powered by Google  
CBSSports.com Insider: McCraw bridges two eras of D.C. baseball - MLB Sports News   Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 


Community | Help
  Home   Fantasy     NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  Racing  |  Tennis  |  Cycling  |  MMA  |  More CBS College | High School | Mobile | Shop  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Horses Home
 Live Racing
 Youbet Update
 Carryovers
 Free Selections
 Contests
 U. of BET
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Cycling Home
 Results
 Standings
 Stages
 Teams
 Riders
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Arena Football
 Boxing
 CBS College Sports
 CBS Sports TV
 College Baseball
 College Hockey
 Horse Racing
 Collegiate Nationals
 Message Board
 Poker
 Soccer
 SPiN
 Tour de France
 Video
 WNBA
 Women's Coll BK
 World Sports
 
 Site Index
 
 
 CBS College Sports
 Coll Sports Tonight
 Get CBS Coll Sports
 XXL - Watch Now
 Talent Bios
 Schedules
 School Sites
 
 
 Find your School
 '08 Football Preview
 Football Rankings
 Football Stats
 Hoops Recruiting
 Hoops Rankings
 Hoops Stats
 Video Highlights
 
 
 Featured Application
 Mobile Web
 Alerts
 Applications
 Video
 
 
 Home
 NFL
 NCAA
 MLB
 NBA
 NHL
 Fantasy
 
MLB Home | Scoreboard | Standings | Schedules | Stats | Teams | Players | Transactions | Injuries | Video | Fantasy News
 

Insider: McCraw bridges two eras of D.C. baseball

 

Insider | Short Hops | Love Letters

Early afternoon. The RFK Stadium gate swings open for major-league baseball in Washington, D.C. Heart thumping, Tommy McCraw passes through the players entrance, walks toward the clubhouse and -- and here's where this story splits and begins to follow parallel paths.

As a player, Tommy McCraw ended a D.C. era. As a hitting coach, he's helping start a new one. (Getty Images)  
As a player, Tommy McCraw ended a D.C. era. As a hitting coach, he's helping start a new one. (Getty Images)  
This could be 2005. Or this could be 1971.

"It's amazing," says McCraw, batting coach for the Washington Nationals, and with that, he's certainly in the correct D.C. Zip Code.

No other sport weaves together generations as tightly as the red stitching holds together a baseball, and as the Nationals add to the history books with the game's long-awaited return to our nation's capital Thursday, the game's master tailors are hard at it again, looping one more well-placed stitch through the years.

As the old Washington Senators closed out their term in RFK Stadium on Sept. 30, 1971, a 30-year-old veteran named Tommy McCraw played first base, lined the final hit in Senators history and recorded the final putout of an era.

As the new Washington Nationals open another chapter in RFK Stadium on April 14, 2005, a 64-year-old coach named Tommy McCraw will be in their dugout as the team's hitting instructor.

Amazing?

"Astounding," McCraw says. "People ask me, 'Did you ever think ... ?' Hell no, I didn't think I'd still be in baseball to make that circle. How do you think that? I can't think that. You can't think that. There's no way. It is going to be very emotional for me."

It is one of the neatest, latest twists in a game where the tie from one generation to its past is always shorter than it might appear.

And so it will be that while the old Senators might be frozen in time, one man who long ago wore the red cap with the pretzel-twist W will be proudly wearing it again Thursday night as that time melts away. And through him will be felt the presence of another man, an utterly important man who pulled the strings as manager when baseball last called Washington home.

"The tremendous lessons I got from Ted Williams, that's probably the reason why I'm a hitting coach today," McCraw says.

Isn't that something? You never know where the years will take you or what influences life will place into your path. One of baseball's greatest legends has been dead for nearly three years, remains unthinkably frozen in some new-age facility in Arizona, yet specks of his being continue to appear up and down the Nationals lineup, placed there with care by Tommy Lee McCraw.

CONTINUED: 1 · 2 · 3 · Next »
 
 
 
 
 
Scott Miller
Recent Columns
 
Headlines
 
 
 
CBS Sports Store
Texas Rangers Authentic Josh Hamilton Home Jersey with All-Star Patch
Get your MLB Jersey for the 2nd Half of the Season
Order yours now Shop today