|
Jim Rome's Take Sucks
By Cyd
Zeigler Jr.
Jim Rome’s take
today SUCKED.
After getting some
good grades on his takes on gays in sports, Rome fans out HARD in
discussing the rumors surrounding the New York Mets and the potential
that one of the players on that team is gay.
He says emphatically that baseball is not ready for an openly
gay player, the fans aren’t ready, and anyone saying otherwise is
fooling themselves.
Rome develops a
self-fulfilling prophecy. He
is THE voice of sports. He
gets the biggest interviews, has a radio show and a television show
– he is the king of the sports media.
Yeah.
If Jim Rome tells everyone, “you can’t handle a gay
ballplayer coming out,” shocker:
people will be less able to handle a gay ballplayer coming out.
Rome focuses on the Eric Davises of the world, who say that
they don’t want to play with a player “like that.”
But, why does he focus so much on the negative?
The manager of the
New York Mets says an openly gay player would be cool.
The star player of
the New York Mets says an openly gay player would be cool.
The general manager
of the New York Mets says an openly gay player would be cool.
Jim Rome, who
doesn’t play baseball, who doesn’t work in baseball, who doesn’t
spend his days in the locker rooms, has decided that these guys, who
DO play baseball, and who DO spend their days in the locker rooms, are
wrong.
The expert that Rome
brings onto his show to corroborate his assertion is Billy Bean –
who, shocker, was too weak to come out of the closet when he was
playing professional baseball (er – seven years ago), and who has
spoken against players coming out the last few years.
Hmm – I wonder what his regretful take is going to be . . .
Bean says:
“people who run professional teams don’t want
distractions.” He adds that, if you have 15-20 reporters asking a guy
personal questions about his sexuality, it’s going to cause
distractions. Hmmm –
let’s see. Jackie Robinson caused quite a few distractions his first
year in the Major Leagues with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
His rookie year, as the first black man in the Major Leagues,
he hit .297, scored 125 runs, stole 29 bases, and led his team to the
World Series en route to being the first-ever Major League Rookie of
the Year.
So much for
distractions.
At what point does
Rome think a baseball player should come out?
Does he need a handwritten invitation from every player in
Major League Baseball? Does
someone need to go door-to-door in New York City to make sure that
every single Mets’ fan is comfortable with a gay ballplayer?
How about this:
many people are cool with it, including the team manager,
including the team’s star, including the team’s general manager;
much of the press is supportive of the issue; much of society is
supportive of the issue. Apparently, that’s not enough for Rome. He’d
rather listen to an ex-marginal-baseball player and some lugheads that
write into his smack-filled show and decide that baseball isn’t
ready.
Hell, even one of
Rome’s callers got it right. Rolo
from L.A., a self-described straight guy, said that gay players
can’t wait until “baseball is ready” because, if you do that,
baseball will never be ready. Rome’s
reaction:
“Er . . . uh . . .
ummm . . . good point.”
“It would not be
accepted in your own clubhouse. No
way. No chance,” Rome
said on his show today. But, oddly, he then goes on to say that there are surely gay
men on teams all over Major League Baseball – and that some of them
are surely openly gay with their team.
He acknowledges that there are players who are openly gay to
their teammates, but then accuses those teammates of not being
tolerant enough.
Er . . . uh . . .
ummm . . . .
Rome needs to rethink
his take on this one. Instead
of telling gay players to wait for a phone call from him and every
other “clone” out there to come out, he should be focusing on the
positive – on the players like Mike Mussina and Mike Piazza who say
that it’s cool if one of their teammates come out – and help
encourage gay ballplayers to be themselves and make a difference. There are plenty of clones out there – too bad Rome is
acting like one himself.
As Rome says at the
end of every show:
“I am Out.”
|