"I think one of the most difficult things for anyone who's played baseball is to accept the fact that maybe the players today are playing just as well as ever"
About this Quote
The hardest part of aging in sports isn’t the aching joints; it’s the bruised ego that comes with being replaced by evidence. Ralph Kiner’s line lands because it admits, with a wry grimace, how nostalgia works as a defense mechanism. Former players don’t just miss the game - they miss their centrality to it. So the mind reaches for a comforting story: the league has declined, the fundamentals are gone, nobody plays “the right way” anymore. Kiner punctures that story without preaching. He frames the problem as “accepting a fact,” which is a sly way of saying the resistance isn’t rational. It’s emotional.
The intent is modest on the surface: a veteran acknowledging that modern players can be “just as well as ever.” The subtext is sharper: greatness is not a fixed property of an era; it’s a moving target, and we hate moving targets. Baseball, with its obsessive statistics and endless arguments about “dead-ball” vs. “steroid” vs. “analytics” eras, is uniquely built for this kind of denial. Fans and ex-players alike use comparisons as a way to keep the past alive and, by extension, keep themselves important.
Kiner also sneaks in a generosity that reads like hard-won wisdom. He doesn’t say today’s players are better; he says “maybe” they’re as good. That little hedge is human: even when you’re trying to be fair, pride still negotiates the terms.
The intent is modest on the surface: a veteran acknowledging that modern players can be “just as well as ever.” The subtext is sharper: greatness is not a fixed property of an era; it’s a moving target, and we hate moving targets. Baseball, with its obsessive statistics and endless arguments about “dead-ball” vs. “steroid” vs. “analytics” eras, is uniquely built for this kind of denial. Fans and ex-players alike use comparisons as a way to keep the past alive and, by extension, keep themselves important.
Kiner also sneaks in a generosity that reads like hard-won wisdom. He doesn’t say today’s players are better; he says “maybe” they’re as good. That little hedge is human: even when you’re trying to be fair, pride still negotiates the terms.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sports |
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