In
baseball, opposing batters pose no physical threat but, in the years between,
Mariano Rivera has brought back that sensation by his demeanor on the mound and
the sureness of his mastery over the fears that envelop us all as we move through
life.
As
Rivera ascends into myth, it is not the remarkable statistics we will remember
but the man himself, embodiment of all those virtues Hemingway wrote
about but in a figure devoid of the bullfighter’s self-important preening.
In
his farewell tour, the tributes by those who opposed him were remarkably
heartfelt. They were not only honoring his numbers and broken bats but
something more, the essence of what competition should be—-clean, honorable and
self-deprecating.
We
will miss him, but what he leaves behind will remain.
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