The days grow short.

AuthorBarrett, Wayne M.
PositionSPORTS SCENE

THE DAYS HAVE STARTED getting shorter again; seeing the go down sooner inevitably sends the signal that the pennant s have begun in earnest, an exciting dine to be sure, and one of heartfelt prayer to the baseball gods that perhaps this year (finally, oh please, finally) they will look kindly upon our chosen team and bestow their blessings so that this long-beleaguered franchise ultimately may shed its crown of thorns in exchange for the golden ring of World Series supremacy--or not.

When the Yankees were ringing up all those championships in the '40s, '50s, and '60s (yes, we know, they did likewise in the '20s, '30s, '70s, and '90s)--and the Fall Classic actually was an afternoon treat--the oft-quoted Yogi Berra explained the tough sun-field in left at the old Stadium quite simply: "It gets late early these days," said the player with more World Series tings than anyone in history. Berra, a former catcher, was part of the large Hall of Fame contingent that graced the Yankee Stadium diamond one last lime during the pre-game ceremonies at this year's All-Star Game, and the American League's record-setting 15-inning triumph in the Mid-Summer Classic proved to be a fitting star-studded farewell to the House that Ruth Built. A glitzy new ballpark, this one built on the backs of New York City taxpayers, will open across the street next year, with the . now-standing structure being razed for more parking spots.

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The Hall-of-Famers, dressed in street clothes, but wearing their former team's cap, dutifully lined up in their old positions and subsequently were greeted by the warm applause of the crowd as well as the contemporary players who were manning those respective positions in that night's All-Star Game. Berra, in order to ensure that he receive the longest and loudest ovation, was introduced last. Yet, not far from where he was standing was the man who, in our mind at least, deserves an unending cavalcade of plaudits for the genius he showed while pacing the dugout of the Baltimore Orioles--former manager Earl Weaver, whose legacy of success in and out of Yankee Stadium (the original and the one soon to fall victim to the wrecking ball) is the reason he is enshrined at Cooperstown. Famed for his fiery temper, record number of ejections, umpire bating, rulebook expertise, statistical index cards, chain-smoking dugout tirades, reliance on pitching and power hitting, refusal to play the infield in, and abhorrence for the...

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