Casey at the Bat: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Penned by Ernest Thayer in 1888, "Casey at the Bat" is a longform poem describing a typical baseball game, wherein the fans of the "Mudville Nine" are rooting for their beloved hitter Casey to win the game for them. An iconic poem in the annals of baseball history, it is possibly the [[Ur Example]] of [[Down to the Last Play]].
Penned by Ernest Thayer in 1888, "Casey at the Bat" is a longform poem describing a typical baseball game, wherein the fans of the "Mudville Nine" are rooting for their beloved hitter Casey to win the game for them. An iconic poem in the annals of baseball history, it is possibly the [[Ur Example]] of [[Down to the Last Play]].

[https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Casey_at_the_Bat Read it on Wikisource.]

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[[Category:Poetry]]
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[[Category:Sports Stories]]
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[[Category:Casey at the Bat]]
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[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Literature]]

Revision as of 01:25, 24 April 2018

Penned by Ernest Thayer in 1888, "Casey at the Bat" is a longform poem describing a typical baseball game, wherein the fans of the "Mudville Nine" are rooting for their beloved hitter Casey to win the game for them. An iconic poem in the annals of baseball history, it is possibly the Ur Example of Down to the Last Play.

Read it on Wikisource.

Tropes used in Casey at the Bat include:
  • Defictionalization: In a tribute to the poem, the real-life Stockton Ports minor league baseball team renamed themselves the Mudville Nine in 2000 and 2001.
  • Down to the Last Play: In this case, Casey did not win the game for Mudville.
  • Miracle Rally: Subverted. A series of mediocre players make it to base, and it looks like Mudville will come back at the last moment. Then their team hero, Casey, strikes out, losing the game.
  • Shoot the Shaggy Dog
  • What an Idiot!: Casey decides to be slick and let the first two pitches fly rather then hit then, confident he can hit the last ball. Yeah should've took those first pitches Casey.