The speaker was a leader of his own; he showed the leaders of the opposite side that their viewpoint was wrong to him. When turf was completely cut out, the people did not know what to do with it, “But what will we do with this?” The idea was very in the moment, but the people involved thought it was a good way of getting their message through, “We could mail them anonymously to baseball executives, politicians, clergymen.” Baseball played on sod was all that was known to the speaker; nature was the basis of the game of baseball, “Gentle reminders not to tamper with Nature.” The speaker and his following were not going to be like everyone else; they were going to be true to themselves. The speaker in this story continued to represent the message of showing leadership. W.P. Kinsella firmly believed in teaching his readers the values of sticking up for what you believe in. If his readers do not believe in what the majority believes in, then Kinsella wants his readers to make a change. Kinsella wanted his readers to go against the status quo of society. Kinsella wants his readers to fight with the same passion as the speaker. Kinsella does not want his readers to settle for something that is not what they