Everybody Sees The Wind Blow
Paul Simon is on record, apparently, as stating that Graceland is the best song he's ever written. I was never much for Graceland and its unrelenting bass line; it reminds me of a chorus of cartoon frogs. Lately, though, I've started listening to a cover of the song done by The Tallest Man On Earth and the cover has made me notice Simon's lyrics for the first time. They're actually really sad, or at least wistful, in sharp contrast to the locomotive arrangement that Simon built around them. If I was a better listener, I guess I would've noticed the significance of that choice the umpteenth time I was choosing to skip past the original Graceland.
The song is about Simon's painful separation from Carrie Fisher and there's this terribly sad line, "She comes back to tell me she's gone, as if I didn't know that, as if I didn't know my own bed." Of course he knew that his wife had left him; he didn't need a summary report to know the state of things.
This brings me to the long, painfully mundane vision quest that has been the Cleveland Indians offseason. It's been like a walkabout where no one remembered the peyote and, hey was that an animal? No? Just dust? Ok. As we wander aimlessly through free agency wilderness, seemingly every national outlet feels the obligation to put a bow on the Cleveland Indians, letting us know just how deficient they were last season and just how deficient they will resume being as soon as sanctioned baseball resumes play at its highest level. Jerry Crasnick was the latest national penman to put his fingers on our rapidly fading pulse as he searched around in the dark closet of his mind for appropriate turns of phrase:
No location plays the role of beleaguered doormat with the reliability of Cleveland
Over the past two years, the Indians have also done their share to stoke the city's reputation as Depression Central.
Heaven knows, the Indians could use some improvement across the board.
So what is a beleaguered, financially hamstrung franchise to do as it waits for the future to unfold during a frigid winter in Ohio?
Incredibly, Cleveland is both a beleaguered doormat and a beleaguered franchise. It's a place that needs the help of heaven while simultaneously it stokes the fiery hell of its own reputation. To be fair to the offseason, it's not like Cleveland only transforms into such a sad state when the Indians hibernate. These types of pieces crop up all the time. In fact, the first piece that Google returns for "Jerry Crasnick Indians" is an autopsy from two seasons ago. I understand the utility of these pieces: national outlets need to maintain at least the appearance of coast to coast coverage and, when the big wheel lands on "Cleveland", the narrative's not likely to vary from the recipe: mix equal parts sadness and incompetence in a souffle dish, add a dash of hubris, finish with gallows humor flourish and garnish with one or two Major League references (chef's preference).
But, as a fan, an obsessive, off the rails fan, the kind who knows the difference between Clayton Cook and Austin Adams, I sometimes have to squash an impulse to write Crasnick and his cronies a strongly worded electronic mail, one that essentially asks: "You came here to tell us the team was bad? As if we didn't know that? As if we didn't know our own lives?"
There's another line in Graceland, "She said losing love is like a window in your heart. Everybody sees you're blown apart; everybody sees the wind blow." That's both the best and worst part of cheering for a team this bad, a team where it's obvious that the marital bed is empty. The worst part is that your heart, or some part of it, is constantly somewhere on the spectrum from exploding to exploded. The best part is that every other Indians fan you meet, you can see right into who they are. No one's here to keep up appearances.
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Speaking of awful pieces piling on the Indians, Bob Hunter let one loose today about the Indians not visiting Columbus this year on their press tour.
"Magic would be getting productivity out of Crowe or Valbuena. I’ll admit we could use a little luck, but that’s not the same thing." - Jay
Columbus is a weird city for following baseball because most writers/columnists are either Reds or Indians fans, with no in-between. I’m assuming this guy is the part of the Reds contingent.
Hunter has been on the Reds wagon for years – he was the Reds beat writer from the Dispatch for many years back when the Dispatch had a beat writer for both teams. Now they mostly run stories from the Cincinnati/Dayton or Cleveland/Akron beat writers about both teams.
"Magic would be getting productivity out of Crowe or Valbuena. I’ll admit we could use a little luck, but that’s not the same thing." - Jay
by woodsmeister on Jan 31, 2011 9:53 AM EST up reply actions
he conveniently leaves out
that instead of visiting columbus on the press tour, they’re actually coming here to PLAY THE CLIPPERS. sounds like an upgrade for the local fans in my book.
Show them Ohio's here.
by slidingscrapes on Feb 2, 2011 12:14 AM EST up reply actions
Is the home opener sold out already? There’s no way to buy tickets directly from the Indians web site right now. They went on sale months ago. I bought upper deckers as recently as two weeks ago.
Last year, the opener didn’t sell out until the week of the game. If it is sold out, that’s a pretty strong statement about fan interest compared to 2010 when the Cavs still existed and the previous year’s Indians team lost 4 more games. Is fan apathy as bad as it’s being predicted to be?
How are you defining existence?
"Magic would be getting productivity out of Crowe or Valbuena. I’ll admit we could use a little luck, but that’s not the same thing." - Jay
by woodsmeister on Jan 31, 2011 11:33 AM EST up reply actions
Looks like no single game tickets are on sale on the website? Maybe they’ve pulled them back for some reason.
Over 1800 available on StubHub starting at around $15.
On the bright side, they’ve sold about 1800 tickets!
I’d guess that those are season ticket holders trying to sell off the tickets they can’t use. I don’t think single games are on sale yet.
Many of the cheapest seats on stubhub are nosebleeds way up in the upper tier that are not likely anyone’s season tickets. Additionally, who buys season tickets AND skips the home opener.
I’ve got this great plan, right? I’ll buy these season tickets and I’ll only go to half the games, making the price of the tickets back by selling them on StubHub! Just wait till you see the secondary market for the Indians home opener!
One problem. Indians fans don’t think with their brain (or wallet,) they think with their heart—no way they miss the opener after waiting six months for baseball.
I go to roughly 40 games a year and am very well versed in ticket prices and seats. I know all the deals and discounts. Trust me, most of those seats on stubhub are not season ticket spots.
Or we can keep going.
by PBH on Jan 31, 2011 12:10 PM EST up reply actions 1 recs
I’m actually somewhat tempted to jump on the “Perfect 10” voucher plan. 10 flexible bleacher tickets for $99? That’s a great deal.
It is a good idea, because it includes the “honey, I/we have to use these tickets” clause that gets you out of the house and into the ballpark.
I’m a big fan of the Buy-the-cheapest-seat-and-sit-wherever-you-want-after-the-3rd-inning-because-they-cut-the-number-of-ushers plan. The Batters Eye Bar is less crowded than ever and a good place to spend the first couple innings. The home run porch is ridiculously empty as well. I might feel bad if I didn’t hand over a bunch more cash for beer—that’s where they get me.
I also like the 3 innings and lunch deal for weekday day games. Fifteen bucks for a ticket and $10 of it goes towards food and or beer.
I like the flexible part of the deal, since my work schedule tends to be boom-or-bust. If it’s a slow work day, I can leave a bit early and make it to Cleveland in time to catch a game. If I’m planning to go to a game and something comes up, then no big deal.
And since I like weekday evening games more than weekend dates, seat availability will not be a problem.
As a 20-game plan owner for the last few years, I will say that the Indians make it nearly impossible for you not to make it convenient to use your tix. If you miss a game, you just go to the box office and exchange unused tickets for games that have passed for another “exchange date” game in the future.
They used to have about 20 exchange dates, now it’s basically any game you want to go to. The idea is getting you through the turnstile, however and whenever, I suppose.
by The DiaTriber on Jan 31, 2011 12:27 PM EST up reply actions
I am flying in from NYC for the opener. Pretty excited . . .
by Les Fleurs Du Mal on Feb 1, 2011 9:36 AM EST up reply actions
I think the Indians might get a bit of a bounce in ticket sales since the Cavs aren’t the priority for the fans’ sports budget. But that’s because the Cavs fell off the face of the earth; the Indians themselves didn’t really do anything.
I agree completely. There is that whole entertainment dollar factor where people will spend the money somewhere and the teams are really competing against each other and other entertainment venues. The Indians appear to have benefited already and, with a solid start, could potentially benefit more. People don’t flock to April baseball for the weather. One can only hope that their attention is turning from one Cleveland team to another.
I think the schedule sets up pretty nicely too for us opponent-wise through about mid-May to have a pretty decent record if we come out of Spring ready to go. This could play a key role in keeping our record decent as long as possible into the season and hopefully play a part in better attendance, even if it is just falsely inflated early on. I think it would be very valuable for the local media guys to keep the casual fans into it through August if we are within 5-10 games of first place.
Then again, if you are really bad, there is no schedule that will help that.
Speaking of the Cavs falling off the face of the earth: the Indians might be the next major Cleveland professional sports team to win a game.
"Magic would be getting productivity out of Crowe or Valbuena. I’ll admit we could use a little luck, but that’s not the same thing." - Jay
by woodsmeister on Jan 31, 2011 1:17 PM EST up reply actions 3 recs
The Cavs vacated my world long before this season. Now, i’m a fan again!
Our best players wear suits.
My favorite Oscar will always be Oscar Madison.
by kennesawmountainwahoo on Feb 6, 2011 5:18 PM EST up reply actions
It’s all about controlling expectations. What MLB, NFL or NBA team do the fine people in Omaha, Neb root for? Are they depressed about this? Cleveland is a great city with an outstanding history. It’s only a matter of time before this area of the country shines again. We humbly serve this area knowing there is honor in that because future generations will appreciate what we had done for them.
You didn't get me down, Ray.
Rec for Tallest Man on Earth reference. Well written piece, as well.
"Spring Training wins are good for the soul."
eh, I don’t know exactly why I don’t dig the musician, I mean he’s good and ole I guess, but he’s kind of the Weeds of music right now. Though I can at least see why alot of people can like his music.
I’m not really sure I know what that means? I don’t watch or know anyone who currently watches Weeds.
"Spring Training wins are good for the soul."
It’s kind of a reiteration of what I already said, I mean it’s good stuff to a degree, but some of the praise is pretty outlandish, it’s a solid enough effort, and like I said, I can understand why people like it (and there are parts that I enjoy), but I don’t see it being all that particularly creative, nor particularly as intricate/deep as others, and they seem to lop that sort of praise on it. And I feel like I’m the only one that doesn’t get it, so it might just be me (and danmang apparently).
I’d apply this previous statement to either Tallest Man or Weeds. At least with music I believe appreciation is mostly (if not all) subjective. So Tallest Man is legit, but I do take aim at the appraisal end of it (mostly people who review album releases).
I think his work is more praised for performance. He is a good musician with a very unique voice, but he really boils down to performance. I feel he is better watched while being listened to. There is something in his face that brings everything down to earth and connects you to the music. And, honestly, I don’t think artists like this can ever get too much praise, deserved or undeserved. In a world of glitz and glam in music, he is very genuine. You gotta love that.
"Spring Training wins are good for the soul."
You’re on the right track here Andrew but what you’re missing is the rage. The demise of our Indians and the loss of the band-wagon fans – hello brick, Pat Tabler, etal – should stoke your fury, not ennui. What’s left after all front runners leave – both “fans” and media – is the True Hard Core. Like elandito said, we’ll be back, we’ll be back. And when we are the all the those sunshine front runners can kiss my fuzzy pink Irish ass.
Our best players wear suits.
You can take a leap, prick. Just because I don’t comment here doesn’t make me a bandwagon fan.r
by Brick. on Feb 1, 2011 9:04 AM EST via mobile up reply actions 1 recs
Ease up on the throttle there, Chuck. A lot of our commentators are young enough to still be going through substantial life changes (graduation, job, marriage, kids, etc…). Just because someone stops commenting doesn’t mean they are bandwagon fans. They might actually just have a more important way to spend their time at the moment.
by APV on Feb 1, 2011 9:44 AM EST up reply actions 1 recs
Chuck made his comment (which was against the ground rules, and appropriately dealt with), Brick made an appropriate response. Let’s leave it at that. Any further comments will be deleted.
Great piece. Any chance we can get this to be the official song? I’d like to nominate Graceland and The Warrior by Scandal, which I recall hearing during batting practice every time I went to a game at Municipal Stadium in the ’80s.
I’ve often wondered why writers pile on a team like this. It’s not like management is pathetic – they make good moves given the financial constraints (maybe not the best moves, but perfection can never be reached). And I’ve never understood why fans of perennial winning teams tell us we are fools for being Cleveland fans. Why do we have to defend our fanhood?!?! As if it’s not easy to see… Hmmm, makes me think of a line from a song I’ve heard: “And I may be obliged to defend every love, every ending, or maybe there’s no obligation now”…
"Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge..." C. Darwin
Because we live in a bottom line society, one in which the World Series champions are winners and everyone else is a loser.
“No excuses, play like a champion!”
by Jay on Feb 1, 2011 9:34 PM EST up reply actions
Perhaps after sweeping away Ben Ali and Mubarak, the pro-democracy forces can take on the Steinbrenner spawn.
I’ll grab a rock and meet you at the 4 station.
Though I look right at home, I still feel like an exile
by Manhattan Tribe Fan on Feb 1, 2011 10:23 PM EST up reply actions 2 recs
And that’s why I never watch the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network. With a first name of “Entertainment”, they find it necessary and easier to tell stories of winners and champions rather than the details of the game.
"Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge..." C. Darwin
And easier to preface stories about everyone else by their CV of losing.
"Magic would be getting productivity out of Crowe or Valbuena. I’ll admit we could use a little luck, but that’s not the same thing." - Jay
by woodsmeister on Feb 2, 2011 10:49 AM EST up reply actions
To be fair to the likes of Crasnick, he’s not coming to Cleveland to tell knowledgeable Clevelanders their team sucks. He’s telling people elsewhere about the Indians. And the narrative—the accepted narrative—is that the Indians are doomed, doormats, etc. It’s laziness, but these things become cliches for a reason. Major League wasn’t made about the Cincinnati Reds, for example, or the Kansas City Royals. There’s a reason for such lazy thinking. People believe what they want to believe, or whatever they’re told, whichever is easier. And, realistically, what is someone supposed to say to a national audience about the Indians? They might be good, if a spaceship bearing ten Albert Pujols lands on Public Square?
They might be good, if a spaceship bearing ten Albert Pujols lands on Public Square?
But then where would we play Pronk?
Come on, four billion!
That’s the way I read it too. He’s not writing for the Indians fans who know the details, but for fans of teams that don’t pay attention to the Indians. Considering the current state of Cleveland baseball, it’s encouraging that we get any national attention whatsoever. And he does point out that there’s light at the end of the tunnel.
You didn't get me down, Ray.
People believe what they want to believe, or whatever they’re told, whichever is easier.
I used this line verbally today in another setting. I think it’s great.

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