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- THE WEEK SOCIETY, Page 20A League of Their Own
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- Baseball's bosses are back in charge after Fay Vincent resigns
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- Like a batter who glares steadily at the umpire after being
- called out on strikes, baseball commissioner Fay Vincent waited
- four days before submitting his resignation last week. The
- owners of major league teams had earlier "requested" that he
- leave. Milwaukee Brewers owner Bud Selig took on Vincent's
- duties. His executive council will select a new commissioner and
- devise a plan for bargaining with the players' union this winter
- -- a strategy that could lead to a 1993 spring-training lockout.
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- Vincent, who shepherded the sport in a troubled year of
- spiraling salaries and shrinking attendance, thought himself
- uniquely able to determine "the best interests of baseball" --
- which meant using his bully pulpit to intimidate players, ignore
- the owners and realign teams against their wishes. He confused
- himself with his job. So last week did his media apologists.
- "The commissionership is dead," intoned the New York Times,
- which had not said similar last rites over the U.S. presidency
- when Nixon resigned.
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- Before becoming commissioner, Vincent worked as a movie
- executive. Selig used to be a car salesman. Somewhere between
- the fantasy of the first job and the reality of the second --
- between a field of dreams and a parking lot full of lemons --
- lies the future of baseball. It will take more than a coup to
- keep America's pastime from doddering past its time.
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