“Win any way you can as long as you
can get away with it.”—Leo Durocher, longtime baseball manager.
“They’ll
fire you for losing before they fire you for cheating.”-- Darryl Rogers, former
college-football coach.
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When the
so-called “Deflategate” scandal broke pre-Super Bowl, I had a couple of
immediate reactions. One was a complete lack of surprise that the supposed
perps were the New England Patriots and their coach, Bill Belichick. The other
was a wish that whoever was coaching my National Football League team, the
Chicago Bears (the post has changed hands of late), had been devious enough to
try something like that.
Belichick
is the modern-day Durocher, a coach who will bend the rules to give his teams
an edge. The main difference between them is that Durocher flaunted his
roguishness while Belichick hides his behind hooded sweatshirts and a taciturn public
persona. You might recall that he and the Pats were the focus of a previous NFL
“Gate”-- the 2007 “Spygate”—wherein the team was caught videotaping the New
York Jets’ sideline defensive signals with an eye toward using the info in
future games.
That ploy mirrored Durocher’s placing
a telescope-using spy in the Polo Grounds’ bleachers to steal opposing
catchers’ signs during the 1951 season.
Among other things, the effort tipped off Bobby Thomson that Ralph
Branca would throw him a fastball on the pitch that led to Thomson’s “Shot
Heard Round the World” home run that won the pennant for Leo’s New York Giants,
a fact that didn’t emerge for several decades.
The curious thing about both
episodes was that the act involved —sign stealing—was and is common in baseball
and football, but the use of technology to implement it somehow broke the
games’ covenants. That’s the sort of fine line we draw in assessing moral
issues in sports, usually without thinking much about it. When an outfielder traps a line drive but
then holds the ball aloft to convince the umpires he caught it, we applaud his
presence of mind. When the Pats bleed a pound or two of air from some footballs
to give its QB a better grip on a cold day before a playoff game, the parsons
of the press box and the imams of the internet (and most fans who don’t live in
or around Boston) scream bloody murder.
The jocks like to say “if you ain’t
cheatin’ you ain’t tryin’ hard enough,” and, usually, we fans agree. Most of us
draw the line on things like steroids use by athletes, which involves altering one’s
bodily chemistry in a potentially harmful way with substances illegally
obtained, thus forcing other players to make the same Faustian choice. By me,
though, playing with balls (tee-hee) is a lesser offense.
Indeed, the idea of using a game’s
equipment to give a competitor an advantage long has been endemic in sports.
Exhibit A in that regard is golf, whose self-policing ethos gives it the high
ground in most discussions of sports morality. There’s been a golf arms race in
progress forever, and the U.S. Golf Association, which polices the sport on
these shores, maintains an equipment-testing program equal to that of the
Federal Aviation Administration to keep competitors within bounds.
Golfers bring their own balls to tournaments,
and these vary in composition, construction and dimple alignment. Abetted by
equipment makers eager to push the rules in pursuit of expanding market share,
players go to great lengths to find the ball they think might give them a few
more yards off the tee or straighter flight than those of their competitors. If
the difference is just 1%, that’s plenty; over 72 holes a 1% difference in
score (about 2.8 strokes) can be worth several places on the leader boards, and
many dollars.
“Deflategate” seems deflated, felonywise, when one notes what NFL teams
are permitted to do with game balls placed in their possession. Before 2006
game balls were given only to home teams, but that rule was changed when teams
complained it gave the homers too much of an edge. Now, each team gets a dozen
new balls the week before each game and can do with them pretty much what they
please before kickoff.
New footballs come out of their
boxes hard and waxy, so teams typically brush them vigorously to take off the
shine, then soak and/or apply conditioners (vitamin E skin cream is a favorite)
to soften their “feel.” Putting them in a sauna reportedly also helps there. So
does temporarily overinflating them to stretch their leather skins. It’s all
OK.
The rules say game balls should be
inflated to a range of 12.5 to 13.5 pounds of pressure per square inch. That’s
an 8% difference right off, and sometimes it’s, uh, extended in both directions.
“Everyone does it,” said Jeff Blake during Super Bowl week. He ought to know
because he played quarterback for seven NFL teams over a 13-season career.
Kickers are tougher on their balls
than QBs, repeatedly bashing them nose first into tables or other hard surfaces
to increase their “give,” or placing them under boards and jumping up and down
on them. The game balls kickers use are marked with a “K.” They’re supposed to
be discarded after every game but, it’s said, kickers have been known to erase
the league’s discard mark to keep ones they like in play longer.
Even at that football takes a back seat to
baseball when it comes to ball manipulation. Baseballs are thrown into games
new but they’re typically rubbed down by pitchers before they’re thrown to
remove their “shine.” Any sort of scuff or irregularity can give a pitcher an
edge and cause a ball to be discarded, so since time immemorial some pitchers
have found ways to alter them surreptitiously.
The ones
who do this best are widely admired for their guile. A celebrated baseball
“doctor” was Gaylord Perry, who pitched in the Major Leagues for 22 seasons
(1962-83). He was busted once (in 1982) with a 10-day suspension, and was
patted down many times by umps, but otherwise won 314 games and gained Hall of
Fame election in 1991.
Perry reveled
in his rep, in mid-career writing an autobiography titled “Me and the Spitter.”
He was widely suspected of using slippery stuff on baseballs, and once sought
to endorse Vaseline (no kidding), but after retirement confessed that he found sticky
substances like pine tar to be most helpful because they improved his ball grip
and put more snap on his curve. He said that wiping his hand on the dugout
pine-tar rag could get him through an entire inning. If that didn’t work he could make his own
pine tar on the mound by mixing rosin-bag talc (dried pine tar) with sweat. He argued, not unreasonably, that batters were
allowed to use things to improve their grips on their implements, so why
shouldn’t pitchers?
Or, for
that matter, quarterbacks?
2 comments:
While I have never played competitive sports except for fun I have never cheated. In a senior softball game recently we were playing another team I said to the guy who made up the team "If you win by cheating you haven't really won." He replied "What kind of an attitude is that?" I know you played tennis--did you fudge on line calls?
the preceding was from Dave Wise.
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