Welcome to Shalom Magazine - Massachusetts
An Appeal to Major Jewish League Players of Today and Yesterday,
and Other Jewish Players, To play and Win for Israel
in the 2013 World Baseball Classic
By Larry Ruttman
Shawn Green says he will do it. ‘Superman’ Sam Fuld told me he would be “honored” to do it. Ian Kinsler has been quoted as saying it would be “cool” to do it. Naturally, people talk of Jewish superstars Ryan Braun and Kevin Youkilis doing it. And how about recently retired star catchers Brad Ausmus and Mike Lieberthal, and active players lately like Gabe Kapler and David Newhan doing it? And we want to mention other major leaguers like infielders Danny Valencia and Ike Davis, outfielder Ryan Kalish, and pitchers Jason Marquis, Craig Breslow, Scott Feldman, and John Grabow doing it. Only recently, Scott Schoeneweis and Jason Hirsh pitched in the majors, and Canadian-born Adam Stern patrolled the outfield there, so one hopes they would be doing it. Everybody’s sentimental favorite to do it is Adam Greenberg, who took a pitch to the head on the first pitch in his only major league appearance, thus having a 1,000 On Base Percentage (OBP), and no batting or fielding average!
Of course no one is going to displace bellwether Ryan Braun from the outfield should he choose to play on this team, but it’s fun to think of the undersized but fleet trio of ‘Superman’ Sam Fuld, Adam Greenberg, and Adam Stern playing the outfield together, reminding us of the Almighty and heroic feats, two guys with the ‘first’ name, and the other a ‘Superman.’
Of course any team, let alone one with so many stars, has to be managed properly. Who would do that? Well, when the Israel Baseball League was launched in 2007, Art Shamsky of the 1969 World Champion ‘ Miracle Mets’ took his team, the (aptly named) Modi’in Miracle, to a successful season. Also managing teams in that league were former big leaguers, southpaw star, Ken Holtzman, first DH ever, Ron Blomberg, and legendary college coach, Steve Hertz. And has anybody seen best-ever lefty Sandy Koufax lately? That great man could provide more than a few tips on how to get them out. As could another ex-Dodger hurler, Ralph Branca, now a hale eighty-five, who long ago tossed up the pitch Giant Bobby Thomson swatted for ‘the shot heard round the world,’ and who recently learned that his mother, Hungarian immigrant Kati Berger, arrived here Jewish.
Combine the pick of those lights with a few native Israelis showing diamond talent in a sport newly appreciated there, mostly under the banner of the Israel Association of Baseball, and you have a team good at all positions, good enough to qualify, good enough to take it all. What a story that would be for baseball, Israel, and America! And what an upper for a country besieged by not only its sworn enemies but a bad and somewhat unbalanced press!
As Commissioner of Baseball, Bud Selig, told me when I interviewed him for my upcoming book, American Jews And America’s Game: Jewish Voices of American Baseball, due to be published by the University of Nebraska Press in early 2013 at just about the time as the World Baseball Classic:
“The World Baseball Classic is huge. You can see that we have more countries now. One day I hope we can include Israel. The internationalization of baseball is my last great goal.” Later, when Israel was invited to participate, Selig announced that Israel is “a wonderful addition” to the WBC, an idea he fathered. What a trip it would be if the meaning of Bud’s words were expanded into Israel taking it all!
So come one, come all, and join up. Under Israel’s law of return, all of you are eligible for Israeli citizenship, and that’s all you need to be eligible for Israel’s team. Four teams out of twelve, including Israel, will meet in the qualifying round tentatively scheduled for Taiwan in November 2012. Of those, only Canada, Colombia, and Panama look like tough opponents. Once by that round, Israel will be in the classic, and with you guys on Israel’s team, not only in, but a good bet to win it all.
PLAY BALL!
Larry Ruttman of Brookline, has practiced law there over fifty years. His next book, combining baseball and Jewish experience, American Jews And America’s Game: Jewish Voices of American Baseball, will soon be published by the University of Nebraska Press.


