10 The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 31, 1995 SPORTING VIEWS: National pastime's season welcomes American fans back to The Show' By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Writer The 1995 season showed that base- ball is our game. There, I said it, it's out in the open, naysayers beware. The American Pastime reestablished itselfasjust that: a game for all America. The human element is stronger and more real than anything that could per- tain to the average citizen. Stories abound, making the impossible realis- tic, not superhuman. This was what baseball needed. Baseball touches us on a personal level as well. Did you ever stop to think, what would America be without base- ball? The void created would be cata- strophic. Baseball touches us in the heart. American children are weaned on baseball. In the second grade, the fixture of learning to read from books is driven into almost every seven-year old, but not my brother. He used baseball cards as his frame of reference and he grew up learning how Rickey Henderson stole 130 bases in 1982, and about the small- town roots of the game. He learned about Cooperstown and the legend of Alexander Cartwright, baseball's cre- ator. That is how baseball touches America. And America touches back with Little League and travelling teams. Any kid can play baseball. Just a bat, a ball and a mitt are needed to fulfill this dream. Where else could a man, tormented yesterday by the same fans that cheer him today, be recognized as a hero? Just four years ago, Albert Belle was Joey Belle, the man who couldn't control his temper, would resort to alcohol, wouldn't run out ground balls, and was sent to the minors because he was uncontrollable. He worked his way back and earned the success that has come to him. After changing his name and atti- tude, Belle had one of the finest offen- sive seasons in the last 30 years. His 50 home runs and 52 doubles made him the first man to have over 50 of each in the same season. Ever. Imagine that, 126 years of Major League Baseball and a hot-head makes history. And Belle's team, the Cleveland In- dians, won more games in the last in- ning than any team in baseball. What does that say for perseverance? This squad finished with the highest win- ning percentage in baseball -not only, this year, but higher than that of any team in 41 years (coincidentally, that was the last time the Indians were in the World Series). Isn't this the American dream? The team that has been stepped on for forty years by the rest of the league, coming through as the best team in the game this regular season. The average man, Greg Maddux, is being compared with some of the game's greatest pitchers. His 1.63 ERA and 19-2 record will undoubt- edly win him a record fourth consecu- tive Cy Young Award, which certi- fies him as one of the game's all-time winners. He led his team to a World Series Championship and is the ace of the "team of the '90's." His mastery of the corners of the plate and of making hitters miss is unparalleled in baseball history. The best pitchers have always thrown hard and tried to U - You are n o t pocket render a mooch, But when S you changeless, a hole in your you reluctantly 1 800 CALL AT] call the folks collect. You dial Your pangs of guilt are minimal. Know the Code. 1800 CALL AT T That's Your True Choicee~ y{$h+"