When George W. Bush walked to the mound for the World Series opener, most viewers saw only a former president reliving a famous ritual. What they missed was the stiffness in his stride, the guarded way he moved his shoulders, the subtle calculation of a man testing the limits of a surgically repaired back. Months earlier, he had undergone fusion surgery on his lower spine, the kind of operation that changes the way you stand, sit, and sleep—let alone throw from a major-league mound.
Jenna Bush Hager’s defense of her father was less about excuses and more about context: the courage it takes to step into a stadium after being rebuilt with screws and rods. His spokesperson confirmed the surgery but emphasized his nature—he doesn’t complain, he just shows up. One awkward, bouncing pitch became something else entirely: not a failure, but proof that recovery doesn’t erase the will to stand in the spotlight, pain and all.