Five words I’ve never before written: I agree with Bud Selig. The MLB commissioner has taken a hard
line on baseball as an Olympic sport and true fans should applaud his actions.
The 2012 Olympics (in London) dropped baseball and softball as Olympic sports,
a decision that has spawned a grassroots movement to force the International
Olympics Committee to reverse that decision. The kicker is that the same
advocates also want professional players to compete. This would entail suspending
the MLB season for two weeks in August every four years, a contingency that
Selig rejected outright. He’s right. August is when the pennant races really
begin to heat up and there is absolutely no reason for the leagues to suspend
play for the sake of what is little more than exhibition games that promote
corporate advertising and muscular nationalism. I’ll go Selig one better and
say that all team sports should be
removed from the Olympics. That would give the games a chance to recoup what
little is left of the elusive “spirit of the Olympics.”
I mean that. No ice hockey, field hockey, cricket,
basketball, or soccer either. But isn’t Olympic ice hockey exciting, you ask?
It used to be–back in the days when occasionally a bunch of feisty amateurs could
take on the state-sponsored Ruskies and occasionally win. But not now; the
National Hockey League is the de facto World
Hockey League. Not only do players from 20 nations suit up, more than half of
the players now come from outside of Canada and the United States. So stop
shutting down the NHL in February for meaningless games between players that
already compete. Besides, like soccer (men’s and women’s) there’s already a
World Cup. And for heaven’s sake, enough with the farcical “Dream Teams” in basketball!
The NBA is also international in makeup, plus it’s boring enough during the
season; we don’t need to see it in August, and we surely don’t need to see a
bunch of pampered pros beating up on amateurs. This sort of thing is a relic of
the Cold War, when (once again) the Russians won gold a few times by defeating
US college players. Ancient history.
Dump field hockey, cricket, and other such sports as well;
they are only played in a few nations and they also have world championships. If
we must keep any team sports at all,
let’s return to the rules that say that a person who has signed a professional
contract to play (at any level) is ineligible for the Olympics. I’d also love
to see an end to the grotesquely expensive and tacky opening ceremonies where
nationalism is on display, plus a ban on “medals count” columns. The very idea
that a nation “wins” the Olympics makes mockery of the ideals behind the games.
We are supposed to marvel over the individual
achievements of stellar athletes. Local pride is one thing, but wallowing in
the collective national loot gathered by pro athletes in
made-for-corporate-sponsors moments is grotesque. Congratulations to
Commissioner Selig for not adding baseball to this farce. For once, this Bud’s
for you! --Rob Weir