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It was "an omen from G-d," said Manager Art Shamsky, after his team made history by winning Israel's first-ever professional baseball game. A good time was had by all. The atmosphere at the Israel Baseball League's (IBL) opening game was
a combination of down-to-earth fun and "Are we really making history
here?" musings, as over 3,000 people came out to Petach Tikva on
Sunday to gleefully escort professional baseball into Israel. The opening game itself appeared to be just a side show for many, with fans strolling around or picnicking behind the stands, talking to players and other visitors, and lazily taking in the experience of taking part in history being made. Fifth-inning mincha replaces the seventh-inning stretch
Or is it? As pitchers threw, batters hit, fielders caught, and runners dashed, the unanswered question in the minds of all was, "Will baseball really catch on in Israel?" At present, baseball in Israel appears to be like a young rookie with all the tools necessary to make it in the big leagues. Most notable among these is a strong fan pool comprising American olim (new immigrants), many of whom say they grew up on baseball, and a young "farm system" in the form of some 70 teams in the 20-year-old Israel Association of Baseball. But will the game's slow, considered pace attract fans in sufficient numbers to make it a commercially viable enterprise? Indications vary. One of the Israeli cameramen filming the game, asked how he was enjoying the job, blurted out, "It's boring!" An Israeli high schooler who apparently caught a love of the game from his two years in "shlichut" in Texas, says he has not been able to convince his friends to come on out to a game - though he has not yet given up. But the excitement of most of the crowd at the opener told a different story. Young and old, religious and not, American and other - almost everyone exuded excitement and anticipation. An Israeli reporter from Globes was interested in almost every aspect, from why a hitter who had singled to the outfield rounded first base from the outside instead of running straight to the bag, up to the extent that hitters controlled where they hit the ball. Holtzman, Shamsky, and Blomberg He'll have another chance tonight, when his team faces Modiin yet again. Modiin manager Art Shamsky - who batted .300 for the 1969 World Champion Mets and once hit four consecutive home runs - was pleased with his team's performance. "It looks like there's no reason we can't go 45-0 this year," he told them. Asked what he felt about having won the first professional baseball game in the Holy Land, he told Arutz-7, "It's an omen from G-d." He did not elaborate. Meanwhile, another IBL manager seemed to be the most lively of all. Former Yankee Ron Blomberg - the first-ever Designated Hitter who wrote a book about his life in baseball and as a Jew entitled "Designated Hebrew" - entertained many of his former and possibly future fans before the game with his catchy enthusiasm. "I'm a very proud Jew from the south," he said, "from Atlanta, Georgia, and I want to be a part of baseball in Israel; I wouldn't go anywhere else... I love the idea of starting a league here. I guess I just like being first - the first draft choice [in the 1967 amateur draft], the first Designated Hitter, and now this. Wearing a baseball uniform with my name across the back in Hebrew - what an opportunity! I guess the Man up there is looking after me." When asked if he plans to promote Israel when he returns home after the season, he replied enthusiastically. "Oh, absolutely," he said, "especially in my YMHA baseball camp. I can tell you that this league is not just an Israeli thing, but all over, everyone is talking it up. It's a big hit all over." The Players Other religiously-observant players in the league are Dovid Green of New York, a 2nd baseman on the Pioneers, Joey Sherman from Brookline, Mass., a pitcher on the Tel Aviv Lightning, and others.
Israel is well-represented in the new league, with 13 players from Kibbutz
Gezer, Kfar Saba, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Ramat Gan and Givatayim. The Dominican
Republic does even better, however, with 14. Others hail from the Ukraine,
Columbia, Japan, Canada, and of course from the United States. Players
from additional countries are expected to be added over the coming months.
The players signed all have significant baseball pedigrees, being alums
from the Minor Leagues, national teams, college varsity teams, and other
major baseball programs.
Young Israeli autograph seeker
Others are not so sure. "Do we really need to import the big-bucks, beer-chugging, hero-worshipping culture of American baseball into the Holy Land?" asks one observer. "This is simply a Greek-like fan-culture with little redeeming value. Did we yearn to leave the Exile for 2,000 years merely so we could build a copy of it here in Israel? It's very nice that the league doesn't play on Shabbat, but I'm afraid that during the week, children will grow up idolizing players, as they do in the U.S. at great cost in time and money, instead of going out to play themselves or otherwise occupy themselves constructively." In either event, a better translation of English terms into Hebrew is necessary, and would add to the catchiness of the game. For instance, an outfielder cannot be called the tedious "sachkan chatzer chitzoni" (player of the outer field), but rather something lighter such as "chutz-nik." Similarly, an infield fly simply cannot be "high ball in the inner field," but must be more along the lines of "me'ofef pnim."
STANDINGS as of 23 Tammuz 5767, 09 July 07
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