[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book I)]
[April 2, 1996]
[Pages 537-540]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Interview With Mel Proctor, Jim Palmer, and Mike Flanagan of Home Team 
Sports in Baltimore
April 2, 1996

    Q. Welcome back to Camden Yards. The Orioles lead the Kansas City 
Royals 3-2. It is opening day, and President Bill Clinton was here today 
to throw out the first ball, and he'll be joining us momentarily, as 
soon as we get him miked up.
    Well, we've got two right-handers, myself and Jim Palmer, and two 
left-handers in the booth now, Flanagan and the President.
    Q. We finally have some balance up here.
    Q. Can we get a Presidential chair in here? Thank you very much.
    How are you, sir?
    The President. Great. It's been a good game, don't you think?
    Q. I agree.
    The President. And a beautiful day.
    Q. What was that first pitch you threw? Fastball, slider, curve?
    The President. It wasn't fast. It wasn't fast, but I had a good 
time.
    Q. This is a good time of the year for you. I know you're a big 
college basketball fan, having gone to Arkansas. Unfortunately, the 
Razorbacks were eliminated, didn't make it to the finals.
    The President. But I'm very proud of them. They started 4 freshmen 
and made it to the Sweet 16, so I think they did well. It was a great 
tournament this year, I think. Everybody who watched the games must have 
felt it was a great tournament.
    Q. I know you love being here on opening day.
    The President. I do. And this has been exciting, you know? It's 
great to see this new Baltimore team. You know, they've got a chance to 
go all the way. And yet, if my count's right, all their RBI's go to Mr. 
Ripken today.
    Q. That's right. [Laughter]
    Q. Yes, he got 30 percent of what he had in all spring training. And 
of course, they all

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want to get to the White House, because I know you had the Atlanta 
Braves there in early March.
    The President. I did.
    Q. I know you get out to a game or two during the season. Do you 
watch at the White House when you're home?
    The President. I do quite often, I do. I watch the games when 
they're on, especially at night. When I come home late at night and I'm 
kind of keyed up and I don't want to go to sleep, I often watch the 
games that are on.
    Q. A drive to right center field. Johnny Damon makes the catch on 
the warning track.
    The President. Great play. That's a great play.
    Q. Johnny Damon taking an extra base hit away from Chris Hoiles.
    So you were saying you watch our games late at night. I guess in 
essence what you're saying is that we put you to sleep.
    The President. Or keep me awake. [Laughter]
    Q. This is the youngster that last year, at Double A, got about 188 
at bats, but the reason Bob Boone left him in center field, even though 
they have a very good center fielder in Tom Goodwin, is because of his 
ability to make plays like that.
    Q. Here's Tony Tarasco, who struck out his first time up.
    Q. Did you play baseball yourself in high school?
    The President. My school didn't have a team, but we had church 
league and Boys Club. We had all those. I played in some of those teams 
when I was a kid. I loved it.
    Q. I know you love to golf; did you play any other sports growing 
up?
    The President. Yes, but only--not in school; I played church league 
basketball, softball, baseball, but you know, everybody that grew up 
where I did wound up loving sports.
    Q. Now, are you allowed to have a favorite team?
    The President. I think so. In the basketball years--in the 
basketball season, excuse me, people understand it when I cheer for my 
home State team or for my alma mater, Georgetown. And when I was a kid, 
interestingly enough, in Arkansas, the St. Louis Cardinals were the 
closest baseball team to us; there were no Texas teams then. And so we 
used to listen to Cardinals baseball. That's what I studied to when I 
was a boy.
    Q. Is that right?
    The President. Yeah.
    Q. I know you were out here last year when Cal Ripken broke Lou 
Gehrig's consecutive game streak.
    The President. I was.
    Q. What did that mean to you?
    The President. I think it meant a lot to me not only as a baseball 
fan but as a citizen and as the President now, as someone who really 
wants his country to work well. The idea that a man could show that kind 
of discipline and devotion to his work and stay with one team for a 
career in a time and age when a lot of people don't last very long 
because they don't have the discipline to do it and just go for the big-
time bucks in the short run and float around from team to team, or in 
the case of non-athletes from company to company, I think it really sort 
of was reassuring, not only to me but to the American people, to see 
that kind of record set and to see that kind of discipline and loyalty. 
I liked it a lot.
    Q. Are you aware that Ken Griffey, Jr., is a Presidential candidate 
and has promised, if elected, to let people not pay taxes for 2 months?
    The President. Yes, I'm worried about that. I'm worried about him. I 
figure that--at the very least he's going to take more votes away from 
me than Senator Dole. [Laughter] I'm really worried about it. I think--
you know, I've always been a big fan of his. I feel sort of stabbed by 
it. It's breaking my heart.
    Q. You wouldn't consider that, would you?
    The President. What?
    Q. Not having taxes for 2 months?
    The President. What I want to know is how he's going to pay the 
bills. I'll consider it. I want to hear the rest of the deal. How is he 
going to not pay the bills?
    Q. Base hit for Jeffrey Hammonds, who is two for two--a double his 
first time up and now a single. So that's a good sign. Hammonds is back 
healthy and swinging the bat well.
    The President. Looking good.
    Q. Getting back to Cal Ripken and all of the pressure that he must 
have been under last year during that streak--and you can certainly 
identify with pressure in your office--what do you see about the way he 
handled the pressure?
    The President. I think he did what I try to do; he didn't vary his 
routine. He just focused on the day that was before him. And I think 
that he must have had the record in mind, but it didn't paralyze his 
play. Even the night he

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was here, the night he broke the record, he hit a home run on a 0-3 
pitch. So he still had enough presence of mind not to even just take the 
walk, you know? He was there, ready. He was playing. He was alive to 
every moment, and I think that's what you have to do. When you're under 
a lot of pressure, you have to just take a deep breath and do what you 
know to do.
    Q. Pitch is low to Brady Anderson, who has struck out and grounded 
out. We're visiting with President Clinton.
    The President. I think you've got to give a lot of credit to 
conditioning, too. And the way he keeps himself in shape in the off-
season and during the season must have an incredible amount to do with 
the fact that he was able to play relatively injury-free all these 
years. And that requires a lot of discipline.
    Q. And you know, a lot of discipline--Mike and I played for the 
Orioles for a number of years, and a lot of people wonder what it's like 
to play in the big league. Are you enjoying being President? Is it what 
you thought it was going to be?
    The President. Yes. Oh, yes, I enjoy it very much. I'm honored every 
day when I go to work. There are some parts of it that are a little 
rougher than I thought it would be, but I have no complaints. I signed 
on for the whole show, and I'm just honored to have a chance to do it, 
to make a difference, to stand up for what I believe in, and to serve. 
It's an incredible opportunity, and if I had it to do over again, I'd do 
it in a heartbeat.
    Q. There are no off days as President?
    The President. No. But I always tell everybody----
    Q. Even Cal gets one off in the spring.
    The President. ----even the bad days are good, you know? Even the 
bad days are good. You know, the only frustrating thing is when you come 
up against a problem that you know cries out for some sort of 
resolution, and you're not sure you have the power to do anything about 
it; or when you get a problem where it seems 50-50 on both sides, you 
just have to kind of feel your way through to the answer, but you're 
not--neither you nor anyone else can be sure about whether it will come 
out all right. Those things are frustrating, but in terms of the 
pressure and the tension of the job, I don't mind that at all. I like 
it. It's part of the challenge.
    Q. Three and 0, the count to Brady Anderson. Jeffrey Hammonds is at 
first with two outs.
    The President. Come on, Brady, you need a hit.
    Q. There goes Hammonds, throw to second by MacFarlane. He bounces 
it.
    The President. He made it.
    Q. But it gets him anyway.
    The President. No.
    Q. You don't think so, Mr. President?
    The President. I don't think so.
    Q. Well, maybe we can get the umpire to change his mind.
    Q. Could we appeal?
    The President. No, no. I went to see the umpires before the game. 
Let's look again.
    Q. Did they have their glasses on?
    The President. Yeah, they got him.
    Q. They did.
    The President. They got him. He was right.
    Q. We'll be back, Mr. President, in a moment. Take a commercial 
break; we'll be right back.

[At this point, HTS took a commercial break.]

    Q. Welcome back to Camden Yards. Mel Proctor with Jim Palmer, Mike 
Flanagan. We're visiting with the President of the United States, Mr. 
Bill Clinton, who is enjoying opening day here at the ball park.
    Good to have you with us.
    The President. Thank you. It's really beautiful here, isn't it? 
Fabulous park.
    Q. We think it's the best.
    The President. One nice thing is, look how hard the wind is blowing, 
and you see the flags up there, and yet it's kind of calm in here, so it 
doesn't seem to be distracting the game.
    Q. Joe Vidiella will lead off the fifth inning for the Royals, with 
the Orioles ahead 3 to 2. Vidiella was called out on strikes his first 
time up.
    We were talking about your job and the enjoyment you derive from it, 
but what is the biggest challenge you have faced so far since you have 
been in office?
    The President. The initial challenge was to try to get the economy 
turned around and get the deficit down, get the interest rates down, get 
the jobs coming back into the economy. Now the big frustration is how to 
make--how to get that economic benefit of--we have over 8 million new 
jobs in the economy. Unemployment is low, lower than the last 25-year 
average. But there's still a lot of people that feel uncer-


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tain, because things are changing so fast. And now the biggest challenge 
is figuring out how to keep the job machine going and still give the 
baseball fans in America, the working people, the security that they 
deserve while they are on the job, some certainty that if they work 
harder they can get a raise, they can have a retirement, they can 
provide health care for their kids, that kind of thing.
    And no one knows how to do this. It's a new challenge. We have never 
had a time before when we generated so many new jobs, and the economy 
was performing well, but we still have people uncertain out there. So 
that's our biggest challenge today.
    Q. One out, Mike MacFarlane up for the Royals. He doubled and scored 
his first time up.
    We were talking about somewhat of a background in sports as a 
youngster. Did you take any lessons away from competition that you use 
now in your life and on the job?
    The President. Absolutely. Two, particularly. No matter how good you 
are at what you're doing, most things work out better when teams do it 
together. People work better together than they do on their own most of 
the time. And the second lesson is the obvious one: Never give up. It's 
not over till it's over.
    Q. Were you very frustrated as a sports fan during the baseball 
strike?
    The President. Yes, very. Especially that year. It's something that 
you can identify with as a pitcher. It was the greatest hitting year in 
50 years. I mean, for people like me that grew up memorizing the 
baseball statistics, not just of all of my heroes in the fifties when I 
was a boy but going back to the twenties and thirties, I knew the 
hitting records of all the old players. The idea that we were going to 
have a--literally a 50-year record in hitting. And I know there are all 
kind of reasons for it, the expansion teams. I know all that. But to see 
that just thrown away, it just broke my heart. For all of us nuts, it 
was a bad deal.
    Q. Thanks for being with us, sir. It's been a pleasure.
    The President. Thanks.
    Q. Come back anytime.
    The President. Thank you. This, however, is going to be a good year.
    Q. Yeah, I imagine, and a busy year.
    The President. A good year for baseball.
    Q. And also a busy year for you.
    The President. But I'll still keep up.
    Q. Okay. Good luck. Nice seeing you.
    Q. A real pleasure.
    The President.  Thank you.
    Q. We'll be back with more from Camden Yards in a moment. Thank you, 
Mr. President.
    The President. Give me a golf game some day.
    Q. Okay. You got a deal.

Note: The President spoke at approximately 4:30 p.m. in the HTS 
broadcast booth at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.