Goble: Heckling is as ‘Merican as warm apple pie

Once upon a time, a friend of mine scored some sweet behind-the-dugout tickets to a Royals game. However, the seats did not overlook our hometown heroes, but the opposing bench.

I saw an opportunity.

Many see heckling as a negative thing. People say, “Corban, they’re just men putting in a hard day’s work” or “Give them a break, they have enough pressure put on them as it is.”

Frankly, hypothetical detractor, I don’t buy it.

When I slap down $20 (and in some cases, much more) to see grown men make hefty paychecks for hitting small rawhide balls and jogging lazily, I am also purchasing my right to criticize their every move.

It’s in the Constitution. Somewhere toward the end.

Miguel Tejada, the previous year’s American League MVP, strutted up to the plate and immediately popped out in foul territory a few baby steps left of third base. As Tejada was slinking back to the dugout, the very dugout I was sitting atop like a Supreme Court Justice, I hurled a deliciously sly “MVP!” his way.

Let me put his response this way: If they had aired the exchange on TBS, Tejada would’ve said, “Flunk you, britches.”

I don’t know which was more disturbing: the vitriolic eye contact or the fact that a prominent, supposedly “professional” athlete couldn’t handle a comment from a freckled, lanky teenager whose athletic prospects are minimal at best.

I felt empowered.

Look back to the 1920s and ’30s. Baseball was king. It was our soccer before the whole Champions League exploded.

Sure, many of the best players to have ever pulled on long, ungodly uncomfortable wool socks weren’t allowed to play, but hey! Baseball still reigned until the late 1960s.

Now we are a segmented sports culture with too many professional sports to consume. Even at this University, we can’t handle two successful sports teams at once.

Remember when our football team was in the home stretch of their historic season? Hardly anyone went to the Kansas vs. Arizona basketball game.

Heckling is the answer.

Sports fans, we pay outrageous sums just to attend sporting events. Go to StubHub.com or Ace Sports on 23rd, and you’ll know what I’m talking about.

Heckling, something that has gone on since cavemen first slammed rocks into other rocks, can revive the great national pastime of baseball by injecting some solid, truly invasive heckling.

My younger brother, Clark, is a tremendous heckler. He has an incredible knack for discovering most obscure gaffes that many Major Leaguers stuff into the far recesses of their cranium.

Prom dates? Unbelievably racist MySpaces? All of these things are fair game to him.

When heckling becomes our greatest national sport, I will be on the sidelines when Clark wins the Golden Notepad at the first Heckling National Tournament.

Last week I was in Las Vegas, and I ran into Pete Rose, who hangs out in Sin City a lot, apparently (a presence that I’m sure helps his Hall of Fame chances).

He was signing baseballs for the low, low price of $99 a pop. I offered him $10 for a hug and flashed me an eye-rolling grimace. What a guy.

People say, “Professional athletes are just like us,” but they’re not.

Professional athletes have been trained to act like this since the first time they ever showed a flash of prodigious talent. This makes for some seriously imbalanced, eccentric people. The generosity of Pete Rose. Michael Vick. I once read that Andy Roddick was scared to tears by a guy wearing a bunny suit. Does this sound normal to you?

Let’s bring these Richie Riches down to our level. It’s democracy!

 

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Comments

"When I slap down $20 (and in some cases, much more) to see grown men make hefty paychecks for hitting small rawhide balls and jogging lazily, I am also purchasing my right to criticize their every move."

You are buying a seat. To watch a game. You know when you buy the ticket what these men are going to do in front of you. If you think they are lazy idiots don't go watch them.

I have watched many games in Wrigley Field's bleachers (a heckler's haven) and I've always had a better time watching the Cubs win than ripping Bobby Abreu.

Stop stacking your beer cups and keep quiet, I buy tickets to watch a game, not your comedy show.

Granted, empirelucas, but you enjoy watching the Cubs, and your username is an allusion to Star Wars. The validity of your fanhood is questioned.

So,Stop stacking your memorabilia Star Wars cups and keep quiet. I log on to read his opinions, because he, unlike you, was hired to write them.

It is a comments section. I am commenting. The Kansan has granted me the right to comment just like they granted him the opportunity to write for the paper. You should stop reading after the story ends if you don't want my opinion.

My username has nothing to do with Star Wars, although it is a movie reference. If you feel so moved I'm sure you could figure out which movie.

Did the Kansan grant you the right to not comprehend sarcasm in his writing?

Also,I'm very proud you're aware of my movie research talent, but I was busy watching the Cubs. Man, they could use some heckling now.

sorry empirelucas, PWNED also gooden0's username is one that alludes to something far more important, Drew Gooden. Him being a kansas basketball player. I think we should trust his opinions about heckling in sports a little more than yours. Now i would be all for supporting you if this was a debate about star wars. May the force be with you.

Boba Fett is my hero, you got a problem with that?

Yoda sexually excites me.

You are both HIlarious. I had no idea who Drew Gooden was. He's on the Chicago Bulls right? Aren't they a basketball team?

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