View From Lodi, CA Pittsburgh, PA: Detroit Tiger Nearly Perfect—Galarraga Should Have Quit When He Was Ahead
Armando
Galarraga,
the
Detroit Tiger
pitcher
denied a perfect game
last week on a blown call at first base by umpire Jim
Joyce, has missed his opportunity for immortality.
I'm not talking about Galarraga's
almost perfect game but
rather his decision to remain an active
major league pitcher
instead of walking away at the peak of his popularity.
At no time in his future will
Galarraga ever be as beloved as he was the instant that
Joyce called the Cleveland
Indians' Jason Donald safe on an infield single
while all of America saw that he was clearly out.
In the minds of baseball fans, his
teammates, major league umpiring crews and front office
personnel, Galarraga pitched a perfect game, no
questions asked.
After the game, Galarraga's grace in
the face of his enormous professional set back won him
the admiration of millions.
When Galarraga presented the line-up
card to Joyce before the next day's game, the umpire was
reduced to tears. Galarraga and Joyce hugged.
Galarraga forgave Joyce's blunder.
Everyone agreed with Galarraga: Joyce is a good man who
made a human mistake.
By this time in his story, people
who don't know baseball from bowling had jumped on
Galarraga's band wagon. Moms and Dads,
teachers,
counselors and ministers all pointed to Galarraga as a
paragon of virtue and an example of how to face
adversity with grace.
At that moment when all the forces
of good merged, Galarraga's
persona
peaked.
And, also at that exact moment
although he didn't realize it, Galarraga also faced a
choice. Should he retire and be known forever as the
pitcher and gentleman who went out on top or continue
his baseball career into ultimate obscurity?
Unfortunately, Galarraga elected to
press on.
Then a few days later on June 8,
Galarraga went to the mound to face the
Chicago White Sox. During five innings, he gave up
seven hits and two earned runs.
Perfection ended. Galarraga is now
on his way to becoming one of dozens of pitchers who
were both perfect and near perfect that, unless you are
an advanced fan, you cannot tell me a single thing
about.
Among the perfect game pitchers
you've never heard of are Addie
Joss, Charlie Robertson,
Len Barker,
Mike Witt and
Kenny Rogers. An
additional ten pitchers had their
perfect games spoiled
after the twenty-sixth out. Among the names you don't
recognize are Milt Wilcox,
Brian Holman and Ron
Robinson.
Assuming Galarraga had taken my
advice (too late now!), what career path could he have
pursued?
Galarraga's opportunities would have
been many including some within baseball. And it's
probable that most of them would generate a higher
income than his $400,000 major league.
Maybe the
Detroit Tigers could have put Galarraga to work
in its community outreach department. As a local hero,
Galarraga would be an inspiration to troubled youth
living throughout Detroit's
inner city.
Commissioner Bud Selig's office has a similar
community service job that extends throughout baseball's
network of cities. Galarraga,
born in Venezuela, would be able to present himself
not only as an on the field champion but also as an
immigrant success story.
Galarraga could have signed on with
General Motors. The auto giant gave Galarraga
a red 2010 Corvette convertible that
advertising executives calculate is worth
$9.0 million in media exposure. GM could give $1
million of that to Galarraga to make appearances on its
behalf to sell cars worldwide.
How about this? Suppose Galarraga
hired the
William Morris
Agency
to book speaking engagements for him. If Bill Clinton
made $51 million since he left the White
House speaking political gibberish on the
rubber chicken circuit, surely Galarraga could
rake in $5 million talking about the importance of
character.
Galarraga's alternate income
possibilities are endless. Since he's already 28 and not
much more than
a .500
pitcher,
he should have seized the day when he could have.
In a fickle America, Galarraga is already yesterday's news.
Joe Guzzardi is a member of
the Society of American
Baseball Research
and the
Internet Baseball Writers Association Of America
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.