The last âfirst pitchâ by a sitting U.S. president on Major League Baseballâs opening day was a left-handed hurl by President Barack Obama in Washington on April 5, 2010.
President Obama lightly trolled the Nationals Park faithfulâwhom he honored via windbreakerâfrom the mound when revealing his cap, supporting his boyhood-beloved Chicago White Sox.
The pre-Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper, fully-in-bloom Nats werenât must-watch TV. Social media platforms like Twitterânow âXââhad yet become âmake-or-breakâ interweb playgrounds populated by overnight sensations âgoing viralâ and institutions âmemedâ out of public favor. At some point in recent memory, instantaneous âcancellationâ became the new cannon fodder.
Dominating the box-office as the number-one movie in these much simpler times? âClash of the Titans.â Today, average moviegoers who purchased a ticket couldnât rattle off its plot. Although, they could venture that, in this much more polarized, dog-eat-dog landscape, the title-in-question more amply describes the marquee billing for the looming bare-knuckle brawls called debates likely to take place between âThe Incumbent â and âThe Donald.â
Fans cheer during a game between the San Francisco Giants and the Detroit Tigers at Game One of the Major League Baseball World Series in San Francisco on Oct. 24, 2012. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Should President Donald Trump continue to stave off criminal charges in his quest to reclaim the presidency, the indecisive voting communityâfatigued or noâwill at least receive the first free pay-per-view match seen between the two in four years. Sans actual boxing mitts and only with verbal bloodshed abound, itâs only in this arena where many would-be voters feel they recognize a semblance of mutually-assured vitality.
With President Trump at 77 and President Biden at 81, the proverbial knock called âold-ageâ is used by their unshakeable champions to discredit the other. âHow can they manage the country, if they canât even manage themselves?â responses follow just about every report indicating a modicum of compromised health in either candidate.
As football approaches its final kick-off, national pastime die-hards countdown the days until pitchers and catchers report to spring training on February 13.
Should the American public envisage a not-so-distant future wherein President Biden throws out a first pitch?
The verdict: unlikely.
President Trump and President Biden are the first sitting presidents since William Howard Taft, who served from 1909 to 1913, not to throw out the first pitch. On opening day, and in general.
Taft introduced the tradition from the Washington Senatorsâ National Park front-row seats in 1910, per official White House and MLB archives.
President William Howard Taft (Right Center) was the first president to throw the ceremonial first pitch in 1910. (Library of Congress)
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1933â1945) is the most prolific first pitch-thrower, with 11. Like those who preceded him, his game-starters always took place from the standsâof great aid to FDR, as the media concealed his polio diagnosis to preserve him as a symbol of strength during a bygone era where the office of the presidency was respected like no other.
Every president from President Taft on through to President Obama has thrown out the first pitch at least once on MLB Opening Day, save for President Jimmy Carter (1977â1981). The âPeanut Farmerâ was heckled all-in-good fun by the Orioles for âfinally showing upâ to Baltimoreâs Memorial Stadium to throw out the first pitch for the decisive Game 7 of the 1979 World Series.
He became the first president to throw from the mound, with rookie Damon Berryhill set-up at consolidated distances for each. Giving âThe Gipperâ leeway didnât seem to matter much with fans, as the 77-year-old was serenaded with a booming applause across the board.
Then-Vice President Joe Biden (C) finds his seat before Game Three of the 2009 MLB World Series in Philadelphia on Oct. 31, 2009. (Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images)
The 2019 World Champion Washington Nationals tabbed Dr. Anthony Fauciânot President Trumpâto throw out the first pitch in their 2020 opener against the Yankees to commence the COVID-shortened season on July 23.
President Trump immediately took to the White House Press briefing room to claim âgood friend of hisâ Yankees President Randy Levine asked him to throw out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium at their home opener on August 15.
A former catcher who played in the Yankees organization decades ago suggests Dr. Fauciâs poorly-received âbouncerâ explains why President Trump and President Biden have abstained from a tradition-rendered-no-more.
Dr. Anthony Fauci throws out the first pitch prior to the game between the New York Yankees and the Washington Nationals in Washington on July 23, 2020. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)
What scenario, then, is feared more: the boos upon emergence to the field of play, or rather those heard when vacating a mound all naysayers now consider effectively desecrated by your first-pitch-gone wild?
Survey says: âa mixture of both.â In this day-and-age, risk typically trumps reward, in the intense scrutiny columnâmostly because another column no longer exists, so too says various historians and sports media alike.
âA lot of politicians arenât celebrated as much as they were when ceremonial first pitches began. People have a record amount of distrust in government. They arenât well-liked,â said New Yorkâs National Sports Museum head researcher, Vincent Lospinuo.
It used to be different; Mr. Lospinuo said a âperfect exampleâ of the intersection between sports, entertainment, and politics, was âin the â70s, you had Gerald Ford falling off a step, and Chevy Chase making fun of him on SNL. That was pretty significant, in terms of his image. It really helped Carter win.â
President Fordâs fall spawned early-days, peak-influential Saturday Night Live mockery, sealing the Michigan Wolverine Football alumâs fate. He became the definition of a âthree-and-outâ candidate blocked by his own momentary clumsinessâso much so, not even a demonstration of ambidextrousness when throwing out consecutive first pitchesâone with each handâat the 1976 All-Star Game could change hearts and minds.
Meanwhile, President Bill Clinton (1993â2001) threw out an opening day first pitch on two occasions. Although both pale in comparison to his saxophone rendition of Elvis Presleyâs âHeartbreak Hotelâ on The Arsenio Hall Show in 1992.
This all-time image-solidifier on the campaign trail set the tone for a quintessentially-1990s presidency.
Then-President William Jefferson Clinton (R) greets the crowds after throwing the first pitch of a baseball game between the Baltimore Orioles and the Texas Rangers, in Baltimore, Md., on April 5, 1993. (National Archives Catelog)
President Clinton left office on his own terms with a 65 percent Gallup poll approval ratingâthe highest mark since President Harry S. Trumanâs 1953 departureâdespite being impeached for essentially perjuring himself during the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Whereas President Clinton will always have Arsenio, President George W. Bush (2001â2009) will always have his first pitch.
A fellow Yale Handsome Dan ballplayer like his father, President George H.W Bush (1989â1993), before him, it stands to reason this was not the former Texas Ranger ownerâs first rodeo in the first pitch department.
Needless to say, such were the stakes on Oct. 30, 2001, mere weeks after the 9/11 terrorist attacks: Game 3 of the World Series. Yankee Stadium, with 55,820 in attendance, and 23 million more watching at home. President Bush adorned in a bulletproof vest and an FDNY jacket. And Secret Service agents disguised as umpires.
The 2004 documentary âNine Innings from Ground Zeroâ made famous the dialogue between President Bush and Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter in the clubhouse ahead of the ceremony.
Then-President George W. Bush throws out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium in New York 30 on October, 2001. (Luke Frazza/AFP via Getty Images)
âSo I just asked him if he was going to be throwing the first pitch from the mound, or in front of the mound, and he said âin front,ââ Mr. Jeter recounted.
âI said, âI wouldnât do that if I were you, this is Yankee Stadium, youâre gonna get booed.ââ
President Bush, in his own recollection, said, âIâm sitting there, fairly relaxed, kind of loose⌠walking out, all of a sudden, the great Derek Jeter looks over his shoulder, [and] says âdonât bounce it, or theyâll boo ya.ââ
âGeorge Bushâs first pitch represented so much more than baseball,â said Jake Kosack, 27, host of âThe Bronx Zoo,â a Yankee media content factory.
âIt symbolized the spirit of New York and the country on baseballâs biggest stage. [Itâs] one of the most iconic moments at a place thatâs the pinnacle of baseball.â
Later, President Bush said, âIâd never felt what I felt before when I walked out of that dugout. I felt the raw emotion of the Yankee fans.â
The patriotic solidarity this moment embodied moved not just Yankee fans, but an entire nation still-reeling, and now healing thanks to a most powerful presidential first pitch that granted all permission to cheer once again.
A prevailing thought since: President Bushâs first pitch shall never be matched. Yet, Mr. Jeterâs advice stands the test of time. Even those who grew up rooting against âThe Captainâ canât refute hall-of-fame sage.
DraftKings host and analyst Jared Carrabis throws the first pitch before a game between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox in Boston on Aug. 14, 2022. (Brian Fluharty/Getty Images)
âThe Tribal Chief of Baseballâsâ friends in the media at ESPN, Eduardo Perez and Karl Ravech were on the call, âso theyâre really giving it to me⌠They came down to field level, Perez is like â…if you bounce or sail this, just know we have 20 cameras and weâre going to show it from every angle possible if you mess this up.ââ
âThere is a video Eduardo took from the booth, you can hear him in the background as Iâm about to deliver, â…heâs been warming up since 3:30,ââ Mr. Carrabis said in an interview with The Epoch Times. âObviously, theyâre jokingâ but there is a lot of pressure.â
With 36,581 in attendance and close to 1.5 million watching on TV, according to Baseball Reference and The Futon Critic, respectively, Mr. Carrabis âfelt all of it.â
âSome people, when under pressure, crack. And some people when under pressure have the most laser focus imaginable.â
A pitcher during his Saugus, Massachusetts youth, Mr. Carrabis has since seamlessly transitioned into a powerhouse ambassador for the sport, with a 450,000-deep follower base on X.
His âmentionsâ naturally ever-bombarded, Mr. Carrabis was as relieved as he was elated to produce a first pitch success story.
âA lot was riding on it,â he reflected, also citing friendly chirps from Yankee manager Aaron Boone, and maybe not-so-friendly chirps he would be due from genuine adversaries of hisâlike reigning Cy Young Award-winner, Yankee ace Gerrit Coleâshould things have gone south.
âThere are some guys on the other side who were like, âfor all the sât you talk about us, you better come correct.ââ
Mr. Carrabis says his podcast would surely cover presidential first pitches, âflubâ or âmissileâânot overly so, but as a means to segue into a broader conversation about baseball history.
Then-President Donald Trump plays catch with Mariano Rivera (off frame), the Yankees hall of fame pitcher, during a Major League Baseball opening day event at the White House on July 23, 2020. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)
âIf Biden went out there and couldnât reach the plate, we would talk about it. If Trump went out there and did a â50 Cent,â weâd bring it up⌠but I donât think weâd crush either one of them,â said Mr. Carrabis.
âItâs like, âOK, if I throw a strikeâfrom halfway between the mound and the plateââgreat, you werenât on the rubber.â
âIf theyâre from the mound, and they throw it away⌠âthis is a representation of our country? Youâre supposed to be our fearless leader and you canât even throw a baseball.’â
Mr. Carrabis said thereâs no real rewardâ for a president today to throw the first pitch. âOther than being George Bush⌠that was legendary. I could post that clip tomorrow and it would still get tons and tons of views, people love it.â
On the prospect of a Trump or Biden first pitch, Mr. Carrabis urges not to get your hopes up: âItâs just not worth it⌠and theyâre 80! I was nervous in my 30s⌠âlet me go out there and throw a dart right down the pipe?â No chance.â
âI think it needs to be somebody who can throw a strike from the rubber,â said Brendan Burt, a New York menâs league âliferâ and screen actor with multiple baseball films to his name. The 50-year-old litigation investigator-by-day, diamond junkie-by-night (and lunch break) dismisses new MLB advents like âpace-of-play,â âpine-tar policeâ and âpresidential absentiaâ as âpure eyewash.â
âItâs shameful weâve had two Commanders-in-Chief who have not thrown out a first pitch while in-office⌠there is a tragic irony at the backroom of this whole thing,â he added.
Then-President John Fitzgerald Kennedy (Center Left) watches an overhead ball during All Star baseball game at Washington Stadium on July 10, 1962. (Stringer/AFP via Getty Images)
Many interviewees agreed, however, that although heâs 70, independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.ânephew of President John F. Kennedy (1961â1963), who launched two opening day first pitches and one at the D.C. Stadium-held 1962 All-Star Game before his assassinationâholds the athletic pedigree to lay a reputable fastball in there.
So the story goes: we wonât soon see Presidents Trump or Biden take a dip in waters as crapshoot-lined as the first pitch pageantry pool, because evading dips in the polls is the name of their game.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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