Sunday, December 26, 2010
1919 World Series - Black Sox Scandal
Wikipedia - "The 1919 World Series matched the American League champion Chicago White Sox against the National League champion Cincinnati Reds. Although most World Series have been of the best-of-seven format, the 1919 World Series was a best-of-nine series (along with 1903, 1920, and 1921). Baseball decided to try the best-of-nine format partly to increase popularity of the sport and partly to generate more revenue. The events of the series are often associated with the Black Sox Scandal, when several members of the Chicago franchise conspired with gamblers to throw World Series games."
Wikipedia - 1919 World Series, W - Black Sox Scandal, YouTube - 1919 World Series Footage White Sox vs Reds, Wage Setting and the 1919 Black Sox Baseball Scandal (Jean Shepherd), Black Sox Scandal
Charles North
The Best American Poetry, Wikipedia, EPC, amazon
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
The 1928 Negro Leagues – The Two Leagues
Rickwood Field – Still used today
"Teams ordered roughly by their league success, except for Homestead, which never joined the ECL, but remained independent, playing mostly semi-pro teams while barnstorming through Pennsylvania. However, Homestead did also play against most of the ECL teams and some NNL teams, and was definitely a top caliber major eastern team. The Cuban Stars were a traveling team, with no home city in the U.S. The Brooklyn Royal Giants were effectively a traveling team also, as owner Nat Strong’s white semi-pro Bushwicks team received most of the home dates at Brooklyn’s Dexter Park.'
Seamheads - 1, Seamheads - 2
Jilly Dybka - "Like a Wild Pitch"
my hair damp underneath my cap,
I hear the melody of bats.
Baseballs travel through space, full of voice.
Full of ghosts and sense-sound fantasy.
For a moment, a homer hangs in the air,
then sails past the old-timers.
Past the rookies.
The stadium can barely contain their youth.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
"The Silent Season of a Hero" - Gay Talese, Esquire, July 1966
"IT WAS NOT quite spring, the silent season before the search for salmon, and the old fishermen of San Francisco were either painting their boats or repairing their nets along the pier or sitting in the sun talking quietly among themselves, watching the tourists come and go, and smiling, now, as a pretty girl paused to take their picture. She was about 25, healthy and blue-eyed and wearing a turtleneck sweater, and she had long, flowing blonde hair that she brushed back a few times before clicking her camera. The fishermen, looking at her, made admiring comments, but she did not understand because they spoke a Sicilian dialect; nor did she understand the tall gray-haired man in a dark suit who stood watching her from behind a big bay window on the second floor of DiMaggio's Restaurant that overlooks the pier. ..."
Gay Talese, Esquire, July 1966
Michael Palmer - "Prose 43"
lower part wanted to steat but the rest
seemed to hesitate. The reliever was
still wet from the sea; he was trying
to hold it together with a string
stretched from his right foot sixty
feet and six inches to the plate. His
receiver waited there on one knee with
his left arm extended and the gloved
hand raised. But his eyes kept shifting
from the string to the runner on second,
half bull and half man, and back again.
After a while he asked for time out and
headed toward the mound.
Friday, December 10, 2010
Kirby Puckett
Wikipedia - "Kirby Puckett (March 14, 1960 – March 6, 2006) was a Major League Baseball center fielder. He played his entire 12-year baseball career with the Minnesota Twins (1984-1995). He is the Twins franchise's all-time leader (1961–present) in career hits, runs, doubles and total bases. His .318 career batting average was the highest by any right-handed American League batter in the second half of the 20th century."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Bruce Lader - "In the World Series of Jazz"
taps his foot in front of the stand,
licks the reed a taste or two
looks in for a sign and
before breathing a sound
lets the rhythm grab him,
gets into a groove.
The monster in the lineup
points the club, ready to swing the charts
like Bechet, Prez, and Benny,
or hard bop the ball out of the park
like Bird, sensing vibes the hurler phrases
from his medley of instant surprises
but the dot blows by, a goose egg of smoke
burning the catcher's mitt,
and then a Kansas City slider
side-slips the plate, explodes runs of blues.
The joint of eighty thousand plus
jumps like grasshoppers in a field of butterflies,
logic laid out,
as the cat tempts a half-speed change,
a curve bridged above his wheelhouse
like a slow boat to China, but the batter,
cool as Monk, Gerry, and Chet,
doesn't chase the quote.
The players are off their benches
as the southpaw winds, spins loose
a dexterous swallow of joy, the agile
turnaround of a tune
to take us out.
Amorak Huey - "Carver and Cheever Watch the Bucky Dent Game in a Bar in Chicago, October 2, 1978"
Carver fresh in love and no longer drinking.
Cheever doesn't understand that thinking.
Ray's happy to back Johnís team
though he's never cared much for the game.
Cheever drinks and roots as if he's making
notes for a speech, saying witty things
like All literary men are Red Sox fans,
and when that pissant little shortstop
knocks a fastball up and over Yaz's head
Cheever stands to go and says:
I've seen enough—the death of hope,
the home run that broke New England's back,
and Ray, by God, I've written my last book.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Pitcher
Wikipedia - "In baseball, the pitcher is the player who throws the baseball from the pitcher's mound toward the catcher to begin each play, with the goal of retiring a batter who attempts to either make contact with it or draw a walk. In the numbering system used to record defensive plays, the pitcher is assigned the number 1. In the National League and the Japanese Central League, the pitcher also bats. Starting in 1973 with the American League and spreading throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the hitting duties of the pitcher have generally been given over to the position of designated hitter, a cause of some controversy."
Wikipedia
Steven Winn - "Pitcher Hitting a Triple"
passes away in a Boston hospital,
dying words for anyone, anywhere
with the patient wherewithal
to listen to an oldster exaggerate
how huge the hitters, fast the pitch,
from his seat behind home plate,
so close, he saw the seam, the stitch.
His final breath, a skein of history
splits like the fingers of a mitt,
leaves it to books, to mystery,
to curse, to explain the myth of it.
A thousand ways to die or lose,
so goes the one who brought the news.
Daniel Bronson - "Satchel Paige Takes Off His Pitcher's Mask"
A blur past your slur.
I smiled through the years,
Knowing guile was my mate—
Slipped my curve by your fears,
Blew my heat past your hate.
Even so,
We both know
That you cheated me.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Roger Maris
Wikipedia - "Roger Eugene Maris (September 10, 1934 – December 14, 1985) was an American right fielder in Major League Baseball who is primarily remembered for hitting 61 home runs for the New York Yankees during the 1961 season. This broke Babe Ruth's single-season record of 60 home runs (set in 1927) and set a record that would stand for 37 years. Maris played with four teams during a 12-year Major League career, appearing in seven World Series and winning three World Series Championships."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, Baseball Almanac, Roger Maris Museum, YouTube - Roger Maris Home Run Record 1961, YouTube - Roger Maris, baseball's greatest unsung hero
Charles Barasch - "World Series"
hit the home run,
did the man in section 22,
down the third base line,
raise his hand for joy,
forgetting his fat wife
at home with the teenage daughter,
and driving home
why did he remember his wedding night,
and even the first night
parked by the river,
which is why he married her
in the first place?
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Homestead Grays: Gone But Not Forgotten
"The story of Washington D.C.'s Negro League baseball team. I was the producer and co-editor on this film."
YouTube
Mikhail Horowitz - "The All-Pugilistic Team"
1B Alex Hooks
2B Mike Champion
SS Monte Cross
3B Pie Traynor
OF Taffy Wright
OF Jimmy Wynn
OF George Bell
RHP Jimmy Ring
Bill Hands
LHP Roy Hitt
Jess Buckles
MGR Vern Rapp
Sunday, November 21, 2010
1966 World Series
"The 1966 World Series matched the Baltimore Orioles against the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers, with the Orioles sweeping the Series in four games to capture the first championship in franchise history."
Wikipedia, YouTube - 1966 World Series Part 1, part 2, part 3
Steven Schild - "Journeyman Student, Standout at Third"
other-worldly cant of Kant
and categorical whatever
and Sartreís loneliness
lay siege to this boy
who would otherwise be
on God ís green grass
if not for this test, these texts
that count so little
next to the certainty of
straight white lines,
dust raked rich and red
under cleated feet,
the sound of the spheres
when bat hits ball
like subject kisses verb,
when horsehide makes love to leather,
comes loudly, snugly consorts and stays,
the verity of curveball that does not hang,
the hope that one does when he bats,
the hope that it rockets the unabstract
distance to dead center,
the knowing that sometimes he can
hit one out, round the bases
and be part of a wholeness
that would make even Aristotle
leap up to cheer
and not care a damn
if he spilled a full beer.
Kelly Terwilliger - "How Baseball Becomes the Beginning of Longing"
is a warm pool, and you wade in happily,
the green field below as smooth as a freshly made bed,
and the sky fading peach into the cooling
air, the lights so bright, so white they trick the eyes
into seeing the whole world sepia, like an old movie
steeped in the color of nostalgia, the smells
of hot dogs and popcorn clinging to the very air
and somewhere inside, you can still hear the smack of the ball
you can feel the arc it makes over the stands and the boy next to you
so wanting to catch it he brought his tiny red mitt to the game
just in case, and he tells you again and again how it would be:
the ball, so hard, so fast it could hit him in the eye and blind him,
would come sailing right between the two of you, and he—he would snatch it
from the air as fast as anything, and it would be his! And how bare
and pointless the evening turns when he knows it is too late,
no ball will come his way tonight and you will go home
and he will be empty-handed and this was in fact
the worst baseball game ever and now he isn't even sure why
he wasted his time coming, and you climb
that hill with him, his head down, his sandals flapping and the air
clear and darkening all around you, carrying the moon on its breath
like a not-quite-ripe baseball, just out of reach.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Periodic Table of Hall of Famers
"There are few charts in the world as well-known and recognizable as the Periodic Table of the Elements. On charts and folders and schoolbooks everywhere, the periodic table has been around for almost 150 years. It has been in use for so long thanks in large part to its ability to tell a complex and sophisticated story about the known elements in the world in a simple layout. With 118 elements known on the current chart, and 109 players elected to the Hall of Fame by either the BBWAA or via special election (no Veteran's Committee here!), it seemed like a fun exercise to try and arrange the Hall of Famers into a periodic table structure. Well, maybe 'fun' is a bit relative."
wezen-ball
Michael Cantor - "An Octina for Wally Pip"
who loved each moment of each baseball game—
the grass and sweat, tobacco juice, the pitch,
the spirits that meant Wally came to play
wherever fist hit glove and ball met bat.
Broad-shouldered, tall, his voice a manly bass,
he wooed true fans from Beantown to St. Lou',
and thrilled to hear the crowd's ecstatic bawl
exploding as the umpire called, "PLAY BALL!"
But then a migraine's grip felled Wally Pipp
and Coach told him, No need to stew. In lieu
of you that college kid can start a game
or two. We'll test the rookie at first base;
see how he does against a big league pitch.
The fact is that he ain't no acrobat,
and talks just like he's in some Broadway play—
maybe not the guy you want to play
when the pennant hangs on every ball
but, hey, they say he swings a nasty bat.
The kid dug in—he outweighed Wally Pipp!—
bestrode the plate, admired a chest-high pitch,
then rocked his hips, uncocked thick wrists—HALLOO!—
a rocket ship roared wide of second base,
and skied to play a slap-bang crashing game
of tag with empty bleacher seats. The game
became the kid's—he handled every play
at first as if he'd always owned the base,
each swing just tore the cover off the ball,
and fans began to scream his name, Big Lou!!
He had the legs, ran bases like a big-assed bat
from second basemen's hell, crushed every pitch—
a horsehide whip, a battleship, a pip!
And that was all she wrote for Wally Pipp,
who didn't start another Yankee game.
He shared the bench with washed-up vets whose pitch
to him each day — that kid needs dirty play;
piss in his shoes and hat, chop up his bat
for firewood — was the bitter rant of base
old men who'd plot a rookie's Waterloo:
we'll take him out and get him drunk and ball
some five buck whore—for five bucks more she'll bawl
to all that it was rape—but Wally Pipp
already knew that greatness lived in Lou
and wouldn't play that sick old-timer's game.
He praised the man who took away his base
and led the cheers for him to slug each pitch,
while tycoons, heartless as a cork-plugged bat,
had Wally quickly sold away, to play
for Cinci'—small-town Cinci'—where the play-
by-play announcers peddle hay; and ball-
field summer heat can scorch a wooden bat;
and that became the end of Wally Pipp.
He left to run a bar and grill; would pitch
in nights, and lift a few and talk of Lou:
how sure it was that he would make the Base-
ball Hall of Fame, an All-Star of the game,
the Iron Horse, who never missed a game
in fourteen years. Bad calls can ruin the play
of life, and Wally found he was off base
once more: he thought some day they'd name a ball-
park after Lou—not a disease—then Lou
fell ill. The Scoreboard marked his last at bat.
When millions mourned him on the final pitch,
the saddest man of all was Wally Pipp.
At every New York game the ghost of Lou
is said to grab a bat and try to play;
smash back a pitch, bring home the men on base,
for baseball fellowship—and Wally Pipp.
Home Run Derby (TV)
Wikipedia - "Home Run Derby was a television show held at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles putting the top sluggers of Major League Baseball against each other in nine-inning home run contests. The show was produced and hosted by actor/broadcaster Mark Scott and distributed by Ziv Television Programs. The series aired in syndication from January 9 to July 2, 1960 and helped inspire the Home Run Derby event that is now held the day before the annual Major League Baseball All-Star Game."
Wikipedia, amazon, MovieWeb
Friday, November 12, 2010
Ernie Banks
Wikipedia - "Ernest 'Ernie' Banks (born January 31, 1931 in Dallas, Texas), nicknamed 'Mr. Cub', is a former Major League Baseball shortstop and first baseman. He played his entire career with the Chicago Cubs (1953–1971). He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
J. Kelly Yenser - "Out of the Yard"
on a flat slider, driving it out to left.
The sore-armed Moore slumped and that
was that. Soon after the Sox headed for the Mets.
And we all know what happened almost next:
Buckner kicked a Sunday bounce,
Mookie legged it out, etcetera.
(Did you hear the one going around
that winter: How Billy Buck thought
to step in front of a bus . . . but it went between his legs?)
What's the diff, finally? We all foresaw
the curse before it was again, but never
the worst: that Donnie Moore, sore at heart,
would take it in so soon, would take it all so hard.
Ishle Yi Park - "Agbayani"
I claim the 7 train as mine. For 15 years it has rocked me indelicate
above crisp beds of maple, graffitied brick, and a metallic
Worlds Fair globe. Called the Oriental Express back
when Oriental was not offensive. I loved that nickname
because it banded us together like thieves in collusion.
And the stubble-chested Italian boy, who stuffed my little brother's face
into the fender of his dad's '84 Chevy, cannot even think victory
tonight without an Asian name breaking waves against his hesitant lips,
to scatter his notion of American into fine spume,
like the red-brown dust rising from a slide into second.
Agbayani . . . Agbayani . . . Agbayani . . .
Shea Stadium. I've seen it dark as a janitor's closet,
and vibrant as fiesta, where faces confetti the stands.
My grandfather hobbled to a game when Shea's marketing sharks
promoted ethnic day on Korean night, which was accidentally billed
with Dominican night, and he cheered for Chan Ho Park to the clave
of fifty thousand hands.
Agbayani. You make their lips twist. Agbayani. My grandfather
circles the scores in the cut-out newspaper with a magnifying glass.
Your name is beautiful. I will ignore the way the pitcher
rubbed your head like you were a cocker spaniel, I will ignore this.
The double, the double, slide into second.
Yellow numbers clicking victory.
Tonight your face is beloved, familiar on the television.
Tonight we are red dirt, stadium light,
tired thighs, champagne spray, wet towel. You gave us this.
I could give a shit about baseball. The crotch-scratching,
gum-chewing Long Island families filling my train
and spilling out at Shea every summer
not my thing. But I can pocket now this torn ticket
night when you filled it, made New Yorkers cheer,
an oil-hot stadium waiting for reason to leap.
As I ride by on the tired commute back to mama's house in Queens,
I think of you. The way you twist their lips.
The night we were soaked towel, stadium light.
My grandfather circles your name
and keeps it in his records. Your beautiful name,
you gave us this.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Mantle’s Griffith Shot
"It was mid-April 1953. Dwight Eisenhower was president, the Korean War was in its third year, and a young baseball player named Mickey Mantle was hitting some monster home run shots for the New York Yankees. One of these came in a game with the Washington Senators at the Senators’ home field at Griffith Stadium, Washington, D.C."
Pop History Dig, A Tribute To Griffith Stadium - Video
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Silliman's Blog - World Series, San Francisco Giants
Edgar Renteria gets the pitch he wanted
In 1954, the last time the Giants won a World Series, I was eight years old. I remember the series as one of the first that I watched on TV with my grandfather, gradually becoming a baseball fan but not yet with an allegiance to any team. In ’54, the teams local to the Bay Area were the Oakland Oaks & San Francisco Seals, both minor league franchises in the Pacific Coast League. The Oaks folded after 1955, and I never saw a Seals game in person. But what I remember most about that 1954 series is that TV showed Willie Mays’ catch of a long drive off the bat of Vic Wertz over and over. I may not even have known what a replay was before that series. Although Cleveland had won 111 games that year and was seemingly invincible, the rather motley crew of the Giants, whose heroes included a pinch-hitter by the name of Dusty Rhodes, swept them in 4 games.
Four years later, when I was 12, the Giants moved to San Francisco, led that season by Mays & Johnny Antonelli, one of the pitching heroes of the ’54 series. That first west coast team had a number of young players, most notably rookie first baseman Orlando Cepeda, who would go on to the Hall of Fame, rookie third-baseman Jim Davenport & a slew of good young outfielders that included Willie Kirkland, Felipe Alou, Bill White, Leon Wagner and Jackie Brandt, and I was instantly a die-hard Giants fan. I can tell pretty much everything about the first game I ever attended at Seals Stadium on 16th Street. Ruben Gomez started for the Giants but walked the first four batters & was pulled instantly by manager Bill Rigney, who sent in Paul Giel (a one-time Jack Spicer student!) who shut down the Reds the rest of the way, allowing the home team to beat Bob Purkey. Before they moved to Candlestick Park in 1960, I saw Leon Wagner hit a ball that cleared the stadium walls & crossed 16th Street to land in a park – that is still the longest home run I’ve ever seen, even if it gets a little longer every year.
Once the Giants added Willie McCovey (another Hall of Famer) in 1959 & Juan Marichal (ditto) in ’60, the team became a regular contender in the pre-playoffs era of baseball. In 1962, the Giants came within a hit of besting the New York Yankees in a seven-game series. Game 4 of that series proved to be the only World Series game Juan Marichal would ever play in. Although the Giants won that particular contest, the victory in relief went to Don Larsen, whom everyone remembers for his perfect game with the Yankees in 1956.
I can recall exactly where I was sitting when McCovey’s ninth-inning line drive found its way into Bobby Richardson’s mitt to end the 1962 series, where my grandfather was sitting, and where my brother was pounding on the screen door to be let into the house. But the game and series were already over before either of us rose to get the latch. That was the only World Series the Giants played in as locals while my grandfather was still alive. By the time the Giants got back to the series in 1989, Arthur Collins Tansley been dead already for 18 years. Not one of the 1958 players was still competing. The nation had gone from JFK to George Herbert Walker Bush as president between appearances in baseball’s greatest show.
The 1989 series was marked both by competition from right across the bay, the Oakland A’s, a team that had relocated from Kansas City in 1968, and by the Loma Prieta earthquake that put a huge damper on everything. The upstart American League franchise was in the second of its three-year-run in the series that year, having lost to Los Angeles the year before, and losing again in 1990 to the Cincinnati Reds. I managed to attend Series games in both 1988 and ’90, watching the A’s win in extra innings on a home run by Mark Maguire in ’88 and watching with Kit Robinson as the Reds finished their sweep of the local team in 1990. Jose Rijo, the winning pitcher of that final game was the then-son-in-law of Juan Marichal. Life’s little ironies.
I had thought I would be seeing the Giants in the 1987 series. That was the only year I was ever able to swing post-season tickets for the Giants, led in that era by manager Roger Craig, whose good-ol’-boy persona often strikes me as the template for current Phillies manager Charlie Manuel. The Giants won the Western Division and took the lead in the playoff series two games to one over the Cardinals when they left to play the final two games in St. Louis. But the Cardinals won both games & I still have a photocopy of my World Series tickets somewhere. The originals went back for a refund.
In 2002, the Giants came within six outs of winning the series over the California Angels, only to have the bullpen blow game six and then to lose game seven. By then, I no longer lived in the Bay Area and tho my allegiance was slowly moving over to the Phils, I had no trouble rooting for Barry Bonds-led Giants. Even then, however, Bonds was the lone player left from my days in the Bay Area seven years earlier.
When the Giants made it to the World Series this year, I was rooting in fact for the Phils. The current Giants, the 2010 World Champion Giants, look nothing like that team in 2002, nor any of their previous division-winning teams. With one of the hardest baseball stadiums to hit for power in in the game, the team has been largely designed for the peculiarities of that ball park, and designed on the cheap. As I wrote on October 6, the Giants were the one team that gave me pause in hoping that the Phils would take their second world title in three years, precisely because of the Giants’ pitching. If anything, I underestimated their pitchers. Their number three starter, Jonathan Sanchez, had a case of the yips and went from being their strongest starting pitcher at the season’s end to being a non-factor in the post-season. But Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain & Madison Bumgarner were masterful. Closer Brian Wilson was perfect. And the rest of the staff was good enough.
The Giants also had the weakest starting players of any team in the playoffs, possibly ever. Not one of their starting outfielders began the season as regulars with the team. The left side of the infield was a patchwork, and they traded their starting catcher to make room for a 23-year-old phenom. The phenom, Buster Posey, first baseman Aubrey Huff (signed in January as a free agent), and second-baseman Freddy Sanchez (a former batting champ with worst-team-in-baseball, Pittsburgh, a few years back) were really the only solid starters the team had most of the season. Another way of looking at this is that five of the starting eight positions were being held by back-up style ballplayers, mostly older ballplayers who could no longer play as regulars elsewhere. I still think that Buster Posey is the only position player on the Giants who could compete for a starting job on the Phils. A lot of good that did the Phils.
Because, with good enough pitching, that turns out to be good enough. In three of the games the Giants won, the Rangers scored one run or less. The World Series MVP is a good-hands, no-hit shortstop who is on the cusp of retirement. His obvious replacement, Juan Uribe, is, shall we say, stocky for an infielder, tho not by comparison to the gargantuan Pablo Sandoval, who had starred for the 2009 Giants only to lose his job this year.
One other phenomenon should be mentioned here, tho, which is momentum. The Phillies had the best record in the National League, but only once in the past decade has the National League team with the best regular season record even gone to the World Series – the 2004 Cardinals who were then swept by the Red Sox. The Giants instead executed a more common narrative by being the team that had to work hardest in September to get into the play-offs, and then going on to win it all. Usually that’s the wild card team, but the Braves had that wrapped up a week before the season ended. The Giants, by contrast, hustled to take the Western Division crown on the final day of the season. Of the eight teams in the playoffs, they were the one that spent the fewest days in first place, just 37 days from six months of competition. But once in the playoffs, they never stopped hustling. In the National League Championship Series, you could tell in at least the first four games that the Phils were trying hard not to lose the series, while the Giants were instead trying to win, taking greater chances and getting good results. Playing the team with the best record in the American League in the series, the Giants even made it look easy. Once it became clear that Lincecum had better stuff than Cliff Lee in Game One, the championship never seemed in doubt. To somebody who has been watching the Giants for over 50 years, that sentence just sounds odd, but it’s true. Watching them cruise to the title took me back a long ways, to my childhood really. I wish my grandfather could have seen this team.
Silliman's Blog
Monday, November 1, 2010
Home run
Wikipedia - "In baseball, a home run (abbreviated HR) is scored when the ball is hit in such a way that the batter is able to circle all the bases in one play without any errors being committed by the defensive team in the process. In modern baseball, the feat is typically achieved by hitting the ball over the outfield fence between the foul poles (or making contact with either foul pole) without first touching the ground, resulting in an automatic home run. There is also the 'inside-the-park' home run, increasingly rare in modern baseball, where the batter circles the bases while the baseball is in play on the field."
Wikipedia, Baseball Almanac, YouTube - Babe Ruth's 60th Home Run 1927
Larry Moffi - "Homage to a Vacant Lot"
He follows the Dodgers. She follows
him. She works for Aetna, he
for The Travelers. They do what
nobody bothers to ask, the paperwork
of other people's lives in offices
where colleagues are legion. Twice
each summer they go off on her company
sponsored trip, or his, cardboard valise
holding them up on the corner
until the blue tobacco bus takes them
away: Boston, a long weekend.
Otherwise, he drinks beer and smokes
five solid months on the porch,
Brooklyn on the radio, the mourning
of the pennant race. Drunk, especially
drunk, he dispenses his portion of wisdom,
the philosophy of the all-important loss
column, "losses being what kill you,
you can make up a win but never a loss."
Or else I am shagging flies he lifts
high across the vacant lot. "Two hands!"
he shouts, "Two hands!" And I try.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
The San Francisco Freak Show
“The Freak” by Robert Marosi Bustamante.
"Dear Will,
The Texas Rangers made a strong bid for my allegiance too, and not just because Neftali Feliz roped A-Rod with that curve to clinch the American League championship. There’s something ebullient and, yes, winning about the Rangers. They’re slightly cocky, sweet, and sly, smiling like they’ve gotten away with something—which, as you point out, several of them have. (And don’t forget catcher Bengie Molina, traded by the Giants to the Rangers over the summer; he’ll get a ring regardless of who wins.) I love to watch Josh Hamilton’s swing, injured ribs or not—the long extension and the letting go. And I love to watch Elvis Andrus dash around the base paths—so foolish, so daring. Still, there’s something a little too Manifest Destiny about the team. I can’t help but think of the Rangers’ former owner, George W. Bush, not to mention James K. Polk.
So I’ll take San Francisco, thanks. The Giants call their style of baseball “torture,” their star “the Freak,” their NLCS MVP “Cody” (I don’t care if that’s his real name). I’m smitten with a kid named Buster Posey. Willie Mays, the “Say Hey Kid,” would fit right in. The Giants hit home runs, or not at all. And their pitching! This team plays baseball like it’s a great game of catch with diverting interruptions. The whole team is weird and improbable. After Juan Uribe homered in the eighth to break a tie in game 6 of the NLCS, Phillies Manager Charlie Manuel said, “The big blow was by what’s his name? The shortstop.” Never mind that Uribe was playing third base. Plus, when the game was over, I got to do my best imitation of Russ Hodges hollering, “The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant!” (My grandfather was at the game where Bobby Thomson hit his famous shot and swore he’d never attend another game—baseball couldn’t get any better.)
When do you know a game is over? When the story is over. When the suspense turns into celebration and postmortem, and you can see the losing team members mentally practicing their lines: not our game, not our year. A dumb answer, but there’s something to it. The Yankees, their stars especially, were passive from the start, but once Hamilton homered and Cliff Lee took the mound to start game 3, the ALCS was effectively over. The Yankees payroll was a $207 million ticket to somebody else’s drama. (Rangers payroll: $55 million, doled out by stat-head wunderkind Jon Daniels, the youngest general manager in baseball.)
Between Sabermetrics and steroids, it seems to me—at least from a distance—that baseball has been experiencing a scientific age. Forget the burden of history, forget the curse of the past: With the right GM and some smart statisticians, even the Red Sox can win! I have a friend who sometimes forwards me e-mail exchanges from a group of particularly knowledgeable baseball fans. They and their ilk throw around terms like WAR, WHIP, and something called the Ultimate Zone Rating. It is all very impressive, but also somewhat alarming, don’t you think? These stats-obsessed fans are like a group of geneticists examining a man’s genome to predict the exact course of his love life. I don’t mean to suggest that statistics aren’t important or revealing; they’re half the fun of following the game. Nor do I want to suggest that an interest in them precludes storytelling. (Just read Moneyball for proof of that.) Part of the beauty of baseball has always been that the narrative arc of a game can be gleaned from little columns of agate type. Still, sometimes the numbers don’t add up. Sometimes Gary Cooper doesn’t get the girl.
Play ball!
Louisa "
The Paris Review
Mikhail Horowitz - "The All-Bohemian Team"
1B Kelly Paris
2B Luis Sojo
SS Bobby Wine
3B Wayne Garrett
OF Art Rebel
OF Shawn Hare
OF Ted Beard
RHP Bill Reeder
Elmer Ponder
LHP Lance Painter
John Rocker
BENCH Jack Coffey
Lloyd Merriman
Tex Jeanes
MGR Tony Muser
Southpaw
Ron Guidry
Wikipedia - "Ronald Ames Guidry (... born August 28, 1950, in Lafayette, Louisiana; nicknamed 'Louisiana Lightning' and 'Gator') is a former Major League Baseball left-handed pitcher. He played 14 seasons for the New York Yankees from 1975 through 1988. Guidry was the pitching coach of the New York Yankees from 2006 to 2007."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Friday, October 22, 2010
Michael Palmer - "A Note on Poetics, 1974"
Louis ("Hit-em-where-they-ain't") Zukofsky at short, Peter
Kropotkin at second, and Anon at first. Art ("Frenchy")
Rimbaud is in left, Willie the Lion Smith in center, and
Gertrude Stein in right. On the mound Werner Heisenberg, whose
notorious indeterminacy pitch has made him the club's un-
challenged "stopper". Alternating behind the plate are John
Cage and Master Canterel, and manager is Ludwig ("the Barber")
Wittgenstein, whose rep around the circuit as a staunch
disciplinarian is largely undeserved.
Then let us suppose that there's no field, no ball, and no
other team. What would would the final score be?
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Pafko at the Wall
Wikipedia - "Pafko at the Wall, subtitled The Shot Heard Round the World, was originally published as a folio in the October 1992 issue of Harper's Magazine. It was later (1997) incorporated as the prologue in Don DeLillo's magnum opus novel, Underworld, with minor changes from the original version, such as a new opening line. In 2001, Pafko was re-released as a novella, by Scribner (this is the same version as printed in Underworld). In Underworld this section is titled The Triumph of Death, in reference to the painting by Pieter Brueghel the Elder."
Wikipedia, amazon, Google
Phil Rizzuto.- "I Really Should Be Going Home"
As a matter -
I'm telling you,
I've been freezing.
My hands are cold.
I have low blood pressure anyway.
And arthritis.
I really should be going home.
July 24, 1983 (The Pine Tar Game)
Kansas City at New York
Mike Armstrong pitching to Rick Cerone
Seventh inning, bases empty, two outs
Tankees lead 4-3
Amy Munno - "Investment"
a large cardboard box overflows
with baseball cards from 1986,
still sealed in original plastic,
pristine packs, the price tags stuck to the top.
My cousin and I, fifteen, feeling lucky,
bought up the wax wrappers, carefully peeling them
back like gently shifting the clothes off
a new lover to find out what you've invested in.
Snapping the stale pink sticks in our mouths,
we lined up rookies like savings bonds,
recorded their values on notebook paper,
and slipped them into plastic sheets
for a long safe sleep.
Now I drive my cousin crazy with my cardboard box.
"Open them," he chides. "Carpe diem—
cash them in." But there's something
he doesn't understand, something he missed
when he sold his cards—the Goodens
for his drunken Bahamas trip, the Strawberrys
for his drugs, the McGwires for his car
that has long since died.
There are moments that continue to accrue,
the times he and I crouched for hours
in the drugstore, bubble gum breath
in each other's faces, waxy film
under our nails as we shuffled out
the regular players from the bad poker hand,
praying like tiny monks that the one card
we needed would reveal itself divinely
at the bottom of the pack.
These memories of him,
the old ones before life got hard,
I've wrapped these up,
grouped the good,
put them away.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Bullpen
Wikipedia - "In baseball, the bullpen (or simply the pen) is the area where relief pitchers warm-up before entering a game. Depending on the ballpark, it may be situated in foul territory along the baselines or just beyond the outfield fence. Also, a team's roster of relief pitchers is metonymically referred to as "the bullpen". These relievers usually wait in the bullpen when they have yet to play in a game, rather than in the dugout with the rest of the team. The starting pitcher also makes his final pregame warmups in the bullpen. Managers can call coaches in the bullpen on an in-house telephone from the dugout to tell a certain pitcher to begin his warmup tosses."
Wikipedia
Joel Peckham - "BP"
we walked into the damp, hard consonants
of cold spring rain. The grackles and the gulls
calling in the pines, the crack of damp wood
in my hands—You in flannels pushed up from
your wrists and thick forearms, me in good
slacks, new cleats. Towering sixty feet
away, you were huge to me then—and distant,
calling out directions I couldn't hope to meet—
elbow up, top hand through, relax, head down.
I couldn't make it out. The ball thrown
high and tight or floating off, impossible
to hit. What could I know of contact then
Old man, warm up your arm. Fire one in here again.
William Miller - "Minor Poets"
we sit in the dugout waiting
for our turn in the magic circle,
our chance at the plate.
We swing for the fence,
sometimes topping,
but never clearing the wall.
When we steal second,
we always slide head-first,
though the tag is just in time.
And when the ball,
that glorious ball,
flies out of the sun,
we run and stumble,
strain for and almost make
the perfect catch.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Vada Pinson
Wikipedia - "Vada Edward Pinson, Jr. (August 11, 1938, Memphis, Tennessee - October 21, 1995, Oakland, California) was an American center fielder and coach in Major League Baseball. Pinson played in the major leagues for 18 years, from 1958 through 1975, and his greatest seasons were with the Cincinnati Redlegs/Reds, for whom he played from 1958–68."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Dan Liberthson - "Catcher"
he crouches at the still center,
then sets the world spinning
with the minutest sign:
the diamond breaks light
into prismatic motion,
and all the game's colors
bloom from his glove.
Bat smolders orange with energy
sucked from the earth through
the batter's tensile trunk and arms,
then flares red ripping
to meet the icehard ball
that dips, dense blue,
curves, elusive green,
waits, slow rust dream, or
melts whitehot with speed.
He sets all this in motion,
sits back and watches
for a fugitive eternity until
bat cracks ball, time begins,
the play explodes and then,
like every other player
on that field of chance—no!
more naked than any other
despite the armor he wears,
shorn of all his powers save
the flesh of his sacrificial body,
he stands like a wooden idol
blocking the path of the force
he has let loose:
unbroken light lancing around
the diamond, burning home.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Vivienne Woodhead - "Fenway"
smell of hot fat, kids drumming on plastic barrels, cans,
discreet scalpers with three down front, want some?
Inside, the mystery
of the still field, open like a chalice.
The pitcher on the mound gathers himself,
pauses,
a long pause,
lets go
and the batter uncoils
and the ball goes up, up,
past vendors climbing tier on tier
lofting red trays of cola, rafts of peanuts, silver boxes of hot dog suppers,
past the exhortations to civility and moderation—
the use of coarse language will result in immediate ejection
from the ballpark—
and the crowd begins to pulse
anemone arms rising and falling
harmonized by the play of running men.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Moses Fleetwood "Fleet" Walker
Wikipedia - "Moses Fleetwood 'Fleet' Walker (October 7, 1857 – May 11, 1924) was an American Major League Baseball player and author who is credited with being the first African American to play professional baseball."
Wikipedia, Negro League Baseball Players Association, Baseball Reference, Playing Field: Racial Segregation on the Baseball Field
Bill Meissner - "Mickey Mantle's Last Dream"
swings. Dreams are the sound of leather meeting
the whorls in the wood grain, dreams
are chalk dust, floating beyond home plate.
In this dream, Yankee Stadium is on the moon.
His hit rises high and deep, the red seams spinning lazily.
The ball floats over
the stadium roof, keeps arcing
until it climbs into orbit.
Instead of running the bases, he dashes toward the outfield,
lies down on the stiff grass of center, arms crossed,
and watches as the fans wave it goodbye
each time it passes overhead.
Mikhail Horowitz - "The All-Cosmopolitan Team"
1B Rudy York
2B Miguel Cairo
SS Sal Madrid
3B Kelly Paris
OF Claudell Washington
OF Clyde Milan
OF Daryl Boston
RHP Jose Lima
Jose Santiago
Reggie Cleveland
Paul Moskau
Steve Phoenix
LHP Ken Patterson
Jon Raleigh
BENCH Charlie Hamburg
Joe Hague
MGR Dave Bristol
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Eddie Murray
Wikipedia - "Eddie Clarence Murray (born February 24, 1956 in Los Angeles, California) is a former Major League Baseball first baseman who was known as one of the most reliable and productive hitters of his era, earning the nickname 'Steady Eddie'. Murray is regarded as one of the best switch hitters ever to play the game. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2003."
Wikiedia, Baseball Reference
H. R. Coursen - "Second"
was still alive, and Gehrig, Grove, and Honus,
greatest of the shortstops. Then the bonus:
Joe DiMaggio turned center field to truth
for any ten-year-old within the reach
of the real grass beneath the steel frame
of Yankee Stadium, and when you came
from the grimy Bronx to that oasis, each
batted ball looked like a homer at first,
until it settled into neatsfoot and
a casual fling from the vast and distant land
called outfield. A double play, rehearsed
a thousand times—Crosetti, Gordon, Dahlgren—
an easy game of backyard catch, back then.
The first World Series was still recalled, back when
the biggest war had been World War One.
It was not called that in 1939.
A shadow slides across the luminous line.
Pamela Yenser - "Summer Games"
Or blame yourself if life lies
foul and love's a mystery
(foul play!) we half realize
through our fingers in the dark—
like those leather-hard, hand-sewn
balls of flesh which symbolize
your sex. To each his own.
Now give me your hand—and glove.
Let me show you a softer mound,
greener fields empty with love,
a lighter stick to swing around.
You started this game in the first place,
bragging how you'd gotten to first base.
Monday, September 13, 2010
Baseball scorekeeping
Wikipedia - "Baseball scorekeeping is the practice of recording the details of a baseball game as it unfolds. Professional baseball leagues hire official scorers to keep an official record of each game (from which a box score can be generated), but many fans keep score as well for their own enjoyment. Scorekeeping is usually done on a printed scorecard and while official scorers must adhere precisely to one of the few different scorekeeping notations, most fans exercise some amount of creativity and adopt their own symbols and styles."
Wikipedia, Baseball Almanac, Dan's Guide to Baseball Scorekeeping, Baseball Basics: How to Keep Score, YouTube - How to Keep Score in Baseball : How to Note a Base runner on a Scorecard, YouTube - iScore Baseball Scorekeeping Tutorial, iScore
Fred Chappell - "Fast Ball"
The grass raw and electric
as the cat's whiskers.
3 and 2.
At secoond the runner: loiters:
nervous as the corner
junkie: loitering for a connection.
Hunched like the cat, the batters;
his prehensile
bat he curls and uncurls.
The pitcher hitches & hitches.
At last the hitcher pitches.
"It gets about as big," Ty
Cobb said, "as a watermelon seed.
It hisses at you as it passes."
The outfielders prance like kittens
back to the dugout.
They've seen what they're glad they
don't have to worry about.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Warren Spahn
Wikipedia - "Warren Edward Spahn (April 23, 1921 – November 24, 2003) was an American left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for 21 seasons, all in the National League. He won 20 games each in 13 seasons, including a 23-7 record when he was age 42. Spahn was the 1957 Cy Young Award winner, and was the runner-up three times, all during the period when just one award was given."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Phil Rizzuto - "Hero or the Goat"
The whole season coming down
To just one ball game,
And every mistake will be magnified,
And every great play will be magnified,
And it's a tough night for the players,
I'll tell ya.
I know last night, being in the same situation many times
With the great Yankee teams of the past,
you stay awake,
And you dream,
And you think of what might be,
If you are the hero or the goat.
October 14, 1976
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST PLAYOFF
Final game
Kansas City at New York
Pregame show
Bill Meissner - "Something About Certain Baseball Fields"
steps out of his long, shiny car, drops his
keys that bury themselves in the soft dirt of the lot.
He tugs at the tie that's always knotted tightly
at his throat, strolls to the place
where the sunlight plays across the outfield
like pale yellow music, where
grass blades applaud subtly in the wind.
He remembers standing on fields like these as a kid
in a frayed Little League shirt, his cap sideways on his head.
He'd run for that high pop-up,
a precious leather jewel he always seemed to catch.
He thinks how easy it is to miss
a life, to stand empty-handed for years beneath
an avalanche of sales slips and jagged envelopes.
Now his three-piece suit seems to melt off, pool at his feet,
and he's naked.
As if pulled by a cord tied to the earth of center field,
he kneels down, curls up.
He feels the slow pain, then a sudden brightness
fills his eyes:
he takes the first quick gasp of air as the world
gently slaps him.
At last he can open his lungs
wide and cry, a cry that might, from across the field,
sound almost like a cheer.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Negro Leagues: New Postage Stamp Series Unveiled
"Almost all of them are gone now, fading memories kept alive through grainy photos and dog-eared newspaper clippings their children and grandchildren keep near. But now the black baseball players and their contributions to the culture and history of a country that once shunned them are being honored. The U.S. Postal Service released a set of stamps Thursday honoring early Negro Leagues players."
Books on Baseball, Kansas City
Tony Gloeggler - "Shagging Flies"
slips behind the backstop.
My father stands at home plate.
I trot to the outfield,
stand with my legs spread
shoulder length apart.
Bent slightly at the waist,
I place my hands on my knees,
lean my weight forward
and wait for him to toss
the ball up, swing the bat.
Hit. The sound sings
in my skin. I take
that first cross-over
step, get my legs
in gear, track the ball
down. I catch it,
cradle it in the web,
peg it back on one hop.
Hit. The Mick sprints
to the base of the monuments,
makes a backhand stab,
pulls up with a limp.
Hit. Hit. Yaz turns
his back to the plate,
watches the line drive
dent the Green Monster.
He whirls, unfurls
a perfect strike
to second base, gets
the runner sliding in.
Hit. Hit. Ellen Springer's
seventh grade mouth
drifts down from heaven,
kisses my lips, slow
dances with my tongue.
Hit. Hit. Hit. I catch
my breath, lick sweat
off my upper lip. Hit.
Hit. Clemente charges
a hard hit single,
picks it up thigh high,
fires it home on a fly.
Hit. Aaron lopes back
to the warning track,
feels for the fence,
braces himself, leaps
and snatches the ball
out of a fan's hands.
Hit. A shooting star
falls, lands in my mitt.
I fling it back with all
my might, watch it grow
wings, fly and splash
the twilight with bright
white light. Hit. Hit. Willie
glides after a broken bat
blooper, loses his hat
to Candlestick winds,
catches the ball in his basket
and races my father home.
Manly Johnson - "On the Avenue"
was catching flies.
He wanted a fungo bat
with his name burned in
to knock the ball into the air
and catch it himself before it fell.
That was more difficult
than seeing his face
in profile.
He wanted to pitch the ball
and hit his own slider
over the fence.
He would collect a little sweat
from his cap and grip the ball
with thumb and two fingers.
He would lean back
lift a foot higher than his head
swing the arm through
and let go with a wrist snap.
As the spinning spheroid cut
the corner of the plate
his bat would meet it
with a solid crack.
That was harder than flying
off the garage roof.
He would like to be the umpire
calling himself safe at home
as he slid in a tick ahead
of the ball.
He would snag his own line drive
over third with a backhand stab
and catch himself off first.
He wants a glove and a bat
he wants a ball
and cleats.
He wants to give himself
these things.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Ron Santo
Wikipedia - "Ronald Edward Santo (born February 25, 1940 in Seattle, Washington) is a former professional baseball player. He played the majority of his Major League Baseball career as the regular third baseman for the Chicago Cubs before playing his final year with the Chicago White Sox. Santo was a productive player despite suffering from diabetes, a condition which he carefully concealed for 80% of his career; it eventually necessitated the amputation of both of his legs."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, YouTube
Craig Paulenich - "For the Game"
The World has regained its orbit,
the spiral tightened.
Persephone emerges in right field,
shading her eyes.
The lineup of holy seasons past
remains unbroken.
The gods are remembered,
gloves restrung.
They cross the on-deck circle,
Osiris and Shoeless Joe,
Pete Gray and Mordecai Brown,
Gil Hodges and Gilgamesh.
The vultures of winter
are driven away.
My new heart is
the size of a baseball.
II Playing Ball
Comiskey
Sportsman's Park
Crosley
Ebbets
Forbes
Westinghouse
Five Points
New Virginia
Hogback
Frogtown Road
Finger the bat neck
like a rosary. It will
raise blisters like roses.
Oil the glove. This cowhide
is not dead. See it
drink, grow supple
and dark?
This is my first season without my father.
The diamond seems more oblique, askew,
the game quieter, the space
between second and third
more crowded, claustrophobic.
The infield is slower, grass taller.
The pitches break in on my wrists,
there isn't time enough
to bring the bat head around.
And so we sacrifice,
moving others up,
bringing them home.
It is, after all, the game which matters.
These small martyrdoms kill the self,
bind us with the dead who have
raised dust on these base paths.
Sarah Freligh - "Minor League"
and orange shag carpeting
(the color of insanity, Al has heard),
a hole in the living room
wall weeping plaster where
Boonie put his fist through
trying to prove how tough he was
to a girl he picked up at the pool.
Stu, the handyman, comes to fix it, bringing
his complaints: so much rain, so hard
on the missus, her arthritis. Where's
the old Florida, he wants to know—
flamingoes, blue sky, oranges, sun—
snow last winter, can you beat that?
Should have seen all those rich orange
growers up in Orlando watching the sky
like they were waiting for a favor from God.
Boonie cast his hand in masking
tape that everyone wrote on
with a felt-tipped pen. No brain,
no pain, Al put, signed his name,
finishing the "l" in a happy face.
Practicing.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Carl Hubbell
Wikipedia - "Carl Owen Hubbell (June 22, 1903 – November 21, 1988) was an American baseball player. He was a member of the New York Giants in the National League from 1928 to 1943."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Thomas Guarnera - "Searching For Ballata"
Some words unnerve like people do,
confusing with their promise.
Your sudden visit, from the blue,
brings to mind a case in point:
that shifty word, ballata.
Is it the new "forbidden dance"?
A folk song from the Renaissance?
An ancient form of martial art?
A secret left-wing movement?
("My comrades in the ballata,
tonight we liberate Minsk!")
Perhaps it is a native grain?
A kind of prehistoric fish?
Or just some gutter expletive?
("You son of a ballata!")
Then I learned, in World War II
rubber had become so scarce,
they tried a gummy substitute
to fill the core of baseballs.
It had the name ballata.
But when a bat touched these balls,
their sole trajectory was down.
They didn't bounce; they hugged the ground.
Two strikes and ballata was out.
Which takes my rambling thoughts to you--
so casual, just passing through.
It seems, how long, a hundred years
since last I saw you in the flesh.
Your rose has given up some bloom;
my plant stays firmly potted.
Yet though it's bottom of our ninth,
I hear the National Anthem.
My ump cries out Play ball!
Each time I sidle to the plate,Baseball is a subtle game;
you stare me down from the mound.
What you pitch, I still can't touch.
Your infinite variety
of curves and biting sliders,
they tie me up inside.
And then, my final turn at bat
(Bronx cheers raining from the crowd;
redemption one good poke away),
my mind wanders from the game.
The ball, the bat, a cloudless sky.
See the fences disappearÿ
the players float like balloonsÿ
the fans peel off all their clothes
and throw them as confetti.
Everything is possible
save for hitting that damn ball.
Strike three called, while I dream.
less subtle, by half, than freedom.
You taught me love in absence.
Even more, in defiance
of simple cause and effect...
of history and tendency...
of box scores and their tabled truth.
At times I'm almost grateful,
if gratitude could show its face
below the Mendoza Line.
For you, nostalgia has its charm;
for me, I live in present tense.
I need new words to close the loop,
to make sense as you vanish.
So, remember this when we part:
You've been, you are, you always will
be the ballata of my heart.
Phil Rizzuto - "From Slumber I Heard the Men At Work"
Friday.
When I was forced
To leave the game after six innings, You know,
I almost came back in the 13th inning
Moore.
I want you to know I was thinking
Of Murcer and Seaver there.
II.
I woke up
and it was like,
Like a nightmare.
I said, "Could the game still be going on?"
And sure enough.
I started to get dressed.
And then the 14th inning came.
If it had gone another inning,
I'd have been there.
August 30, 1992
New York at Minnesota
Russ Springer pitching to Chili Davis
Sixth inning, two outs, bases empty
Twins lead 5-1
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Shot Heard 'round the World
Wikipedia - "In baseball, the 'Shot Heard 'round the World' is the term given to the game-ending home run hit by New York Giants outfielder Bobby Thomson off Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca at the Polo Grounds to win the National League pennant at 3:58 p.m. EST on October 3, 1951. As a result of the 'shot' (baseball slang for 'home run' or any hard-hit ball), the Giants won the game 5–4, defeating the Dodgers in their pennant playoff series, two games to one."
Wikipedia, YouTube - Shot Heard 'round the World, Video - Bobby Thomson Dies At Age 86, NYT - Bobby Thomson Dies at 86; Hit Epic Home Run, W - "Pafko at the Wall", Don DeLillo
Craig Paulenich - "Strange Loops"
— attributed to Saturnino Orestes Armas Miñoso
Me too.
Fireflied evenings,
the lawn mower's roar still
tingling the fingers,
we'd tune in
"Cleveland Indians Baseball,
brought to you by
Carling Black Label."
"Yoo-Hoo! Mabel! Black Label."
And from Cleveland, far across
the corn, smoking and chugging,
from the Mistake on the Lake,
anachronistically beautiful,
came baseball.
And we listened,
my father drinking pony bottles
of Black Label,
"dead soldiers" he would call them
when I was twenty and
working in the mill, pouring steel
in the sweltering days and still evenings.
When I came home
we would build a small fire
and catch a game from the coast.
But now, I am eleven and
my small glass is filled only once.
Barbara M. Seagle - "Radio Game"
beneath the rolling swell
of the crowd.
The evening sky opens,
spilling darkness
over the porch.
Light and avid finches
withdraw; I am alone
with the rumbling
of the night game.
Far from the city,
the lineups, the anthem
emerge from clack and static.
All the big plays, I know,
will be transformed
to frenzied obscurities.
The twitch of forearms,
the burn exchanged
by opposing eyes,
the forward-leaning longing
of the howling crowd
are all present and I, too,
lean into the night.
At the turn of fall,
the season's
hoard depleted,
I take my place
in a home uniform.
Light sways all around me
with an eager green.
On the hilltop porch,
the breeze turns cool.
There are broken
cheers from the crowd
as a bright sphere
shoots into the night sky.
Monday, August 16, 2010
Lou Brock
Wikipedia - "Louis Clark 'Lou' Brock (born June 18, 1939) is an American former player in Major League Baseball. Brock was a left fielder who played his career with the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals. He batted and threw left-handed. He is currently a special instructor coach for the St. Louis Cardinals."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, YouTube
David Moseder - "You Could Look It Up (Ode to the '62 Mets)"
Spring '62 was a season of wonder
Casting a spell I still find myself under;
Something profound I could not then define
Struck me as Dad changed the channel to Nine.
Baseball it was, with a strange added magic
Blurring the line between comic and tragic.
Bad as it was it was good as it gets —
I fell in love with new New York Mets.
Nelson and Kiner and Murph called each play
("Drake throws it wide…and it's dropped by Bouchee!")
Painting the word picture, colorful, snappy,
Ending with recaps most often not happy.
(Paying to broadcast the team's odd beginnings,
Rheingold and Viceroys were sold between innings.)
Bringing new life to the old Polo Grounds,
Cheered by a fandom whose hope knew no bounds,
Time after time this team broke chance's laws,
Snatching defeat out of victory's jaws.
Games came undone like a battered ball's stitching;
Folly prevailed, leading off with the pitching:
Many a fat, hanging curveball was tossed,
Only MacKenzie won more than he lost;
Jackson dropped twenty and Craig twenty-four,
Anderson piled on seventeen more.
Hook was no better, no worse, but he found
History waiting for him on the mound:
After the Mets' first nine games, with none won,
He hooked the Bucs: New York 9, Pittsburgh 1.
Many who followed seemed merely spare parts:
Hunter was shot down in all his six starts;
Winless were Roadblock and Vinegar Bend
As their careers stalled and rolled to an end;
Cisco showed promise, one win, one defeat;
Once-great Labine should have stayed in St. Pete;
Moorhead pitched more games than most, all for nil;
Hillman's last days on the mound went downhill;
Brief were the tenures of Moford and Foss,
Just long enough to each rack up a loss.
Two Robert Millers shared time in Mets hell:
Lefty Bob G and righthander Bob L.
G split four Ds but would quickly depart;
L's only win was his twenty-first start.
(L would move on to earn World Series gold,
Then, at the end, would rejoin the Mets' fold.)
Daviault's only career victory came
July the seventh — my first big league game.
Taylor caught both games that day and was strong,
Homering twice; he'd hit three all year long.
Six other catchers would share backstop time,
Two not quite ready and four past their prime.
Choo Choo could fly, but his bat was deplorable;
Young Cannizzaro would prove more endurable.
Ginsberg caught twice, then was put on the shelf;
Chiti was traded for none but himself.
Piggy's career on the season's last day
Came to an end with one swing: triple play!
Landrith a niche in Mets annals would carve:
First to be drafted — then traded for Marv.
Marvelous Marv (whose pinch homer, sky high,
Won that aforementioned game in July)
Played with a style that the fans grew to love,
Feet missing bases and balls missing glove,
Sharing first base with the hobbled Gil Hodges,
One of the most revered ex-Brooklyn Dodgers.
Both men would yield to a young high school grad
Called in September to show what he had.
Striking a double that stirred hopeful cheers,
Kranepool arrived — and would stay 18 years.
'Cross the Mets infield a voice could be heard:
"Where's what's-his-name? Who's that guy playing third?"
Zimmer began the long third-base procession;
Legions replaced him in tag-team succession:
Wrong Way Mantilla and Hot Rod Kanehl,
Shortstop Chacon and their keystone man Neal,
Herrscher and Cook and others to follow
All took their turns at the hot-corner hollow.
Out in the outfield the grass was no greener
Save for two pros with an all-star demeanor:
Ashburn played great, as he had in his youth,
Then called it quits for the Phils' TV booth;
Thomas went yard more than Maris that year
Giving us thirty-four reasons to cheer.
Other warm bodies in left-center-right
Couldn't allay the team's ongoing plight:
Woodling's and Bell's better days were behind them
Like long fly balls when their gloves couldn't find them;
Christopher, pride of St. Croix, Virgin Isles,
Rarely made plays near as big as his smiles;
Bobby Gene Smith, who was just passing through,
Proved that three names are no better than two;
Marshall played one game there, out of position,
Helping to found a long-held Mets tradition;
Hickman could bash when his bat found the ball;
Then there's DeMerit — the name says it all.
Coaching this crew, Lavagetto and Kress,
Ruffing and Hemus - and Hornsby no less! —
Tried to impart their collective acumen,
Proving they too could be erringly human.
Stengel, ol' Casey, would watch from the dugout
Antic misplays that would make his eyes bug out;
He who once led the great team 'cross the river,
Waited in vain for these Mets to deliver.
Triumphs were few, only forty were rendered —
One for each three that were sadly surrendered.
Of his poor troops he was heard to exclaim:
"Can't anybody [here] play this here game?"
Then in a voice more ironic than brazen
Christened these lovable losers "Amazin'!"
Yes, '62 was a magical season,
Wondrous beyond any logic or reason.
Onward remembrances from way-back-when go,
Echoing groans and the cry "Yo lo tengo!"
Bad as it was it was good as it gets;
Proudly we hailed: "Let's Go Mets! Let's Go Mets!"
Friday, August 13, 2010
Brooks Robinson
Wikipedia - "Brooks Calbert Robinson, Jr. (born May 18, 1937) is an American former third baseman in Major League Baseball. He played his entire 23-year career with the Baltimore Orioles (1955–77). Robinson was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1983. Robinson began his professional baseball career as an 18 year old with the Orioles, and gained great renown for his fielding ability. Nicknamed 'The Human Vacuum Cleaner', he is generally acclaimed as the greatest defensive third-baseman of all time."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Fred Chappell - "Third Base Coach"
the ghost of Hamlat's father.
Shuffles & tug & yawns & spits.
Like a steeplejack he itches weirdly and continually.
Dances on his grave plot.
Prophetic flame at the wiped lip.
The fouls go by him like tracer bullets.
Writes runes with his toe, healthy spells.
Like an Aeschylan trageds he's static; baffling;
Boring; but.
Urgent with importt.
Robin Rule - "The Baseball Prayer"
Basemen: Tag 'em out
Shortstop: Throw 'em out
Fielders: Can o' Corn
Catchers: Get 'em at home
Batters: Show 'em where you live
Robin Rule - "Dedication"
To all the men who as boys
slept with their gloves
To Ari who gave me three Will Clark cards
and to the cat who led me
deep into the Temple of Baseball
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Grand slam
Wikipedia - "In the sport of baseball, a grand slam is a home run hit with all the bases occupied by baserunners, thereby scoring four runs—the most possible on a single play. According to The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, the term originated in the card game of contract bridge, in which a grand slam involves taking all the possible tricks. The word slam, by itself, is usually connected with a loud sound, particularly of a door being closed with excess force; thus, slamming the door on one's opponent(s)."
Wikipedia
Linda Kittell - "Letter to Hugo from Payette, Idaho, Killebrew Field"
Let's say I came here with a dream. The last
good hit I had came years ago
when I took it all in stride
and swung from the hips. Let's say
the grandstand's still here, not this
pile of paint chips and blanched wood, chicken wire
rustling in the wind. Tonight the outfield's
not gone to weeds and seedlings, outcasts
from the maples that canopy right field. And ants haven't turned
that first base bag into home.
At the gas station
I learned I should go right,
then straight onto Killebrew Drive. What drive? Nothing here
lasts long enough to be a homer, even lives
turn to fractions, numbers and percentages on the bronze and money
raised with autographs. How important is a name? How long
should I look at a shelf of books, for a self
on the lineup tacked to the dugout?
From where you sit, the light
might be too bright. Where I sit
the concrete roof's too low.
Out in the bullpen
the tall guy's still tossing. Every night
seems the sameóthat kid comes down and asks
for you by name. You tell him
"Don't think Hugo's playing tonight" then run out
onto the field. I want to run too,
not swing for the fences, but slap
to the hole and tip my cap
from what's left of first base. Then I'll be yours
from ninety feet out, watching for a sign.
The moon's up there, fat
and round as a kid's dream. Throw it in here,
letter high.
Linda
Scott A. Winkler - "Riverview Park Baseball Diamond December 25, 1998"
picks up and puts down his scaly feet
between snow patches that crust over the dirt skin.
He peers toward the plate
and squints a black marble-eyed challenge
to a ghost only he sees–
a batter who knocks snow from his cleats
with a phantom white ash club.
"Come on," the crow's voice cracks, "you can't hit one past me."
His weight shifts from foot to foot,
his wings, feathers spread, skim the ground–
black on white under winter's blue sky–
and he crouches,
waiting for April.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Juan Marichal
Wikipedia - "Juan Antonio Marichal Sánchez (born October 20, 1937 in Laguna Verde, Dominican Republic) is a former right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball. Playing for the San Francisco Giants most of his career, Marichal was known for his high leg kick, pinpoint control and intimidation tactics, which included aiming pitches directly at the opposing batters' helmets."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, YouTube - Juan Marichal "The Dominican Dandy"
Rodney Torreson - "Dreams Should Not Dog Great Center Fielders"
Dreams should be pets gone fat.
In nightmares Mantle is
cramped, broad-shouldered,
in a taxi, hungry
as Mutt, his father,
who pitched his free time
to get Mick a ticket
from the mines.
He's late for the game, always.
And DiMaggio at the airport,
despite his tall grace,
eyes darting like some terrier's
as he stands beside his luggage,
glances at his watch;
he is late, as if he's waited years
to board a flight
that takes him back
to Marilyn.
And Mantle's dreams
can't shake the guards.
The announcer says,
"Now batting ... number 7,"
as Mantle finds a hole
in the fence
but can't squeeze through.
And DiMaggio
for twenty-one years
sends six red roses
three times a week
to her Hollywood crypt,
but they're a dog's
nervous patter.
The dreams of the greats should
be tame, trained
to open and close a gate,
with Mantle strolling
his heaver in center;
Monroe on her toes,
smiling, leaning into
The Clipper's arms,
returning the roses of her
red lips.