Baseball in London? Major league showcase held in Hyde Park
LONDON (KFB) — A piece of American sports culture was on display Tuesday in London’s Hyde Park as baseball came to town on July 4, the U.S. Independence Day.
The exhibition featured several former major leaguers playing a Home Run Derby in one of London’s best-known open spaces.
It’s part of Major League Baseball’s plan to showcase the game to build interest in Britain and Europe, a region where soccer is overwhelmingly the favorite sport. The move comes during the summer hiatus in England’s Premier League.
Part of Hyde Park was transformed into a baseball fairground on a warm summer evening as fans took advantage of the batting cage to try out their swings. One of the best hitters was a woman wearing a Red Sox uniform.
There were a few English touches — the bar had Pimms’s with lemonade for sale — but Americana was in vogue, with some attendees wearing outfits based on the stars and stripes to mark Independence Day.
The event, which drew several thousand enthusiastic fans, provided a needed shot in the arm for British baseball teams, which arrived from various parts of the country to rub shoulders with former major leaguers, including Carlos Pena and Cliff Floyd.
“This event is a big start because if this goes well baseball’s popularity is only going to build and build,” said 20-year-old Josh Heues, who traveled 90 minutes with several teammates from the Northampton-based Centurions to get to Hyde Park.
Charlie Hill, the managing director of Major League Baseball for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, says it’s possible that some regular-season games will be played in London as soon as the 2019 season.
“The teams are enthusiastic,” Hill said. “That is the target, and it’s becoming the expectation.”
If MLB league games are played in London in two years, baseball would still be way behind the National Football League and the National Basketball Association, which have played official games in Britain for decades.
Hill said the exhibition was a Home Run Derby, similar to the one that precedes the MLB’s All-Star Game, an easy-to-understand demonstration of hitting prowess.
One concern is that baseball’s somewhat arcane rules might make the game seem incomprehensible to Britons — much as Americans can be slow to grasp the finer points of cricket.
“We don’t want to play games here from a cold start,” Hill said.
The former major leaguers playing Tuesday were joined by several prominent British cricket players who tried their hand at knocking baseballs out of the park. They showed impressive skill with a baseball bat.
John Boyd, who heads Baseball Softball UK, said there’s already strong interest in the game. He says there’s an estimated 1.5 million baseball fans in Britain, partly because it’s become so much easier to watch live games.
“Now I can watch it at the pub,” Boyd said. “I have an app that lets me watch it in real time. The globalization of tech has made it a lot easier to follow other countries’ national pastimes.”
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