Il baseball è come la vita

L’accidente della “partita imperfetta” della settimana scorsa ha scatenato le celebrazioni della grandezza letteraria del baseball.
Bruce Weber sul New York Times:

That reality, in fact, should tell us something about the nature of baseball, which is the least programmatic, the least technological of games. It doesn’t even have a clock. The fields have widely varying shapes and sizes, and the primary battleground between offense and defense — i.e., the strike zone — is a box of air with dimensions that have proven impossible to specify. There is a lot less science in baseball, a lot more art, than in any other sport you can name.

Jon Meacham, su Newsweek:

Of all sports, I think, baseball most resembles life. The seasons are long; defeat is familiar; repetition often, but not always, makes you better. And it is not necessarily fun all the time: our colleague George F. Will wrote a splendid book on the game with the telling title of Men at Work. A drama that played out last week in Detroit is that rarest of public moments: one in which everyone involved acted with grace, giving the country an example not only of sportsmanship but of how to conduct oneself in politics, in business, in journalism, and in daily life.


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Luca Sofri

Giornalista e direttore del Post. Ha scritto per Vanity Fair, Wired, La Gazzetta dello Sport, Internazionale. Ha condotto Otto e mezzo su La7 e Condor su Radio Due. Per Rizzoli ha pubblicato Playlist (2008), Un grande paese (2011) e Notizie che non lo erano (2016).