{"id":80,"date":"2011-08-18T17:08:00","date_gmt":"2011-08-18T17:08:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/?p=80"},"modified":"2023-04-18T17:13:21","modified_gmt":"2023-04-18T17:13:21","slug":"georgie-and-the-dragon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/?p=80","title":{"rendered":"Georgie and the Dragon"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"500\" height=\"300\" src=\"http:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/04\/BD49475F-85E8-4C16-8C95-F19DAA456F8A.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-81\" srcset=\"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/04\/BD49475F-85E8-4C16-8C95-F19DAA456F8A.jpeg 500w, https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/04\/BD49475F-85E8-4C16-8C95-F19DAA456F8A-300x180.jpeg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The shoulders of Jos\u00e9 Constanza&nbsp;are not, I will admit, the likeliest&nbsp;resting-place for the&nbsp;full&nbsp;weight of Western civilization.&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/cdn3.sbnation.com\/fan_shot_images\/208958\/ilFLbg.gif\">Look at him<\/a>.&nbsp;The guy is listed at 5&#8217;9&#8243; and 150 pounds, soaking wet in galoshes no doubt,&nbsp;on the Atlanta Braves\u2019&nbsp;roster.&nbsp;Until a few weeks ago, he&nbsp;<em>didn\u2019t even have his own Wikipedia page<\/em>.&nbsp;Jos\u00e9 is roughly as likely to achieve lasting fame as his honorary stepbrother, Seinfeld\u2019s George Costanza, is likely to leg out a bunt or chase down a gapper.&nbsp;But don\u2019t be deceived by such trivialities.&nbsp;Jos\u00e9 has been chosen for a higher purpose.&nbsp;And his fate may just seal your own.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is&nbsp;precious&nbsp;little to be known about Jos\u00e9, the human being.&nbsp;I see him&nbsp;on the streets of Santo Domingo, chasing stickballs, I imagine, across mahogany-shaded sandlots, hustling and diving and laying out to snag the attention of the&nbsp;<em>buscones<\/em>&nbsp;who scour the backstreets for raw talent, leaving school and family to pile into roach-ridden hovels with boy-men&nbsp;more desperate than himself\u2014and&nbsp;then landing the big break, the gringo&#8217;s visit that opens the door to the gleaming Academy, and ultimately across the water to the land of big money.&nbsp;And then the slow deflation of dreams deferred, of detours through the clean alien worlds of Kinston and Gwinnett, pride-sucking stints with the Mahoning Valley Scrappers and the Akron Aeros, endless hot bus rides and the ache of the bat bag and veiled slurs in half-grasped English.&nbsp;Such is Jos\u00e9&#8217;s life for&nbsp;six&nbsp;years, seven hundred and forty-three baseball games, three thousand one hundred and sixty-four long walks to home plate and, more often than not,&nbsp;right&nbsp;back to the dugout, without any promise of a more&nbsp;estimable&nbsp;future.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And then a hernia changes everything.&nbsp;Deep in the groin of one Nate McLouth, that slumpingest and most-mocked of the&nbsp;BigBraves, something stretches to the point of no return.&nbsp;Nate is whisked, mercifully for all, to the operating table.&nbsp;And for lack of a better option, a certain pocket-sized Dominican journeyman is&nbsp;pluck\u2019d from obscurity and&nbsp;whisked to the Big Show.&nbsp;Where for two wondrous weeks\u2014and counting\u2014Constanza, a fine but unspectacular baseball player for all of his 27 years, proceeds to uncork&nbsp;his&nbsp;best&nbsp;impression of Ted Williams.&nbsp;Hits&nbsp;well north of&nbsp;.400, wreaks havoc on the basepaths, bashes a home run (after hitting six in his entire minor-league career!), makes a circus catch in left.&nbsp;Up here, his new teammates&nbsp;fondly&nbsp;call him Georgie.&nbsp;Jos\u00e9&#8217;s translator says he doesn&#8217;t mind.&nbsp;They probably don&#8217;t know his story, most of them, any more than I do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In another sense, though, I know everything there is to know about him.&nbsp;Jos\u00e9 Constanza cannot hide from me.&nbsp;I have his ISO and his BABiP, his OPS and wOBA, his O-Swing and his Z-Swing, his BIZ and OOZ and UZR, right here at my hot little fingertips.&nbsp;Baseball feasts on failure, and every failure is witnessed and counted and wrung out and laid flat and, ultimately, embalmed as a statistic.&nbsp;If Jos\u00e9 aims his bat a quarter-inch too low, if he hesitates for a quarter-second on a liner in the gap, it will be known, and known forever.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In this respect, as in so many others, he is no different from any other ballplayer.&nbsp;In fact, it took me some time to recognize that the weight of Western civilization was resting on his shoulders.&nbsp;Perhaps I should have been tipped off that Jos\u00e9 was up to something when the cameras\u2014they see all!\u2014caught&nbsp;him&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/mlb.mlb.com\/video\/play.jsp?content_id=17745971&amp;topic_id=9780550&amp;c_id=mlb\">licking the barrel of his bat<\/a>&nbsp;after a foul tip.&nbsp;&nbsp;No real reason, says Jos\u00e9 Constanza&#8217;s translator.&nbsp;I just like the taste of burning wood. Sure,&nbsp;Jos\u00e9, and I just like a little brimstone in my coffee.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But no, my first real clue to Georgie&#8217;s cosmic significance came later.&nbsp;It came, to be exact, on August 7, when his name appeared innocuously on a major league lineup card for the ninth straight game, and this mere fact caused the Braves blogosphere to crumble into smoking, blood-spattered, apocalyptic ruin.&nbsp;Here Iinclude, as Exhibit A, an abridged&nbsp;(and mildly sanitized) transcript.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>*\u200b*\u200b*<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Dramatis Personae.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cCommentator A.\u201d &nbsp;<\/em>An avowed supporter of the Atlanta Braves, and an avowed disciple of the latest and most arcane statistics used to analyze baseball performance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cCommentators B<\/em><em>, C , D<\/em><em>, E<\/em><em>&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;<\/em><em>F<\/em><em>.\u201d &nbsp;<\/em>Avowed supporters of the Atlanta Braves, and avowed skeptics of the latest and most arcane statistics used to analyze baseball performance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Sabermetrics<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>The latest and most arcane statistics used to analyze baseball performance.&nbsp;Named after the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Jason Heyward&nbsp;<\/em>\u2013 the Braves\u2019 22-year-old right fielder and&nbsp;superstar-in-training,&nbsp;once&nbsp;the top-rated prospect in all of baseball, yet currently embogged in the proverbial Sophomore Slump, and losing playing time, as a result, to Jos\u00e9 Constanza.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>_________________________<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Act I. Scene I.&nbsp;<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Commentator A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I appreciate what Constanza has done, but\u2026eventually Heyward will need those starts. He\u2019s the better overall hitter.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Commentator B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>[Commentator A], we all understand you want to use metrics to prove your case on anything. Then please explain to me why the developers of SABER have stated in repeated interviews\u2026that the metrics system is flawed\u2026I honestly would like an honest answer and not some\u2026\u2026.I know more than you because I look at different stats\u2026<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>[Explains several of the \u201cmetrics,\u201d including BABiP (Batting Average on Balls in Play), which suggests that much of Constanza\u2019s success can be attributed to luck.]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I respect your view but I contend they are just numbers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>[You] can say they are garbage all you want. But it really is like saying that you don\u2019t believe in gravity or the speed of light or the pythagorean theorem.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. C<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em><em>\u2026<\/em>All of this infatuation with applying endless stats to a game involving humans, human judgment, the wind, the rain, turf, maple vs hickory bats, baseballs in humidors and on and on\u2026is for you and the others that really want to spend endless amounts of time second guessing what the guys are doing on the field and in the dugouts\u2026.&nbsp;I\u2019m in love with the game of baseball \u2026. not some math geeks efforts to run the game like it was a rocket going to the moon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>\u2026It\u2019s not trying to run it like a rocket ship, it\u2019s trying to run it correctly.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>Grow up and stop getting defensive. You want to live in a metric world fine. Go for it. But I do have a problem when you try to look down you nose as you do reapeatedly to people that want logic instead of arbitrary numbers. By your Metric holy numbers\u2026\u2026..Constanza never should have been on the roster.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>All these numbers do is show you what they did and how they did it. It digs through the chaff to get to the wheat. It shows you that (over a large enough sample size of course) you can expect player A to be this type of player.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. C<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I\u2019m betting Ted Williams didn\u2019t studfy physics to make him the all time greatest hitter\u2026here we\u2019re just enjoying a kid\u2019s game\u2026.of course a long comes a bunch of adults and screws it up\u2026.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>Yu are being aggressive. You accuse me of not presenting facts (and i have) you offer no facts of&nbsp;your own to back up your case\u2026These numbers make the game better by providing a better tool for the mgr\u2019s ,gm\u2019s coaches, fans scouts..etc to use to determine player value. It\u2019s foolish to not take advantage of more information when it\u2019s available.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>\u2026How old are you [Commentator A]? \u201d no i not aggressive you are\u201d. Grow up son. And I call you son, if you want to try and question me there\u2026\u2026..I served 10 years in the US ARMY, also gave up a baseball scholarship to do so. So just maybe I might know a little bit about a game I was good enough at playing to earn a scholarship even though I turned it down to serve my country. What about you?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. D<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>\u2026I guess that you mean that Georgie can not play up here with all of us Phds with a chaw in our cheek cause he\u2019s just a little 5-9 guy that spent 7 years riding buses?&#8230;&nbsp;No wonder he doesn\u2019t speak English after all those years up here. I do not blame him a bit; if he did he might screw up and read those numbers and find out he can not do what he is doing\u2026<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I\u2019m saying that Constanza is probably going to regress to his normal numbers eventually in the big leagues. It may start tomorrow, it may start 3 weeks from now, it may start in April of next year, but He\u2019s obviously not going to keep hitting .423.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. E<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>\u2026there is one thing that can\u2019t be quantified in numbers to predict performance and that is HEART AND DRIVE\u2026i\u2019m not saying constanza will keep it up but there always needs to be some magic for a team to win.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>[cites examples of players\u2019 major-league performance&nbsp;conforming to&nbsp;their minor-league trends]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>Anybody can pick 2 names at random. You used avg\/obp\/ops\u2026..where is your holy metrics? You believe in them use them\u2026Son With all due respect you wouldn\u2019t last 3 days in basic training at fort benning. Don\u2019t test me son.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I lasted 4 years in the Army, I\u2019m 38 years old. I\u2019m 6 foot 3 235 pounds\u2026You silly attempts at belittling me as some sort of weakling is amusing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. B<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>No soldier is as defensive as you sir. I am sorry, but we have pride and honor\u2026You miss the point of all of the criticism. You claim numbers that are arbitrary and mean nothing. Baseball is a game of numbers but you are going over the top and not looking at logic\u2026You are not a soldier. If you ever were, then I am embarrassed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. A<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>I\u2019m not defensive, I\u2019m frustrated with the complete lack of cooperation or even an attempt to go \u201cohh, hmm you might be right about that\u201d not it\u2019s been&nbsp;pretty much \u201cBURN THE WITCH!!!\u201d&nbsp;\u2026I left the army after 4 years to get away from all the meathead career army people\u2026I\u2019m the grandson of a 3 war vet AF colonel who started in the army air corps (which became the air force) he said that he retired because there were too many thick neck idiots coming in and not enough cream of the crop.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. C<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em><em>\u2026<\/em>Pardon me but you are an arrogan elitest SOB. You skated thru a tour in Europe in peace time and were so damn smart you detest the thick necked \u201cmoron\u201d that died so that weasels like you could preach statistics on a baseball blog\u2026You are disgusting\u2026..I\u2019m out of here\u2026you guys can have this little weasel<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Com. F<\/em><em>.&nbsp;<\/em>Look out world. We are being attack by geek monsters!&#8230;Hide all of your \u201cFIRST BORN\u201d. THE GEEKS ARE TAKING OVER!<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>*\u200b*\u200b*<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bYou dare to bring BABiP into my home? &nbsp;Sir, you are a coward and a blackguard! &nbsp;Fetch the dueling pistols! &nbsp;Just Southern men being Southern men, we might say.&nbsp;And&nbsp;Southern manhood&nbsp;is&nbsp;indeed&nbsp;a delicate thing.&nbsp;We&nbsp;take&nbsp;offense easily and badly\u2014this&nbsp;much&nbsp;is the stuff of proverb\u2014and&nbsp;nothing offends&nbsp;us&nbsp;more than an infringement&nbsp;on possibility.&nbsp;&nbsp;Hence the fondness for the tall tale.&nbsp;Hence the&nbsp;suspicion&nbsp;toward Big Government.&nbsp;And hence the fixation on baseball\u2019s mythological Intangibles:&nbsp;Heart, Drive, the Hot Hand.&nbsp;The fabled conservatism that supposedly defines the South, and thus much of Braves fandom, is just a symptom of the deeper&nbsp;and wider&nbsp;condition of romanticism.&nbsp;A world in which little Georgie is forever imprisoned by his numbers, never given the chance to make his own magic, is a world in which the&nbsp;romanticfinds little reason to live.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bHeyward vs. Constanza is just an excuse, of course:&nbsp;a convenient dueling-ground for&nbsp;the Forces of the Old and the Forces of the New.&nbsp;It doesn\u2019t hurt that Constanza is a throwback, a&nbsp;scrappy, pesky, hustling, grinding,&nbsp;hit-\u2018em-where-they-ain\u2019t sparkplug&nbsp;rugrat(did I miss any?) who seems&nbsp;tailor-made for the small ball of yesteryear.&nbsp;Heyward,&nbsp;for all&nbsp;his neo-Ruthian exploits (see the trails of carnage he left through the Braves\u2019 spring-training parking lots), is very much a product of modern baseball:&nbsp;hyped and coddled at every step through the farm system, fawned over by sabermetricians even\u2014or especially\u2014when his Standard Stats seem wanting,&nbsp;and doggedly milked by the PR machine as the messianic new face of African-American baseball.&nbsp;Heyward\u2019s greatness&nbsp;(30 home runs, .400 OBP,&nbsp;plus arm,&nbsp;double-digit steals, etc.)&nbsp;is&nbsp;preordained and&nbsp;predetermined; it\u2019s the inevitable output from a computer program, one that damn well better get it right, considering all the money we put into it.&nbsp;If he doesn\u2019t fulfill his destiny, it\u2019s going to be our fault for pressuring him too much.&nbsp;Or not giving him the at-bats.&nbsp;Forgive the old-timers if they can\u2019t find the romance in all of this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bAnd if&nbsp;they can\u2019t&nbsp;look to baseball for romance, after all, where can&nbsp;they&nbsp;look? &nbsp;Doesn\u2019t the greatness of baseball&nbsp;depend on&nbsp;its indeterminacy? &nbsp;In this sport, impossible things happen routinely; its Valhalla is bedecked with portraits of unlikely heroes.&nbsp;Bill Mazeroski, a man whose offensive prowess earned him the nickname \u201cThe Glove\u201d (in the spirit of \u201cHe\u2019s got a great face for radio\u201d),&nbsp;naturally&nbsp;slew Mantle and Maris and the rest of the mighty Yankees with one&nbsp;blast over the Forbes Field fence.&nbsp;Kirk Gibson, staggering to the plate on a blown knee, a&nbsp;shredded hamstring, and a&nbsp;flu-ridden stomach, naturally tore the hide off the ball and single-handedly snatched control of the \u201988 Series.&nbsp;Francisco Cabrera&nbsp;(another Dominican Brave), after managing to bat only ten times during the whole of 1992, naturally stepped in for the eleventh time with two down in the ninth and the pennant in his hands, and naturally plated a lumbering Sid Bream to provide a life-defining moment for a generation of fans.&nbsp;Baseball is the sport in which no lead is safe; in which there\u2019s nothing, in theory, to stop a game from stretching on towards extra-inning infinity; in which a hitter\u2014even&nbsp;one as mortal as Jos\u00e9 Constanza\u2014can&nbsp;at any given moment soar above the rules, the rhythms, the&nbsp;very boundaries of the game with one transcendent swing and one heroic trot.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bAnd yet! &nbsp;And yet no other sport is so encrusted with numbers.&nbsp;No other sport is so quantifiable.&nbsp;No other sport, in fact, is so&nbsp;<em>predictable<\/em>, because no other team sport depends so much on the isolated work of the individual.&nbsp;For those fans mindful of rain and turf and hickory bats, the greatest fear is that the geeks at the walls will one day complete their conquest.&nbsp;Today\u2019s&nbsp;\u201cmetrics\u201d may be flawed, but science marches on, as long as there\u2019s money to fuel it.&nbsp;Imagine a world in which we can predict not only Jos\u00e9\u2019s long-term value but his&nbsp;moment-to-moment reactions.&nbsp;A world with electrodes in Jos\u00e9\u2019s brain, feeding real-time data to MLB-sponsored supercomputers.&nbsp;A world in which we could all pause our TiVos, freeze that backdoor slider,&nbsp;hit the Markov Chain button,&nbsp;anticipate the swing and the miss&nbsp;(or the kiss of the bat?), and turn back to our dinner&nbsp;with muttered oaths but&nbsp;unoffended&nbsp;eyeballs.&nbsp;A world in which Jos\u00e9 is nothing but a stream of bits, and to actually \u201cwatch\u201d him is a messy waste of time.&nbsp;To know baseball fully would be to kill baseball.&nbsp;Wouldn\u2019t it?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bBut this is not really about baseball, just as it\u2019s not&nbsp;about the Southern man.&nbsp;As promised, it\u2019s about the fate of civilization.&nbsp;The disenchantment of the diamond, that project to which the \u201cmetrics\u201d-mongers are so fanatically devoted&nbsp;in the eyes of their enemies, is merely Step 8,732 in the disenchantment of the whole God-forsaken world.&nbsp;Old Max Weber, who gave us that word (actually, he said:&nbsp;<em>Entzauberung!<\/em>, with a Teutonic flourish of his&nbsp;bushy&nbsp;eyebrows\u2014or&nbsp;so I imagine), saw it all coming.&nbsp;The gods will&nbsp;be driven out! &nbsp;Magic will succumb to reason! &nbsp;And&nbsp;lo,&nbsp;we will be no more than cogs in a machine, locked in an \u201ciron cage\u201d of soulless bureaucracy.&nbsp;Weber was not one to sugar-coat things much; he also foresaw modernized life as a \u201cpolar night of icy darkness,\u201d&nbsp;haunted&nbsp;by \u201csensualists without heart\u201d and \u201cspecialists without spirit.\u201d &nbsp;His thoughts on&nbsp;<em>Sabermetrik&nbsp;<\/em>would surely have been dire.&nbsp;But Weber also held out hope that&nbsp;a new breed of heroes&nbsp;might someday emerge:&nbsp;a&nbsp;breed&nbsp;with the ability to find and defend some precious patch of meaning amidst the soul-crushing forces of rationalization; a&nbsp;breed&nbsp;able to harness the powers of modernity without succumbing to dissolution,&nbsp;anomie, and&nbsp;protein shakes.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bLike all of us, I guess, I aspire to be that guy.&nbsp;I love sabermetrics.&nbsp;I love&nbsp;taking a player\u2014for&nbsp;comedy\u2019s sake,&nbsp;let\u2019s say Wily Mo Pe\u00f1a\u2014cooking&nbsp;him down to a handful of decimals, tossing him back like a shot of whiskey, and feeling the satisfying warmth of&nbsp;digested&nbsp;knowledge.&nbsp;I also love watching baseball, love all the stuff between the boxscore lines.&nbsp;I&nbsp;love seeing&nbsp;two grown men&nbsp;barrel&nbsp;into each other in shallow left field.&nbsp;I love the broken bats, the barehanded rollers, the rundowns, the dogpiles, the mound visits&nbsp;and patted behinds.&nbsp;I love seeing a borderline&nbsp;dinger&nbsp;coaxed into fair territory by a little gesticulation and sweet-talk.&nbsp;I love the simple feeling of adulation when Francisco Cabrera, or whoever, fulfills my fondest hope.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But adulation is a dying art.&nbsp;Today\u2019s baseball gods are a far cry from Olympians like Cobb and Ruth; steroids, endorsements, Twitter feeds, reality TV, vapid postgame interviews, and yes, statistical cynicism have made sure of that.&nbsp;The kid\u2019s game&nbsp;has been ruined by grown-ups; the numbers say that we\u2019ll all come down to earth, when all we want to do is leave it for a while.&nbsp;So is ignorance really bliss? &nbsp;Doesn\u2019t the thick-neck&nbsp;idiot have something we covet? &nbsp;Is baseball fandom, truly meaningful baseball fandom, really possible without sticking one\u2019s head in the sand?&nbsp;&nbsp;Or can I have my Constanza and my Heyward too?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the old times,&nbsp;whenever the&nbsp;Higher Powers&nbsp;got&nbsp;too&nbsp;lazy or fractious or full of themselves, whenever things got too heavy or dull or one-sided, you could count on the Trickster to show up.&nbsp;The Trickster was pesky, scrappy, and a sparkplug.&nbsp;He went by&nbsp;Puck,&nbsp;or&nbsp;Loki,&nbsp;or&nbsp;Coyote,&nbsp;or&nbsp;Anansi,&nbsp;or Brer Rabbit, but&nbsp;regardless of guise, the message was the same.&nbsp;Keep it loose! &nbsp;Rules and numbers, science and progress, are all well and good, but&nbsp;go all in&nbsp;and you\u2019ll&nbsp;hear that iron door locking&nbsp;behind you.&nbsp;So long as you don\u2019t know everything, leave yourself a little wiggle room; without a little irreverence, a little wildness, a little&nbsp;bat-licking&nbsp;crazy juice, the unexpected is impossible.&nbsp;Small wonder that tricksters so often did double duty as world-builders or fertility gods.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What do you say, Jos\u00e9? &nbsp;You\u2019re nothing but a bush-league scrub,&nbsp;underneath that small-sample veneer,&nbsp;and you know it.&nbsp;You\u2019ll cool off any day now;&nbsp;the metrics are coming for you.&nbsp;I dare you to prove me wrong.&nbsp;That\u2019s what I\u2019m saying to my TV on the&nbsp;night of the twelfth, as&nbsp;Constanza digs in\u2014for the first time in his life\u2014against&nbsp;the Cubs\u2019 plume of molten rock&nbsp;better&nbsp;known as Carlos Zambrano.&nbsp;First time up, he drags a bunt&nbsp;toward first, does a little softshoe to dodge the tag, and is called for leaving the baseline.&nbsp;Baselines! says Jos\u00e9 Constanza.&nbsp;I don\u2019t need your stinkin\u2019 baselines! &nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But he digs in again in the fourth, one out, bases empty.&nbsp;Takes three straight pitches.&nbsp;Waggles his bat\u2014or the bat waggles Jos\u00e9, it\u2019s not clear.&nbsp;Gets a&nbsp;fastball at the letters, middle of the plate.&nbsp;Lifts his leg&nbsp;sky-high&nbsp;like he\u2019s going to&nbsp;defile&nbsp;the thing, and then reaches out instead and swats it toward the opposite field.&nbsp;Looks for all the world like another one of his slap singles, and from the way Jos\u00e9 takes off out of the box, you\u2019d guess he thought so too.&nbsp;But it just keeps carrying, like it\u2019s&nbsp;hitched to piano wire on a Hollywood set.&nbsp;And before you have time to blurt out what you\u2019re thinking\u2014<em>No&nbsp;<\/em><em>chance<\/em><em>, this can\u2019t happen, dude weighs a buck fifty, he\u2019s got six homers in the past&nbsp;<\/em><em>six<\/em><em>&nbsp;years, and he already&nbsp;<\/em><em>hit his one fluky big-league shot the other night<\/em>\u2014it\u2019s screaming over the fence and Jos\u00e9 Constanza is sprinting round the bases, holding onto his helmet like he\u2019s on the ride of his life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Outlier, say the metrics.&nbsp;Magic, says baseball.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Reflections on the unlikeliest folk hero and the impossible romance of baseball.  <a class=\"more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/?p=80\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">Georgie and the Dragon<\/span> <span class=\"meta-nav\" aria-hidden=\"true\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":81,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-80","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/80","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=80"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/80\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":82,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/80\/revisions\/82"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/81"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=80"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=80"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/matthewclarksmith.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=80"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}