Kenny Rogers: “The Greatest”

A modest baseball song by Kenny Rogers, “The Greatest,” offers a heartwarming lesson.

Kenny Rogers Greatest Baseball

Anyone who was not an all-star in Little League Baseball will have to appreciate Kenny Rogers’s ode to the hopeful optimism of childhood with “The Greatest.” Released in 1999, it is one of the more heartwarming baseball songs, turning the strikeout tale of “Casey at the Bat” on its head.

Kenny Rogers always had a talent with story songs. If you discount his talent as being too pop, just compare his version of his greatest hit “The Gambler” to the recording of the song by Johnny Cash. Both versions were released in 1978, and while I think Cash is one of the all-time greats, there is a reason that Kenny Rogers’s version of “The Gambler” is the one we remember.

Rogers never had a story song surpass “The Gambler.” Around a year after that song’s release, his revenge tale “Coward of the County” became a top-ten hit in 1979. It is a catchy tune and became a TV movie in 1981, but it has not aged as well as “The Gambler.” The Chipmunks also covered “Coward of the County,” of course not near as well as Rogers, although their version has the advantage of being more chipmunky and deleting the rape.

“The Greatest” did hit the country charts in 1999, but was not much of a hit. It did spawn a book but no movie. I’d never even heard the song until very recently. That’s probably okay, as the song seems not to be trying to hard. It presents a modest tale about a young kid, with no life-and-death events as in “The Gambler” and “Coward of the County.”

Like “The Gambler,” the song “The Greatest” was written by Don Schlitz. Schlitz also co-wrote Randy Travis’s “Forever and Ever, Amen” and Keith Whitley’s “When You Say Nothing at All” (also recorded by Alison Kraus).

Three Strikes!

“The Greatest” tells the tale of a young boy one afternoon tossing a baseball in the air and trying to hit it. Alas, he misses three times, striking himself out. Like many young children, the boy was dreaming of being “the greatest” while playing with the bat and ball We imagine his disappointment at striking out.

But a twist comes at the end. “The greatest” realizes he can still call himself “the greatest” as the greatest pitcher.

It is a sweet message about adjusting one’s perspective to see the best in ourselves. Check it out.

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    Author: chimesfreedom

    Editor-in-chief, New York.

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