The Old Dog With A New Trick
CC Sabathia

A lot of us like to root for young, upstart underdogs with attitude. That motivation is the root of “The Kid” character, the star of the current MLB campaign “Let The Kids Play”.
But I think we also love old farts. Grumpy, stodgy, but wise older folks make compelling characters. They personify a whole subsection of baseball fans, but there is something even more broadly appealing about older athletes, especially veterans with long tenures on the same team. But I want to talk about an even narrower category. There is a specific subset of older athletes that I believe offer a very compelling narrative. Old farts who retool and lengthen their careers as a result. The Old Dog with a New Trick.
At the 2008 All-Star Game, as the story goes, HOF closer Mariano Riviera was talking with the late HOF pitcher Roy Halladay. Riviera taught Halladay his grip for the cutter, the pitch that made Mo’s career. Halladay was ten years into his dominant career, and yet he was humble enough to add the cutter to his approach and reinvented his game as a result.
Right now, CC Sabathia is the Old Dog With A New Trick on the Yankees. He is the established veteran, the wise sage, who admitted his mortality and changed as a result. CC will be going to the Hall of Fame. However, if he hadn’t changed his approach from power to precision, he might not have stuck around long enough to get the credits needed to get into the Hall of Fame.
CC went from throwing gas at batters–daring them to hit his fastball, to painting the corners with sliders and cutters–to get soft contact and easy outs. There’s a certain masculine sense to fastball pitching, pitchers who can hit the high 90’s don’t usually like to change to throwing breaking balls. Adjusting is not something every older athlete is capable of doing–look at Craig Kimbrel right now for example.
The Old Dog With A New Trick appeals to everyone. They’re characters in a nicely written story. An older great in the twilight years of their career who changes an essential part of their game is a very compelling narrative completely ignored by “Let The Kids Play” and that’s a shame.
Archetypal Hall of Famer
Roy Halladay




