoffsWorld RecordsSudden Death Book:The Summer Game Source: The Summer Game
“Baseball is slovenly and excessive in midsummer, with its onrolling daily cascade of line scores and box scores, shifting statistics, highlights and lowlights, dingers and shutouts, streaks and slumps.” SportsLinesBaseballBoxesScoreStatisticsShiftingHighlightsStreaksMidsummerSlumpsCascade Author:Roger Angell
“Infield practice is more mystic ritual than preparation, encouraging the big-leaguer, no less than the duffer in the stands, to believe in spite of all evidence to the contrary, that playing ball is a snap.” BelieveBigsSportsPracticeEvidenceBallsContraryPreparationSpiteRitualMysticSnaps Author:Roger Angell
“Losing is the bane and bugbear of every professional athlete's existence, but in baseball the monster seems to hang closer than in other sports, its chilly claws and foul breath palpable around the neck hairs of the infielder bending for his crosshand scoop or the reliever slipping his first two fingers off-center on the ball seams before delivering his two-and-two cut fastball.” FirstsTwoSeemsSportsExistenceCuttingHairLosingBaseballBallsBreathsFingersAthleteMonstersNecksFoulDeliveringClawsSlippingBendingBaneProfessional AthleteFastballsChilly Author:Roger Angell
“What really makes baseball so hard is it's retributive capacity for disaster if the smallest thing is done wrong, and the invisible presence of defeat that attends every game.” IfsHardDoneGamesSportsCapacityBaseballDefeatDisasterInvisibleSmallest Author:Roger Angell