Cal Ripken Jr. is retired, but he has never been one to sit on the sidelines. At 7 a.m. on April 7, 2020, the Hall of Fame baseball player 鈥 who set the record for consecutive games played 鈥 tweeted for the first time.
Ripken had an important message to get out. The Cal Ripken Sr. Foundation, which has established programs and built fields to give kids in underserved communities a safe place to play and learn, was now shifting its focus to help feed families in those same communities.
I鈥檝e joined Twitter to help the and our partners launch with to lend a helping hand during this challenging time. To make a real difference, it takes a team. Join us by donating here:
鈥 Cal Ripken, Jr. (@CalRipkenJr)
Through social media like Twitter, Ripken knew he could reach the masses and explain the with Feeding America聽and how even a small donation would help support 200 local food banks and 60,000 food pantries and meal programs across the country.
鈥淥ne dollar given is 10 meals distributed,鈥 Ripken said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an amazing thing, only $5 or $10 can really have a big effect on these communities,”聽 Ripken said.
“I thought it would be cool to embrace social media and my dog Nash is probably the star of Twitter, but the reason I jumped on is to try and help the need for food in this crisis.鈥
Helping is the Ripken way. The foundation is named after the former Baltimore Oriole’s father, who as coach and manager in the minor and major leagues of baseball, spent his entire life helping others achieve their goals.
Ripken鈥檚 father鈥檚 legacy lives on and his words and wisdom still resonate.
鈥淚n this particular case, I go back to the same advice he (Ripken Sr.) gave me when I played all those games in a row,鈥 said Ripken.
“You can鈥檛 play tomorrow鈥檚 game until it gets here. You can鈥檛 replay yesterday鈥檚 game although you can learn from it. And so you might as well play the game that is here.
“In order to execute each and every day, you really have to live in the moment,鈥 said Ripken.
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Ripken follows that advice and lives in the moment. Until recently, he had not watched in its entirety the game where he set the record for most consecutive games played.
Over the years, Ripken had seen bits and pieces from the September 1995 event 鈥 when he reached 2,131 consecutive games.
Ripken said he was reluctant to watch it all, because he wanted to preserve his own memory of that game.
Listen to an interview 草莓传媒’s Dave Johnson did with Cal Ripken just before the 20th anniversary of the day he broke Major League Baseball鈥檚 consecutive games played streak.
Finally seeing that magical night from start to finish, Ripken said it was fascinating.
There were scenes he did not remember and conversations that were part of the broadcast he had never heard, including one with his first manager Earl Weaver who switched Ripken from third base to shortstop.
鈥淲hen Earl moved me from third to short, I thought it was mistake,” Ripken recalled.
鈥淓arl said during that telecast I was just hoping to get through the weekend, which really tells me he was thinking about it only as a temporary move 鈥 now, that temporary move lasted 15 years, but I never knew how Earl was thinking about it.”
Just like his father鈥檚 foundation has shifted its focus to helping feed people, Ripken鈥檚 ability to embrace change, which ultimately led to a Hall of Fame career, is a life lesson.
Going forward, baseball fans might have to embrace change and the prospect, if possible, of Major League Baseball games being played in empty stadiums.
鈥淲e all played in front of no one at some point,鈥 Ripken said.
鈥淭here are going to be some hurdles and challenges that we will have to get used to, but I would much rather have something to get used to, than nothing at all.
“It鈥檚 better than waiting until next year and saying this season is gone.鈥
