From: Jeanne Douglas on
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR200708
1601687.html>

--
JD

"...if you think the 'Star Wars' prequels are a disease, then
'Serenity' is the cure."
From: Tom on
On Aug 23, 12:49 am, Jeanne Douglas <hlwd...(a)NOSPAMpacbell.net> wrote:
> <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR200708
> 1601687.html>
>
> --
> JD
>
> "...if you think the 'Star Wars' prequels are a disease, then
> 'Serenity' is the cure."


The link's not working for me, Jeanne. Is this the Charles Krauthamer
(sp?) column from Sunday?

Tom

From: Eddie Gaedel on
In article <1187906037.832102.3880(a)z24g2000prh.googlegroups.com>,
Tom <drsoong(a)aol.com> wrote:

> On Aug 23, 12:49 am, Jeanne Douglas <hlwd...(a)NOSPAMpacbell.net> wrote:
> > <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR200708
> > 1601687.html>
> >
> > --
> > JD
> >
> > "...if you think the 'Star Wars' prequels are a disease, then
> > 'Serenity' is the cure."
>
>
> The link's not working for me, Jeanne. Is this the Charles Krauthamer
> (sp?) column from Sunday?
>
> Tom

Tom -
That column might be easier to pick up from the Post Dispatch website.
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/Columnist/Charles+Kr
authammer?OpenDocument

or

http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/charleskrauthammer/s
tory/410875096B8C1E4F8625733B0050825B?OpenDocument
From: Tom on
On Aug 23, 5:32 pm, Eddie Gaedel <ed...(a)lycos.com> wrote:
> In article <1187906037.832102.3...(a)z24g2000prh.googlegroups.com>,
>
>
>
> Tom <drso...(a)aol.com> wrote:
> > On Aug 23, 12:49 am, Jeanne Douglas <hlwd...(a)NOSPAMpacbell.net> wrote:
> > > <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR200708
> > > 1601687.html>
>
> > > --
> > > JD
>
> > > "...if you think the 'Star Wars' prequels are a disease, then
> > > 'Serenity' is the cure."
>
> > The link's not working for me, Jeanne. Is this the Charles Krauthamer
> > (sp?) column from Sunday?
>
> > Tom
>
> Tom -
> That column might be easier to pick up from the Post Dispatch website.http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/Columnist/Charle...
> authammer?OpenDocument
>
> or
>
> http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/charleskrauthamm...
> tory/410875096B8C1E4F8625733B0050825B?OpenDocument


Thanks Eddie. I read it Sunday. I was just wondering if it was,
perhaps, a different article.

I'm not a Krauthamer (sp?) fan, so I was quite surprised how much I
enjoyed that column.

Tom

From: Lance Freezeland on
On Thu, 23 Aug 2007 21:53:57 -0000, Tom <drsoong(a)aol.com> gave us:
>On Aug 23, 12:49 am, Jeanne Douglas <hlwd...(a)NOSPAMpacbell.net> wrote:

>> <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR200708
>> 1601687.html>

>The link's not working for me, Jeanne. Is this the Charles Krauthamer
>(sp?) column from Sunday?

Yes.

In case others have trouble, here it is:

Return of the Natural

By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, August 17, 2007; Page A23

In the fable, the farm boy phenom makes his way to the big city to
amaze the world with his arm. At a stop at a fair on the train ride to
Chicago, he strikes out the Babe Ruth of his time on three blazing
pitches. Enter the Dark Lady. Before he can reach the stadium for his
tryout, she shoots him and leaves him for dead.

It is 16 years later and Roy Hobbs returns, but now as a hitter and
outfielder. (He can never pitch again because of the wound.) He leads
his team to improbable glory, ending the tale with a titanic home run
that, in the now-iconic movie image, explodes the stadium lights in a
dazzling cascade of white.

In real life, the kid doesn't look like Robert Redford, but he throws
like Roy Hobbs: unhittable, unstoppable. In his rookie year,
appropriately the millennial year 2000, he throws it by everyone. He
pitches the St. Louis Cardinals to a division title, playing so well
that his manager anoints him starter for the opening game of the
playoffs, a position of honor and -- for 21-year-old Rick Ankiel --
fatal exposure.

His collapse is epic. He can't find the plate. In the third inning he
walks four batters and throws five wild pitches (something not seen
since 1890) before Manager Tony La Russa mercifully takes him out of
the game.

The kid is never the same. He never recovers his control. Five
miserable years in the minors trying to come back. Injuries.
Operations. In 2005, he gives up pitching forever.

Then, last week, on Aug. 9, he is called up from Triple-A. Same team.
Same manager. Rick Ankiel is introduced to a roaring Busch Stadium
crowd as the Cardinals' starting right fielder.

In the seventh inning, with two outs, he hits a three-run home run to
seal the game for the Cardinals. Two days later, he hits two home runs
and makes one of the great catches of the year -- over the shoulder,
back to the plate, full speed.

But the play is more than spectacular. It is poignant. It was an
amateur's catch. Ankiel ran a slightly incorrect route to the ball. A
veteran outfielder would have seen the ball tailing to the right. But
pitchers aren't trained to track down screaming line drives over their
heads. Ankiel was running away from home plate but slightly to his
left. Realizing at the last second that he had run up the wrong prong
of a Y, he veered sharply to the right, falling and sliding into the
wall as he reached for the ball over the wrong shoulder.

He made the catch. The crowd, already delirious over the two home
runs, came to its feet. If this had been a fable, Ankiel would have
picked himself up and walked out of the stadium into the waiting arms
of the lady in white -- Glenn Close in a halo of light -- never to
return.

But this is real life. Ankiel is only 28 and will continue to play.
The magic cannot continue. If he is lucky, he'll have the career of an
average right fielder. But it doesn't matter. His return after seven
years -- if only three days long -- is the stuff of legend. Made even
more perfect by the timing: Just two days after Barry Bonds sets a
synthetic home run record in San Francisco, the Natural returns to St.
Louis.

Right after that first game, La Russa called Ankiel's return the
Cardinals' greatest joy in baseball "short of winning the World
Series." This, from a manager (as chronicled in George F. Will's
classic "Men at Work") not given to happy talk. La Russa is the
ultimate baseball logician, driven by numbers and stats. He may be
more machine than man, but he confessed at the postgame news
conference: "I'm fighting my butt off to keep it together."

Translation: I'm trying like hell to keep from bursting into tears at
the resurrection of a young man who seven years ago dissolved in front
of my eyes. La Russa was required to "keep it together" because, as
codified most succinctly by Tom Hanks (in " A League of Their Own"),
"There's no crying in baseball."

But there can be redemption. And a touch of glory.

Ronald Reagan, I was once told, said he liked "The Natural" except
that he didn't understand why the Dark Lady shoots Roy Hobbs. Reagan,
the preternatural optimist, may have had difficulty fathoming tragedy,
but no one knows why Hobbs is shot. It is fate, destiny, nemesis.
Perhaps the dawning of knowledge, the coming of sin. Or more
prosaically, the catastrophe that awaits everyone from a single false
move, wrong turn, fatal encounter. Every life has such a moment. What
distinguishes us is whether -- and how -- we ever come back.

=========

And on this last point, Krauthammer certainly speaks from experience.

--
Lance

"I believe in the Church of Baseball" Annie Savoy

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