I'm in the midst of John Thorn's Baseball in the Garden of Eden, a wonderfully informative, entertaining and evocative book. Thorn's voice and phrasing have obviously been influenced by a lifetime reading Victorian-era sources, which he quotes liberally throughout, and he brings to his topic a breadth of knowledge that extends beyond the period, the sport, or the country.
In a discussion of the commercialization of baseball, for example, he notes one of the first occasions for what had been until then locally stocked teams taking on paid players from outside the community. In 1869 the Cincinnati Base Ball Club hired an almost entire roster of outsiders, leaving its supporters to "root for the laundry." The quotation is from a comment made by comedian Jerry Seinfeld about the utter emptiness of the modern professional sports team, in which players and managers regularly change from season to season, in which owners move teams from city to city, and whose only enduring feature is the uniform.
Thorn goes on to note such a phenomenon was not unknown to the ancients, quoting Pliny the Younger on the chariot races of 2000 years ago:
“If indeed it were the swiftness of the horses, or the skill of the men that attracted them, there might be some pretense for it [the passion of the crowd]. But it is the dress they like; it is the dress that takes their fancy. And if, in the midst of the course and the contest, the different parties were to change colors their different partisans would change sides and instantly desert the very same men and horses whom just before they were eagerly following. . . . Such mighty charms, such wondrous power reside in the color of a paltry tunic!”
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