Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Day 2498: ... work from 2007





Stacy: news photo, collage & digital.










Want music?

 




Click here for Chaka Khan, Destiny.
then click back on this blog tab or here to listen as you browse, or not?






Looking for art for today's blog,
I ended up with work from 2007.
And some variations.
Saint Joseph Ballet is now the Wooden Floor,
an amazing Santa Ana Dance Company & School.
 
 
 



2GN2S: Too good not to share -

Japanese Baseball’s Ceremonial Opening Pitch


photos by Yoshiki Yamada / Sankei Photo


May 22, 2019 — in Japan, at a baseball game at Koshien Stadium 
between Hanshin and Yakult, a maiko-san threw the opening pitch. 
 It was a dreamy scene as her light orange kimono fluttered through the air. The ball bounced once and landed in the catcher’s mitt. 
The batter swung and a strike was called. 

 
Although the ceremonial first pitch is an American export, Japan has embraced it to its fullest. And there’s an element to it that’s uniquely Japanese. 
The ritual is said to have originated in 1892 when, “Governor McKinley threw the ball into the diamond” from his seat, rather than the mound as is custom today. The pitch went on to evolve as an event between the pitcher and catcher. There was no batter.
In Japan however, the ritual involves the batter, who is always supposed to swing and miss on purpose.




Japan’s ceremonial first pitch dates back to 1908 when the Reach All-Stars, the first professional team from the United States to tour Japan, came on a promotional junket. It was a big deal.





The noble statesman Okuma Shigenobu was to throw the first pitch. As former Prime Minister, founder of Waseda University, it’s hard to overstate how symbolic and important a figure he was.
In what was surely a distressful nomination, Shoji Yamawaki, the top batter in the Waseda Baseball Club, was chosen to bat.
No one will know what was going through Yamawaki’s head as the former Prime Minister and perhaps the greatest nobleman he ever faced off with, threw the ball towards him and it hit the ground, rolled and stopped. According to some records, several American players began rushing towards the ball to pick it up. But that would mean an incredible failure and embarrassment for Okuma and Yamawaki couldn’t let that happen. So he swung his bat, a strike was called and the crowd cheered. Since then, it’s always been customary for the batter to swing and miss on purpose.













A smile for Wednesday ...






1 comment: