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Show af f ?CEJl :fe.; CT. PETERSBURG, FLA. Vari ety is supposed to be the spicf of life, but so are arguments in t baseball training camp. The argu ment this time, including members of the Cardinals and the Yankees had somelhlng to do with brains or and oil the ball field. "Why is It?" one Cardinal want ed tu know, "that a fellow can be r'Wii smart in manj i y" I ways, but d u m l 'm when he gets intc jl football or base- i y can be prettj s i O dumb until he gets 1 ''w . 1 into some athlotic ' f. competition, whei ' AjA ' 1 he may be smartei than almost any- L I it body?" u i mis ls a falI GranllandRlce question. Does any. one recall the most intelligent member mem-ber of the old Giant team from 190E through 1913? I can give you hi! name. He is better known as Bone-head Bone-head Merkle the Giant who forgot for-got to touch second base in 1908. Yet Fred Merkle was the best educated edu-cated member of the Giant Bquad. But his reflexes on the ball field failed to operate as quickly as some others who would have been baffled by McGuffey's second reader. Fred had to take time to think things out. You can't do that when split second co-ordination or intuition must rule. For example, Rube Waddell was a mental eccentric. But there were few smarter, once the gangling Rube reached the mound with a baseball in his left hand. There were two famous ball players who, as far as I know, never made a mental mistake or the field. One was Babe Ruth who came along from an industrial school. The other was Nap Lajoie who was lifted from a cab driver's seat in Woonsocket, R. I., and a trifle later was surrounded and captured cap-tured by Uncle Egbert Barrow. Neither needed any college degree to be smart on a ball field. They were born that way. Instinct and Intuition The athlete who is naturally smart in competition must have a high degree of Instinct, intuition and concentration. I know Eddie Arcarc figures it that way in racing. "You haven't time to think in a split second," he told me once, "There's an opening or there isn'1 an opening, and you have to make up your mind in a flash. Which means largely Instinct for the right things to do." Ty Cobb had this natural instinct, this ability to concentrate, but Cobb also worked on these natural gifts. "I used to lay In bed at night for hours thinking up plays." he said once. "I planned some of these playa weeks ahead against certain teams." Old time ball players had no motor mo-tor cars, movies, night clubs or other oth-er distractions to kill time. So many of them thought only aboul baseball. I mean such men as King Mike Kelly, Kid Nichols, John Montgomery Mont-gomery Ward, Charlie Comiskey, Hughey Jennings, Clark Griffith, John McGraw and most of the old Orioles. The main mental asset in any game is concentration. Many have this needed ingredient more than others. But the art or knack of concentration con-centration can also be developed. Concentration means keeping your mind on the job from start to finish. fin-ish. As Knute Rockne used to tell his squad "Keep physically relaxed but mentally alert." Borowys Predictions We caught Hank Borowy on the fly just as he was heading for the Cub camp and Catalina island. "How about Cub prospects?" we queried. "We'll need all tiie pitching we can get this season," the Cub star said. "By that I mean most of the other clubs will be stronger where we will have about the same cast. We got little back from the service. The Cardinals, Giants and Dodgers will all be stronger. So will the Pirates, Braves and Phillies. "We'll be pitching to better hitting hit-ting strength all along the line, while at the plate we face improved pitching pitch-ing also. That means tough going. A flock of dangerous hitters have been added to the league since last fall. "Hitting in the two leagues? I can't see much difference. I had a better record in the National than I had in the America. But my arm was in much better shape when 1 joined the Cubs." I asked Borowy how the National league race looked from his angle. "The Cardinals are the team to beat," he said, "with so much strength at every point. But they can be beaten. I'm sure we'll be up there. The Giants have all the power pow-er any team needs at bat, but their pitching is still uncertain. What pitcher can Mel Ott depend on for as many as 18 games? "The Dodgers will be better and they were tough enough at times last season. The Pirates will be improved im-proved and the Braves will probably bo bothering everybody. |