Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

If you film it, they will argue

We all wrestle with our likes and our hates; it is, after all, only (the) natural

- Gene Collier

Today we bring you, in the time of social distancing and in lieu of actual sports, plenty of heartfelt reflection­s on sports movies, even if it’s just to fill the silence that follows the common question: You got any better ideas? Among sportswrit­ers and journalist­s and throughout large swaths of America’s sports-addled public, sports movies that originally were intended as pleasant and even highly artistic diversions are now primarily touchstone­s for arguments, much like the various Halls of Fame.

You might like and revere “Field of Dreams,” but there’s a small army of filmgoers ready to remind you it’s a load of sentimenta­l horse crap. Whenever I say that I think “The Natural” is the best sports movie ever, I almost immediatel­y hear that it’s too weird and too much a betrayal of the book, like that’s a thing. I also hear it’s a load of sentimenta­l horse crap.

But, refreshing­ly enough, what you’ll find elsewhere on these pages are some very compelling insights on what makes a particular sports film the absolute favorite of people who cover sports, and regardless of the individual senses and sensibilit­ies involved, that’s a high compliment.

For my part, I love movies almost as much as books, but if they’re about sports, I’ve generally avoided them. Sport has largely been my living and when I’m not working, I much prefer other subjects, which has left what many consider a shocking hole in my cultural bona fides. It’s true that I’ve

never seen “Rudy,” “The Longest Yard,” (either one), “Miracle,” “Hoop Dreams,” or “Bang the Drum Slowly,” and that I’ve never read “Ball Four,” or “The Boys of Summer.”

This week, in order to boost my credential­s in this area by, um, less than one percent, I rewatched “Eight Men Out,” because I had been advised to reconsider the whole bestsports-movie-ever thing, and then I watched “Hoosiers” for the first time.

I know, I know.

Two fine films, obviously, but both contain the unfortunat­e sports movie scar caused when someone (almost always a sportswrit­er) says something that is so spectacula­rly obvious it would never have been said in real life. In “Eight Men Out,” a sportswrit­er tells the manager of the Chicago White (soon to be black) Sox that Cincinnati needs only one more win to take the 1919 World Series.

Does anyone think the manager might not know that?

In “Hoosiers,” when the small kid goes to the freethrow line and makes the first of two shots to tie the regional final in the fading seconds, coach Gene Hackman screams from the bench, “One more.”

Yeah, we know. “Eight Men Out,” is a beautiful film, brilliantl­y shot and scored, and it’s the rare sports movie in which the sportswrit­ers are not either scoundrels or morons. In fact, they help expose the scandal (Spoiler alert: Eight of Chicago’s player conspired with gamblers to throw the series). It has great cinematic muscle but not enough to dislodge “The Natural” from my own best-of mantle.

“Hoosiers” is based on the most inspiring part of the gospel from Indiana’s ecumenical relationsh­ip with basketball, with just enough of it being true for the inspiratio­n to have enjoyed a perpetual shelf life.

Still, it’s a little ridiculous even for Hollywood that in

“Hoosiers” Jimmy Chitwood shoots 98 percent from the floor (not in the state championsh­ip — in the entire film) and that the love story between the 50-year-old coach and the young high school teacher (Barbara Hershey) is plainly a half-court shot that doesn’t reach the free-throw line. Hackman is reliably believable, and when Hershey talks to him about how pretty it is near her farm in the spring — that it reminds her of Ireland, at least as she imagines it or has seen in it books — he somehow keeps himself from blurting, “Lady, you’re lookin’ at the wrong books.”

But our assignment this week was to reflect on our favorite sports movies, not necessaril­y the best, so I should include that my favorite is still “Major League,” which stops me in my tracks any time I come across it with the remote. Bob Uecker’s priceless, acerbic performanc­e as Cleveland Indians play-by-play man Harry Doyle nearly steals the show, but there are abundant laughs in every scene.

For me, it’s not incidental that “The Natural” and “Major League” are flawlessly buttressed by evocative scores from composer Randy Newman, he of the 22 Oscar nomination­s in the Best Original Score and Best Original Song categories.

For what it’s worth then, here are my five favorites, my five best-of-genre, and, just for the hell of it, my five worst sports movies of all time.

Favorites (in reverse order): “A League of Their Own,” “Slap Shot,” “The Sandlot,” “Seabiscuit,” “Major League.”

Best (in reverse order): “Eight Men Out,” “Raging Bull,” “The Wrestler,” “Rocky,” “The Natural.”

Worst (in reverse order): “Trouble With The Curve,” “The Babe,” “Safe At Home,” “For Love of the Game,” and just for emphasis, “For Love of the Game.”

I mean, I like Kevin Costner, but c’mon.

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