USA TODAY GLORIFIES
THE BASEBALL CAP… A HISTORY TO REVERE
The
newspaper that brought you colorful anecdotes
about life has pronounced the baseball cap the
national hat of the US. They make this confession
by noting that everyone has - or is - wearing
baseball caps from the famous to the infamous.
“Tennis players and golfers wear them,
and football players put them on standing on the
sidelines. Umpires and ushers wear them. As do
truck drivers, Boy Scouts, letter carriers and
soldiers. The Dalai Lama donned a Washington Nationals
cap during a visit to the nation's capital. Penny
Marshall, Ron Howard, Spike Lee and Steven Spielberg
don't direct a movie without one.”
Our headwear comrades, New Era Hat Company, are
also quoted in this story.
According to John DeWaal of New Era, more than
60% of New Era's 20 million caps sold each year,
sell to non-athletes. "The baseball cap is
an iconic symbol in baseball and fashion. People
have an affinity for baseball, and part of that
relationship is the baseball cap. We want to celebrate
what the baseball cap has meant to the country,
to the world. It's a fascinating history."
If you want to read the article in its entirety
read on:
Baseball
cap has endured generations as the all-American
hat
7/27/2006
By Steve DiMeglio, USA TODAY
Twelve-year-old Elliot Rambo has nearly 30 baseball
caps in his Pittsburgh bedroom. His preferred
cap, one he wears almost every day, is a Pirates
model that features signatures of former Pittsburgh
pitchers John "Candy Man" Candelaria
and Dave Giusti.
"I play better when I wear the hat or any
baseball hat," Rambo says. "They just,
like, make me, I guess. I never leave home without
wearing one."
That habit started when Rambo was 5, the first
year he played baseball. Since then, through T-ball
and Little League, no matter what team he played
for, Rambo kept the cap.
"I've saved them all, and I'll keep them
forever," he says. "Sometimes I look
at the hats and remember a hit I got wearing it
or when I pitched a good game. I think that's
pretty cool."
If the USA has a national hat, it surely is the
baseball cap. You would be hard-pressed to find
someone who hasn't worn one — forward, backward,
sideways or inside out — on occasion. Tennis
players and golfers wear them, and football players
put them on standing on the sidelines.
Umpires and ushers wear them. As do truck drivers,
Boy Scouts, letter carriers and soldiers. The
Dalai Lama donned a Washington Nationals cap during
a visit to the nation's capital. Penny Marshall,
Ron Howard, Spike Lee and Steven Spielberg don't
direct a movie without one.
Lee, a rabid sports fan, fueled the cap's rise
from sports accessory to fashion cap, says John
DeWaal, vice president of global marketing for
Buffalo-based New Era.
In 1996, Lee asked the company to design a New
York Yankees cap in red, an unofficial color.
Lee was seen wearing the cap at the World Series
that year, and demand for caps of all colors shot
up. According to DeWaal, more than 60% of New
Era's sales of more than 20 million caps a year
go to non-athletes.
Hats have become big hits with females, too.
New Era started a specific line of hats for women
in 2005, adding more patterns and colors. About
15% of New Era's licensed headwear is sold to
females.
To celebrate the 140-year history of the baseball
cap, New Era, the largest sports-licensed headwear
company in the world, turned a 53-foot trailer
into an onboard interactive studio that is touring
the country this summer.
"The baseball cap is an iconic symbol in
baseball and fashion," DeWaal says. "People
have an affinity for baseball, and part of that
relationship is the baseball cap. We want to celebrate
what the baseball cap has meant to the country,
to the world. It's a fascinating history."
New Era's semi displays the 22 steps it takes
to make the "59Fifty-style" baseball
hat that all major leaguers wear. There also are
displays of older hats from the company's Cooperstown
and Negro League collections. Caps representing
the nations that played in the inaugural World
Baseball Classic are there, too.
Like Rambo, MLB players have had their own quirks
and peculiarities with baseball hats. Maintaining
a Cal State-Fullerton tradition he had in college,
Nationals closer Chad Cordero
flattens the bill of his hat in defiance of most
every known baseball style.
Teammates joke that Cordero irons the bill every
day. Cordero yanks the cap so far down that it
folds over the tops of his ears, with the bill
touching his eyebrows.
"People don't see my face during a game,"
Cordero says. "I can go almost anywhere without
being recognized. I think I'd look weird wearing
it like all the other guys. People just don't
get how I can see or how I can do it. It works
for me."
In 1849, the New York Knickerbockers wore baseball's
first uniform, which included a hat made of straw.
In 1860, the Brooklyn Excelsiors wore the ancestor
of the modern, rounded-top baseball cap, and by
1900, the "Brooklyn-style" cap, with
a long visor and a button on top, became popular.
The modern baseball caps arrived in the 1940s,
when latex rubber replaced buckram (coarse cotton)
as the stiffening material inside the visor. By
1954, New Era, which has been making caps for
85 years and has a 70-year relationship with MLB,
was producing a uniform hat for each baseball
team, and today, the company provides about 2,000
per team a season.
For fans, hats come in hundreds of styles, including
plaid, argyle and camouflage. There are more than
200 styles of Yankees caps, nearly 200 choices
for the Dodgers, 175 for the Red Sox.
"You can't tell what team is on the hat
until you see it up close," Yankees center
fielder Johnny Damon says. "Have
you seen the orange Red Sox hat? I saw so many
different hats in Boston that it was confusing.
When I joined the Yankees, I saw pink ones, green
ones, red ones. Whatever floats your boat is fine
with me."
For pitcher David Wells, that
meant honoring his hero. On June 28, 1997, in
the House That Ruth Built, Wells wore the Hat
That Ruth Wore. Wells, a lifelong Ruth fan, took
the mound wearing an authentic 1934 Babe Ruth
hat, which Wells bought for $35,000. Manager Joe
Torre made Wells take it off after the first inning
because it didn't conform to uniform standards.
Wells then blew a 3-0 lead as the Cleveland Indians
won 12-8.
Oakland Athletics pitcher Barry Zito
never takes the mound without writing
a message on the bottom of the cap's bill. Among
his favorites are "Stay Aggressive"
and "FITZ," which stands for Fearless
in the Zone. "I've been doing that since
I was a kid," Zito says. "They're just
little reminders and help me focus sometimes."
A single hat worked for former closer John Wetteland.
Before the 1996 World Series between the Yankees
and Atlanta Braves, hats featuring Series logos
were made. Trouble was, Wetteland, with the Yankees,
refused to wear a new hat. The logo had to be
stitched onto his hat, which had a few other markings
— a season's worth of assorted sweat stains
and dirt.
"I get a hat in spring training, and I keep
it," Wetteland said that year. "It has
character ... if not smell.” Every year
during his career, Wetteland would promise to
give his hat to a kid in his neighborhood. In
1996, the Hall of Fame asked for the cap after
the World Series, but Wetteland wouldn't back
out on his deal with the kid. Sweat stains and
all, Wetteland handed his hat over every year.
Chicago White Sox infielder Alex Cintron,
on the other hand, has no problem washing his
hat. He has to. He says his hat size is 6, but
the MLB caps don't come that small.
"So we need to get a 6¾ or 6? and
shrink it in a washing machine and dryer for a
half-hour," he says with a laugh.
"You can ask them — it's a pain,"
he says. "Every hat. All the time."
Teammate Jermaine Dye calls Cintron
"Beetlejuice" after the Michael Keaton
character who, in the movie with the same name,
had his head shrunk. "My hat would fit a
3- or 4-year-old kid," Cintron says.
Texas Rangers outfielder Kevin Mench
can't say that. His baseball hat wouldn't
fit 99% of the heads on earth. According to New
Era, the largest caps in MLB history belong to
Mench, San Diego Padres manager Bruce Bochy, and
former commissioner Fay Vincent. All wore size
8-plus caps — five to six sizes larger than
the average 73/8.
"I still have to get my cap stretched out
a little bit," Bochy says. "I don't
know what it is. I don't know if my head is getting
bigger or the caps are getting smaller. These
days, with all of the steroid talk, I guess you
got to be a little careful when you say your head
is getting bigger."
As an infant, Mench's mother bought him a matching
sweater and hat, but the hat wouldn't fit. During
rookie ball in 1999, he missed a few games because
the team didn't have a batting helmet that fit
him.
And during a rehab stint for Class AA Frisco
(Texas) in 2003, the team didn't have a photo
of Mench to show on the video board, so when he
batted, the team used an image of Shrek, the famous
green ogre with the huge, bald head. The nickname
stuck.
Teammate Francisco Cordero used
to tell people that the Rangers were going to
make a Mench bobblehead doll, but there was only
enough plastic in Texas to make three of them.
"What can I say, I have a really, really
big head," Mench says. "It's huge. People
make fun of it all the time, and that's fine with
me. You should laugh in life. And you should see
my helmet. It's even funnier." |