
The Fourth of July and baseball are irretrievably linked. The celebration of American independence in midsummer and the game share many traditions. Across America on the Fourth of July, baseball tournaments and games were played as part of celebrations of America’s birthday. Major League baseball is a foremost part of the July Fourth tradition. The holiday also marks the traditional midpoint of the regular season. It is baseball superstition that teams leading the standings on the Fourth of July often go on to play in the World Series. While the addition of division playoffs and wild card teams to post-season baseball has somewhat altered this superstition, a glance at the major league standings on July 4, 2018, found that seven of the ten teams leading the standings on that date went on to appear in the playoffs. Seattle, Arizona and Philadelphia fell from the top 10 and were replaced by Oakland, the Dodgers and Colorado.
On July 4, 1939, one of the most iconic moments in baseball history occurred in Yankee Stadium. Lou Gehrig, afflicted with ALS and soon to retire from baseball, told fans, “Fans, for the past two weeks you have been reading about the bad break I got. Yet today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of this earth.”
In my youth, July 4 was generally a great baseball day because most teams played doubleheaders. The doubleheader, two games played on one day, was a long baseball tradition on Sundays and summer holidays. It has now become a baseball dodo bird, fairly extinct. It exists now solely to make up games canceled due to weather. While major league teams may play two games on one day, they often clear the stadium between games so fans must pay separate admissions, thereby protecting ticket revenue. But major league teams do promote fireworks extravaganzas on the Fourth and teams wear special uniforms that are prominently offered for purchase on the MLB webpage as well as in stadiums. Major league owners maximizing profit is as much a tradition as those historically associated with the Fourth of July.
I was fortunate to spend part of my Fourth of July watching the Springfield Sliders battle the Terre Haute Rex in an afternoon game at Robin Roberts Stadium. The game featured many traditions associated with Fourth of July baseball, including an honor guard of
Marine Corp veterans presenting the colors before singing the National
Anthem. Unfortunately, it also featured a 30-minute weather delay as
lightning appeared in the sky south of the stadium. The weather this
spring and summer has wreaked havoc on baseball games, from tee-ball to
the majors. The Sliders had three games rained out in June including two
major Friday night promotions. The loss of those fireworks nights cost
the team two nights of 1,500-2,000 fans. In the second half of the
season, four more fireworks nights are scheduled.
It
has been a difficult summer for the Sliders as they fell to a record of
9 wins and 20 losses after their 7-4 loss to Terre Haute. There are
some bright spots on the team. Second baseman Brendan Ryan, who attends
SIU Edwardsville, is having an excellent summer. His batting average is
.400, placing him second in the Prospect League. In the field he is the
definition of a hustling, gritty infielder. He has the dirtiest uniform
on the squad and in Thursday’s game fielded his position with skill,
executing a fine over-the-shoulder catch on a pop fly to shallow right
field and helping turn a quickly executed double play in the fourth
inning to end a budding Terre Haute scoring chance.
The
Sliders continue to provide great entertainment value for fans
attending games. Activities abound between innings and every break in
the action offers some potential reward or gift. Even with their woes on
the field, the Sliders rank third in the Prospect league in average
attendance. Because the Prospect League plays a split season, perhaps a
rebound in the second half of the summer might still bring the Sliders
into playoff contention. Owner Todd Miller remains optimistic and
energetic. Throughout the league, attendance is down due to weather. But
Miller continues to work at building crowds. When the doors opened at
Robin Roberts Stadium on July 4, he was at the front gate making certain
everything was in order.
This
year America’s birthday found itself somewhat mired in controversy as
its meaning and raison d’etre became a political football to be tossed
around by politicians hopeful of scoring political points. But for one
afternoon in Springfield there was an opportunity to celebrate the game
America invented and enjoy an afternoon at the ballpark. Keep in mind
there are plenty of games remaining in July and August. Check out the
Sliders.
Stuart Shiff man’s columns on baseball appear this summer in Illinois Times print and online editions.