"Champagne Goggles" Make Baseball Purists Groan

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JOCELYN NOVECK | 11/ 3/09 05:23 PM | AP

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Champagne Goggles

NEW YORK — When the New York Yankees clinched their spot in the World Series last week, the casual TV viewer might have wondered if they were about to go swim the 200-meter butterfly with Michael Phelps.

Call it a fashion statement for the very rich and very happy: There they were, stars like CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and Johnny Damon, sporting swim goggles to protect their eyes from the victory Champagne being poured, squirted and sprayed amid the post-game revelry.

It's become a more familiar sight in the past few years in the locker rooms of baseball's top teams. And some die-hard fans aren't too happy.

Sure, they say, it's important to preserve those valuable eyes. But the eyewear sure looks a little goofy, doesn't it? And more importantly, it suggests a broader problem, these fans say: Post-game celebrations have become too predictable, with all that unspontaneous Champagne-pouring.

"I guess it was funny when they first poured Champagne on somebody, but it's just too prepared, too scripted now," says Matt O'Donnell, a high school history teacher and baseball fan in Sebastopol, Calif. "The way they have the plastic tarps all laid out in the locker room, and they have the goggles already set up there."

O'Donnell, 39, is an ardent Boston Red Sox fan (his 4-year-old son's middle name is Fenway, after Fenway Park.) "Please, No More Champagne Goggles!" he pleaded on his baseball blog in September, when his team was about to clinch a playoff spot.

After every big victory, he complained, the plastic sheets go up, "and then a few players will put on the readily available ridiculous looking champagne goggles and begin spraying their teammates. A manager or coach will inevitably be sprayed with bubbly ... and the perpetrator will think it is the funniest thing ever. Yawn."

Patrick Stimson agrees. "Why can't they all just go into the clubhouse and celebrate naturally?" asks the 28-year-old Oakland A's fan. "What I like is spontaneous moments."

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And while the goggles don't lessen any of his respect for the top players, he does see them as a sign that today's athletes may be getting a little softer.

"It just seems like something the older, more hardened players of yesterday wouldn't wear – not something you'd have seen on Babe Ruth or Pete Rose," says Stimson, who lives in Los Angeles and works in online marketing. "There's a notion that today's players are coddled, multi-gazillionaire athletes, and maybe this is an outgrowth of that."

On his own baseball blog, Stimson recently posted the question of whether Champagne goggles were ever acceptable – or whether it made the players seem, well, wimpy. "Most people thought it took away some of their manly nature," he says.

Talk to an eye doctor, though, and you'll be converted to the pro-goggle side with the speed of one of Sabathia's fastballs.

Champagne has a high alcohol content, high enough to damage the surface lining of the cornea, says Dr. Matthew Gardiner, director of emergency ophthalmology services at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. (For those medically inclined, the lining is called the epithelium.)

"A corneal abrasion like that usually heals within two to three days, but it can be extremely painful while it's healing," says Gardiner.

In other words, you don't want your ace pitcher or hitter nursing a corneal abrasion while taking on the next team, as the Yankees did a few days after their pennant victory against the Los Angeles Angels, facing the Philadelphia Phillies for the big prize. (The series stands 3-2, Yankees.)

For Jane Heller, the well-being of her treasured Yankees is the key concern – much more important than how silly they may or may not look in goggles.

"I see all these posts, saying gee, what sissies," says Heller, a lifelong Yankee fan in Santa Barbara, Calif., who blogs about the Yankees on "Confessions of a She-Fan," and has written a book of the same name. "But it doesn't bother me."

What bothers Heller more is what the goggles might represent: "These quote-unquote celebrations have become so calculated and neat and tidy now," she says. "It used to be a spontaneous burst of enthusiasm. There was no plastic tarp covering everything."

Heller notes that the goggles are a relatively new phenomenon, something she first noticed in 2007. "I noticed that one player, Doug Mientkiewicz, was wearing them during a celebration," she says.

At the National Baseball Hall of Fame's library, researcher Gabriel Schechter can't pinpoint when the first Champagne goggles were donned, but he says it's only in recent years. (Champagne celebrations, on the other hand, have been around since the 1950s, when they took the place of beer.)

"It might just be that they're using so much more Champagne now that it's really hazardous," says Schechter.

One important baseball fan doesn't know anything of the goggle tradition. "Really?" asks W.P. Kinsella, whose novel, "Shoeless Joe," became the movie "Field of Dreams."

"It sounds so calculated," the author says. "Just so you don't get a little Champagne in your eyes." (Kinsella, a huge fan, says he hates watching the celebrations and always turns the TV off anyway once the game is over.)

Hazards aside, fans like Brian Welch may find it hard not to stifle a giggle when they see the next World Series champs don their swim equipment on Wednesday or Thursday, when the series ends. "I think the goggles are hilarious," says Welch, 34, a Cincinnati Reds fan who lives in Chicago.

But he hopes the victorious Yanks or Phillies, with finally no games left to worry about, will throw caution to the wind – or, more like it, to the spray.

After all, says Welch, "Maybe it's good to save your eyes before you go on to the World Series. But once you've won, hey. You've just won the World Series! Suck it up. Get some Champagne in your eyes!"

NEW YORK — When the New York Yankees clinched their spot in the World Series last week, the casual TV viewer might have wondered if they were about to go swim the 200-meter butterfly with Michae...
NEW YORK — When the New York Yankees clinched their spot in the World Series last week, the casual TV viewer might have wondered if they were about to go swim the 200-meter butterfly with Michae...
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- PCMinistry I'm a Fan of PCMinistry 27 fans permalink
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I bet it's really depressing for the other team to have to go back to the lacker and pull up the pre-prepared plastic tarp and throw the goggles away... I think if I was the losing team I would suggest strippers or even high-priced escorts. It's an excuse to use the plastic tarp and if the party really gets wild you may even need the goggles.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 11/04/2009
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Good thing the Yankees won't have to worry about champagne in the eyes this time out!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 AM on 11/04/2009
- G-guy I'm a Fan of G-guy 26 fans permalink
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Why is that? Will the Yanks be serving water when they WIN?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 11/04/2009
- Balzac I'm a Fan of Balzac 120 fans permalink
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Well, I think there was one incident in particular that contributed to this situation. I can't remember the game, but the champion got champagne poured on his head and it foamed up and started dripping off of his face in such a way that it resembled a bukakke. It robbed him of his victory because when the photo hit the newspaper the next day, all anyone could say was "champagne bukakke".

That was pretty terrible and hilarious at the same time. People never would have thought of that if the internet hadn't spread the knowledge of the word. It couldn't have happened in years past when people were more innocent.

Now they shake and spray the champagne with so much pressure, it blasts away any extra champagne and it doesn't foam and drip in such an obscene manner. But the high-pressure champagne blast goes right up the player's noses and under their eye-lids, which could impair vision. It's a difficult situation.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 11/04/2009
- Balzac I'm a Fan of Balzac 120 fans permalink
    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 AM on 11/04/2009
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hahaha... that couldn't look any more hardcore

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 11/04/2009
- Waldimore I'm a Fan of Waldimore 12 fans permalink

Oh please! Who wants champagne in their eyes? It stings and burns. So what if the players of old were harder and tougher. We all were once. How about we go back to basics on all fronts: dump the microwave, processed food, cell phones, texting, i-pods. How about beating clothes on the rocks? Yeah! I didn't think so. They were celebrating the ALCS. If champagne burned Mariano Rivera's eyes and he couldn't pitch, I'd be one angry Yankee fan. Goggles? Works for me!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 11/03/2009
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Get a load of the voyeurs, what a demanding lot!

Shut up and watch, I mean, where the heck do you think they get all the t-shirts and hat's from the second the final out is recorded?

Maybe MLB should leave the World Series trophy back at the hotel; let's be REALLY spontaneous!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 PM on 11/03/2009

Wow! That didn't last long...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 PM on 11/03/2009

It allows the players to celebrate without having to worry about suffering from a dumb injury. I don't see the harm in it, really. The Red Sox fan that tried to connect the goggles to masculinity seemed like he was reaching quite a bit.

http://www.i-yankees.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 PM on 11/03/2009
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This is perhaps the most unnecessary article I have ever read. Way to rain on their parade. Players train their entire lives to play baseball and when they finally make it to the World Series and celebrate you write an article like this?

Get a fuckiinnnggg life, Jocelyn.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:42 PM on 11/03/2009
- G-guy I'm a Fan of G-guy 26 fans permalink
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Older players were harder and tougher, no question.
their salaries made them live comfortable, but not filthy rich.

Even with ten World series wins, Hall Of Famer Yogi Berra needed to sell
suits at Robert Hall, on Bloomfield Avenue, NJ, in the winter for extra money.

Brooklyn Dodgers star right-fielder Carl Furillo worked winters in high-rise
steel construction, walking along girders 30-40 floors high to pay the bills.

There were also no batting helmets, elbow and shin guards, and the players
used to wear metal spikes when they slid hard into the bases,
Ty Cobb used to deliberately sharpen his, so when he stole bases he could really
take a piece out of the infielders and catchers when he slid in hard, feet first.

So goggles, to protect your eyes from burning while celebrating, is sure no big deal today.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 11/03/2009

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