April 3, 2011

Soft hands and a nice pat on the butt

Friends till the end.
As the title of today's post implies, baseball's language takes many forms -- and it definitely includes those pats on the butt. Since baseball is physical its no surprise that its language is, too. We see this language happen live on our screen in every game. And of course, we learn the language of baseball from our trusty baseball announcers. Let's listen in and see what they say. There's almost always a physical angle to it.

When a player reaches down to scoop up a low ball -- and his hand just misses it, coming up empty -- the announcer will often say, "He couldn't get a handle on it." I love that. As if the ball is a little suitcase with a handy feature on top -- a very physical image.

"Oh! What a tough error!" This is what announcers say when the ball is very hard to catch and the fielder understandably misses it -- yet it gets called an error by the baseball gods. The error is tough in the same way it's tough when a child gets pushed over by a bully. A good kid like him didn't deserve that kind of treatment. And it's also about the harshness of the call. To judge this very-hard-to-catch ball as something that should definitely have been caught is the definition of being tough. It's heartless. And with all the struggle this implies, it's physical. Just ask the player who feels like he was punched in the gut by the call.

And let's get down to it. What's with all those pats on the butt? They're obviously a big part of baseball's language because you see them in every game. I'd be curious to learn how readers view this behavior. What do you think is being passed from one player to another by a pat on the butt? And why choose the butt to pat? Arms aren't good enough? I ask these things, but for me there's no mystery to it. A pat on the butt inevitably harkens back to childhood. It's what you do with a toddler or pre-toddler: you pat him on the butt as a sign of approval and support. That's exactly how I see baseball's pats. And yes, there is an infantile aspect to the behavior.

Soft hands is a baseball phrase I love. It's what they say about a player who can catch anything they throw at him: he's got soft hands. It's as if the ball falls easily into the comfortable folds of his sainted palms and blessed fingers. You gotta have soft hands to be a Gold Glover.

Sometimes a pitcher is having a great day and hitting all his "targets", i.e., the mitt the catcher holds up. At those times the announcers say the pitcher is really commanding his sinking fastball (or slider or whatever). I like the use of the word command here. It's a macho, king-of-the-mountain word as if the balls are his minions and he has directed them to follow his every manly order. He is the lord of all things; he has command.

And how about the way the catcher frames the ball for the home base umpire by turning into a statue once he catches it? "See, Mr. Umpire -- it was a strike! Really!" Framing is such a good term for this. The catcher is literally snatching a moment in time and freezing it into a 3D photo. He physically frames a version of reality (his version) for the ump by holding his position.

But of course, in many instances the catcher is trying to deceive the umpire -- because deception is built into baseball. Stay tuned. Baseball's language of deception is coming soon . . . and off in the distance, I can dimly see the post after that . . . why, yes I can see it now . . it's . . . the language of baseball voodoo! All this coming soon to a blog near you! Be still, your heart.

3 comments:

Anna Guess Pick said...

Just yesterday I was watching the end of a game and the team line up of high fives with the pitcher... every now and again the pitcher would offer up a little butt-pat to a team member, but not all were deserving. lol

And sometimes you will see the first baseman welcome the opposing team's base hit with a little butt-pat when the player settles it at first base.

Can't beat 'soft hands'...lol, have a great day, K.

Anna Guess Pick said...

From Len & Bob's Baseball Blog today:

"You Never Know"

"One of the best things about baseball is that you just never know. As much as we try to get a handle on what might happen, things tend to veer off course often, many times in great ways.

Take yesterday's game. The two biggest hits for the Cubs during their huge 5-run 8th came from maybe the two most unlikely guys in terms of how things have been going--Alfonso Soriano, who tied it with a huge RBI single for his first hit of the season and Blake DeWitt, who won it with a 2-run PH double after having a terrible spring, pushing him to "last man on the bench" status.

A radio buddy of mine has a pet phrase regarding sports--"Anything can happen, but usually doesn't." So true, but yesterday, it did.

I love this game.

Len"

Read more: http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/len-and-bob/2011/04/you-never-know.html#ixzz1ITreUrjG

writenow said...

That's fun. I realized I'm familiar with Len and Bob from watching Cubs games. I even considered naming a character in one of my books, "Lenandbob". Didn't do it. I'm with you, Annie. I'm loving the return of baseball. I'm floating in a sea of baseball right now and it feels GREAT. (And again makes me wonder how I make it through the winter months.)