An excellent article to read from beginning to end by Chris Perry.
Twenty four years ago, in Nashville , Tennessee, during the first week of January, 1996, more than 4,000 baseball coaches descended upon the Opryland Hotel for the 52nd annual ABCA's convention.
While I waited in line to register with the hotel staff, I heard other more veteran coaches rumbling about the lineup of speakers scheduled to present during the weekend. One name, in particular, kept resurfacing, always with the same sentiment — “John Scolinos is here? Oh, man, worth every penny of my airfare.” Who is John Scolinos, I wondered. No matter; I was just happy to be there.
In 1996, Coach Scolinos was 78 years old and five years retired from a college coaching career that began in 1948 He shuffled to the stage to an impressive standing ovation, wearing dark polyester pants, a light blue shirt, and a string around his neck from which home plate hung — a full-sized, stark-white home plate.
Seriously, I wondered, who is this guy?
After speaking for twenty-five minutes, not once mentioning the prop hanging around his neck, Coach Scolinos appeared to notice the snickering among some of the coaches. Even those who knew Coach Scolinos had to wonder exactly where he was going with this, or if he had simply forgotten about home plate since he’d gotten on stage. Then, finally …
“You’re probably all wondering why I’m wearing home plate around my neck,” he said, his voice growing irascible. I laughed along with the others, acknowledging the possibility. “I may be old, but I’m not crazy. The reason I stand before you today is to share with you baseball people what I’ve learned in my life, what I’ve learned about home plate in my 78 years.”
Several hands went up when Scolinos asked how many Little League coaches were in the room. “Do you know how wide home plate is in Little League?”
After a pause, someone offered, “Seventeen inches?”, more of a question than answer.
“That’s right,” he said. “How about in Babe Ruth’s day? Any Babe Ruth coaches in the house?” Another long pause.
“Seventeen inches?” a guess from another reluctant coach.
“That’s right,” said Scolinos. “Now, how many high school coaches do we have in the room?” Hundreds of hands shot up, as the pattern began to appear. “How wide is home plate in high school baseball?”
“Seventeen inches,” they said, sounding more confident.
“You’re right!” Scolinos barked “And you college coaches, how wide is home plate in college?”
“Seventeen inches!” we said, in unison.
“Any Minor League coaches here? How wide is home plate in pro ball?”............“Seventeen inches!”
“RIGHT! And in the Major Leagues, how wide home plate is in the Major Leagues?
“Seventeen inches!”
“SEV-EN-TEEN INCHES!” he confirmed, his voice bellowing off the walls. “And what do they do with a Big League pitcher who can’t throw the ball over seventeen inches?” Pause. “They send him to Pocatello !” he hollered, drawing raucous laughter “What they don’t do is this: they don’t say, ‘Ah, that’s okay, Jimmy. If you can’t hit a seventeen-inch target? We’ll make it eighteen inches or nineteen inches We’ll make it twenty inches so you have a better chance of hitting it. If you can’t hit that, let us know so we can make it wider still, say twenty-five inches.'”
Pause “Coaches… what do we do when your best player shows up late to practice? or when our team rules forbid facial hair and a guy shows up unshaven? What if he gets caught drinking? Do we hold him accountable? Or do we change the rules to fit him? Do we widen home plate? "
The chuckles gradually faded as four thousand coaches grew quiet, the fog lifting as the old coach’s message began to unfold. He turned the plate toward himself and, using a Sharpie, began to draw something. When he turned it toward the crowd, point up, a house was revealed, complete with a freshly drawn door and two windows. “This is the problem in our homes today. With our marriages, with the way we parent our kids. With our discipline.
We don’t teach accountability to our kids, and there is no consequence for failing to meet standards. We just widen the plate!”
Pause. Then, to the point at the top of the house he added a small American flag. “This is the problem in our schools today. The quality of our education is going downhill fast and teachers have been stripped of the tools they need to be successful, and to educate and discipline our young people. We are allowing others to widen home plate! Where is that getting us?”
Silence. He replaced the flag with a Cross. “And this is the problem in the Church, where powerful people in positions of authority have taken advantage of young children, only to have such an atrocity swept under the rug for years. Our church leaders are widening home plate for themselves! And we allow it.”
“And the same is true with our government. Our so called representatives make rules for us that don’t apply to themselves. They take bribes from lobbyists and foreign countries. They no longer serve us. And we allow them to widen home plate! We see our country falling into a dark abyss while we just watch.”
I was amazed. At a baseball convention where I expected to learn something about curve balls and bunting and how to run better practices, I had learned something far more valuable.
From an old man with home plate strung around his neck, I had learned something about life, about myself, about my own weaknesses and about my responsibilities as a leader. I had to hold myself and others accountable to that which I knew to be right, lest our families, our faith, and our society continue down an undesirable path.
“If I’m lucky,” Coach Scolinos concluded, “you will remember one thing from this old coach today. It is this: "If we fail to hold ourselves to a higher standard, a standard of what we know to be right; if we fail to hold our spouses and our children to the same standards, if we are unwilling or unable to provide a consequence when they do not meet the standard; and if our schools & churches & our government fail to hold themselves accountable to those they serve, there is but one thing to look forward to …”
With that, he held home plate in front of his chest, turned it around, and revealed its dark black backside, “…We have dark days ahead!.”
Note: Coach Scolinos died in 2009 at the age of 91, but not before touching the lives of hundreds of players and coaches,including mine. Meeting him at my first ABCA convention kept me returning year after year, looking for similar wisdom and inspiration from other coaches. He is the best clinic speaker the ABCA has ever known because he was so much more than a baseball coach. His message was clear: “Coaches, keep your players—no matter how good they are—your own children, your churches, your government, and most of all, keep yourself at seventeen inches.
And this my friends is what our country has become and what is wrong with it today, and now go out there and fix it!
"Don't widen the plate."
While inspiring, Professional baseball is largely fake. Teams are Comms vehicles, ways in which Comms Aware folks can keep tabs on certain Operations via a teams losing or winning streak.
Hillary was associated with the Bears, and the Bears won in 2016. "They all thought she would win."
Babe Ruth, the first manufactured "star".
https://decodingsymbols.wordpress.com/2022/06/22/sports/
https://decodingsymbols.wordpress.com/2021/08/24/ww-billionaire-ops-baseball-comms/
But the message isn't about baseball , it's a metaphor for something much bigger...and we are living it today. Some of my most meaningful and memorable life lessons I learned from my coaches. That's what this is about IMO.
I was interested in seeing if the speech, or specifically, the article written about the speech, contained Comms of some sort. 17 = Q = secret is such a prevalent Comm. In fact I am confident that number was deliberately decided in the creation of baseball the sport itself.
"And when we consider baseball symbolism. What does it mean to “get to 1st base” with a girl?
What is the symbolism of a “Baseball diamond”?
It explains why Hugh Hefner’s death was marked with a diamond sale."
It's an interesting take, I will admit. I never thought to take a deep dive into baseball comms.
Who will you say is a fake star next, Michael Jordan? Your post shows clearly anyone can take a set of facts, twist them into a pretzel come up with any incredulous assertions they want.
Q said that the "Truth would put 99% into the hospital." You don't get to that high a % without fundamental truths we accept of this world to be proven as illusions.
"You may have never thought it odd before, but quite likely the 3 most famous human beings on the planet had the same first name, 2 of them even have the exact same 3 initials. By 1990 all 3 of them were at “Kings” of their industries.
Two hvae the exact same initials, MJJ. Same names, all gods of pop culture, AND they would also all fall from the top of the world as they were involved in scandalous criminal investigations between 1991-1993. 2 Rapes and 1 murder!
Note the name of the boy who destroyed Michael Jackson’s career? 13 Year old Jordan Chandler."
https://decodingsymbols.wordpress.com/2021/09/20/big-cia-vs-small-doj-rabbits-to-ducks/#ForceDuk
I hardly think Jordan gambling on things other than basketball was any kind of scandal. I think he lost $100k on golfing bets. A great sum to most but, by perspective, like a $100 bucks to MJ at the time based on his $100 million plus income a year at the time.
"Michael Jordan testified in Federal court today that a $57,000 cashier's check he gave to a suspected drug dealer covered gambling losses from a weekend of..."
https://web.archive.org/web/20140416103616/https://www.nytimes.com/1992/10/23/sports/bulls-jordan-says-check-covered-gambling-losses.html
NYTimes article, as in, it got a LOT of Media attention.
It is hard to get a sense on what the Media chooses to spotlight the farther we are removed from the events. As an aside, I found the decode on Terri Shaivo to be very interesting, given how I recall the Media obsessing over the story incessantly. I also found out the "covered up history" of Jimmy Carter wanting to add women to the Military Draft during his re-election campaign. In fact, it may even indicate Carter purposefully sinking his own campaign.
"July 1993 is when Jordan Chandler confessed to Michael Jackson molesting him. This was the same month Michael Jordan’s Father James Jordan was murdered. https://web.archive.org/web/20200513115012/https://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/14/sports/man-shot-to-death-is-identified-as-father-of-jordan.html
Michael Jordan switched from being the most popular athlete in the world in basketball to a minor league baseball player specifically because of this murder.
It was said to be the final thing his father and he talked about before he died.
James Jordan was shot to death in his red car
Note his father’s body was cremated due to lack of space. But they kept his teeth/hands for identification. Seems suspicious. Like his death may not have happened as the official story is being told."