Monday, March 23, 2009

World Baseball Classic comes to the wire


     In the electrifying conclusion to the second World Baseball Classic, Ichiro Suzuki led Japan to its second tournament championship 5-3 victory over South Korea Monday night at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. 
     Ichiro went four for six with a clutch two out, two RBI double in the 10th inning to break a 3-3 tie with Asian baseball rivals South Korea. Ichiro's hit came after Japanese reliever Yu Darvish blew a 3-2 lead in the bottom of the ninth inning by surrendering two walks and a single before striking out all three outs in the inning.
     Darvish went into the bottom of the 10th with 5-3 lead and, after walking the leadoff man again, recorded two more strikeouts, the last being the final out of the game. Darvish's performance capped a night of absolute stellar pitching from both nations' pitching staffs. Hisashi Iwakuma pitched a four-hit, two run game into the eighth for Japan, recording six strikeouts with virtually unhitable breaking pitches. Korea's Jung Keun Bong went four innings and gave up only one run and six hits, keeping his tournament ERA under 1.00. Every pitcher in that made an appearance Monday night threw low to mid 90s fastballs augmented with sharp sliders, top-to-bottom curveballs, and the occasional change-up.
     But the real drama of the evening revolved around one man: Ichiro. Ichiro's hit in the top of the 10th not only solidified Japan as champions for its second WBC in a row but also showed the world why Ichiro is already considered a baseball legend. After having a mediocre tournament coming into Monday's game, Ichiro boosted his average from .220 to .280 with four hits and two game-winning RBIs.
     The World Baseball Classic is a very new tournament that begins in four different areas across the globe. Nations send their best professional players to compete, making this competition much more intense than the Olympic baseball competition that only permits amateur players to compete. Critics in the United States claim that the Classic disrupts Major League Baseball teams' spring training which takes place from late February to early April. I find that, despite the fact that many leave their MLB clubs to participate in the WBC and are not with their team for some time, this worldwide competition is a breath of fresh air in the baseball world. It is a joy to watch professional players from the Major Leagues serve their respective countries alongside unknown international talent in fierce competition for worldwide dominance.
     Monday night's conclusion to the long tournament is a perfect example of good baseball. The rivalry between Japan and Korea is as big in Asia as the Yankees/Red Sox or the Giants/Dodgers rivalries here in the states. These two scrappy teams met tonight in the final and battled down to the wire, coming to a tie in the ninth and prompting an extra inning. The pitching was outstanding from both teams and, though Japan dominated the hitting game with 15 hits to Korea's five, the game was a true nail-biter down to the last out. I hope the the World Baseball Classic gains momentum here in the United States as it has elsewhere in the world, as that this level of international competition serves the greater good of baseball and is a wonderful addition to the world of sports.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death...


     In March 15 Associated Press article, "Things are bleak in journalism", writer David Bauder points out that, though newspapers are dying out and the mediums of reporting are changing drastically, journalism is far from dead.
     In the Project for Excellence in Journalism's sixth annual State of the News Media report, it appears "bleak" for journalists everywhere. Print readership is lower than ever, newspaper corporations are filing bankruptcy one after another, and local television is facing serious drops in ratings; it seems that journalism may be in its final years.
     However, Bauder asserts that this is not necessarily the case. Though print journalism on its last legs, many papers have amassed more readers than ever when online readership is taken into account. As local TV ratings drop, cable news stations have seen a boom in the last few years. Such statistics illustrate that news itself is not dying out, but the means by which one gets it are changing forever.
     I come from a family of journalists. Both of my parents work for the Sacramento Bee, and, as a result, I have personally seen the impact of the changing news mediums. My parents and their colleagues have faced massive layoffs these last couple of years. Benefits have been taken away. Retirement has been wiped out. Even their cafeteria and library were shut down. Thankfully, both my parents have kept their jobs. Most of their friends, however, were either bought out or fired after, in some cases, decades of service to The Bee. For many of these unlucky individuals, this has been truly devastating.
     Despite this bleak professional landscape that stretches before me as I stand at the very beginning of my own journalism career, I am not afraid. As Bauder points out, the world still need journalists, and journalists must embrace the new ways to get the news to the world. My generation will be the one that embraces these changes. We have been primed from early ages to use computers religiously and to accept the internet with all its opportunities and complexities as an integral part of life. As a result, we, the new journalists, are ready to excel where other generations have not. Though the state of the news media may be bleak now, it will not be forever. For this reason, I am not afraid.