BASEBALL QUOTES V

quotations about baseball

I think I was the best baseball player I ever saw.

WILLIE MAYS

Newsweek, Feb. 5, 1979


Baseball is as close a liturgical enactment of the white Anglo-Saxon Protestant myth as the nation has. It is a cerebral game, designed as geometrically as the city of Washington itself, born out of the Enlightenment and the philosophies so beloved of Jefferson, Madison, and Hamilton. It is to games what the Federalist Papers are to books; orderly, reasoned, judiciously balanced, incorporating segments of violence and collision in a larger plan of rationality, absolutely dependent on an interiorization of public rules.

MICHAEL NOVAK

The Joy of Sports


Baseball is a spectacle; people come to see it because it is artificial, because it distills reality into a customary form. Yet the very fact that they come to see it makes it real. A culture is its carnivals, its stage plays, its sideshows and circuses.

TIMOTHY MORRIS

Making the Team


Baseball is a curious anomaly in American life. It seems to have been ingrained in people in their childhood.... Baseball is, after all, a boy's game, and children are innocent of evil. So even adults who are prejudiced revert to their childhood when they encounter a baseball player and they react with the purity of little children.

JACKIE ROBINSON

Baseball Has Done It


Baseball is the American success story. It is the only avenue of escape for thousands of boys born into a dreay environment of poverty. It is, moreover, a great common ground on which bartenders and bishops, clergymen and bosses, bankers and laborers meet with true equality and understanding. The game has proved in everyday language that democracy works.

J. G. TAYLOR SPINK

attributed, Seasons of Change


Any baseball is beautiful. No other small package comes as close to the ideal in design and utility. It is a perfect object for a man's hand.

ROGER ANGELL

On the Ball


For most baseball fans, maybe oldest is always best. We love baseball because it seizes and retains the past, like the snowy village inside a glass paperweight.

DONALD HALL

Ford Times, April 1977


If you don’t think it’s the greatest game, leave, cause you’re missing it all. It’s the greatest game there ever was. It is the only game where nobody cares where you come from. And nobody cares who you are. They only care, can you play. That’s all this game is. It’s a game of having fun.

SPARKY ANDERSON

Hall of Fame induction speech


Baseball has two main elements that grip the fan. Like many other sports, it has great subtlety and it has individual heroism. As an American child you're mesmerized by both. As a boy you play baseball all summer long, all day long and into the evening, so long as there is still light enough to be able to see the ball. Then as an adult, you watch it and follow it for the rest of your life, still like a child.

PHILIP ROTH

Le Monde, special issue, Jan. 2013


Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball.

JACQUES BARZUN

attributed, Game Plans


There was a beauty here bigger than the hurtling beauty of basketball, a beauty refined from country pastures, a game of solitariness, of waiting, waiting for the pitcher to complete his gaze toward first base and throw his lightning, a game whose very taste, of spit and dust and grass and sweat and leather and sun, was America.

JOHN UPDIKE

Rabbit Redux


The fundamental reason for the popularity of the game is the fact that it is a national safety valve. Voltaire says that there are no real pleasures without real needs. Now a young, ambitious and growing nation needs to "let off steam." Baseball furnishes the opportunity. Therefore, it is a real pleasure.... That is what baseball does for humanity. It serves the same purpose as a revolution in Central America or a thunderstorm on a hot day.... A tonic, an exercise, a safety-valve, baseball is second only to Death as a leveler. So long as it remains our national game, America will abide no monarchy, and anarchy will be too slow.

ALLEN SANGREE

attributed, The Ultimate Baseball Book


Some argue that baseball is a subtler game than football, which, if true, may be part of the reason many Americans find baseball boring.

ARTHUR ASA BERGER

Media Analysis Techniques


Little Boy, in a baseball hat
Stands in the field with his ball and bat
Says I am the greatest player of them all
Puts his bat on his shoulder and he tosses up his ball

KENNY ROGERS

"The Greatest"


To be an American and unable to play baseball is comparable to being a Polynesian and unable to swim.

JOHN CHEEVER

The New Yorker, Sep. 28, 1953


Sliding headfirst is the safest way to get to the next base, I think. And the fastest. You don't lose your momentum.... And there is one more important reason that I slide headfirst. It gets my picture in the newspaper.

PETE ROSE

Pete Rose: My Life in Baseball


Baseball is continuous, like nothing else among American things, an endless game of repeated summers, joining the long generations of all the fathers and all the sons.

DONALD HALL

Fathers Playing Catch with Sons


If you can't enjoy the game unless you are pretty sure your team is going to win, baseball is not the game for you. Remember, the best team in baseball in any year is going to be beaten about 60 times.

DANIEL OKRENT & HARRIS LEWINE

The Ultimate Baseball Book


Baseball through the years is a tapestry through time; it beats to the rhythm of the culture.

VICTOR ALEXANDER BALTOV, JR.

Baseball Is America: Origins and History: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly


What's true for the people who play baseball is true in different ways for those of us who mostly just watch it. On the one hand, a baseball stadium becomes a kind of home for many of us who go often. Whether it's a big league stadium where you can leave your peanut shells scattered beneath your seat or a high school field where you know the person who chalks the base paths every Thursday, it's a personal space. You can keep score with your private notation system, sound of authoritatively on what Bud Selig is doing wrong, or tell an ump that he's missed a call even when you are 140 feet and a bad angle away from the plate.

ERIC BRONSON

Baseball and Philosophy