Wednesday, December 03, 2008

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Mumbai & The Mets

I doubt many of you read The Guardian but I thought this was kind of cool perspective. (Excerpts below).   Personally I feel the whole Piazza as hero thing has been way overblown (the dude hit a home run, big deal) - but I respect the writer below who just wants his sport to pick up the pieces and get back to normal.

That 2001 Mets team was another of Bobby V's poorly prepared teams.  His Mets had a habit of digging huge holes in April.  This team was 10 games under on June 1st so it didn't matter how "heroic" Piazza was or how many games they won after 9/11...sometimes the math catches up to you.


Miracle Mets show Mumbai why cricket matters more than ever 
It's a shame that cricket's response to the Mumbai attacks will be nothing like as eloquent as baseball's was to 9/11
Six days after 9/11 the Americans started to play Major League Baseball again. The League Commissioner, Bud Selig, explained the decision by saying: "I'll be grateful if we played a small role with other social institutions in bringing this country back." That very day the New York Mets played their first game since the attack, away at Pittsburgh. The team took to the field wearing Fire Defence of New York caps. Their home park, Shea Stadium, had been turned into a recovery centre for relief workers. The night before the Pittsburgh game, the Mets manager Bobby Valentine had stayed up till 3am directing the loading of relief supplies by volunteers.
The Mets won that match, 4-1. Four days later, on September 21, Valentine would return to Shea to oversee his side's first home game back at the stadium. The Mets had decided they would play that game without pay, donating their combined wages for the night, $450,000, to the New York Police and Fire Widows and Children Benefit fund.
The Mets won that night as well. They won, in fact, each of their first six games after 9/11, thrilling their fans and delighting the city as they did so. Back pages were again filled with headlines about the 'Miracle Mets'. Their hitter Mike Piazza commented: "we expect to win every game right now ... because we're playing completely relaxed, even during what should be the most tense of circumstances."
Sport, which is normally taken disproportionately seriously, was just a gloriously trivial distraction from the grief of the city. Mumbai will not be given that opportunity. The attacks may have represented a 9/11 moment for the city but, much as we may want it to be, cricket's response will be nothing like as eloquent as baseball's. The ripples have spread too far across the sport. The decisions that have to be made by those governing cricket are harder still than the ones that Selig faced. The matter of England's imminent return is only the first of many issues cricket will have to tackle.
For instance it looks increasingly unlikely that the Indian government will permit the team's January tour of Pakistan to take place, despite the many pleas for a show of solidarity from across the border. Pakistan have not played a home Test match since October 2007. Since then the only teams to tour the country have been Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, though India and Sri Lanka did briefly visit for the Asia Cup. The Pakistan Cricket Board is understandably desperate for India's January tour to go ahead. With Indian investigators attributing the attacks to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Kashmiri extremist group based in Pakistan, the tour seems improbable.
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