Me 2.0 » Posts for tag 'buyout. copy editor'

The 47-year rain delay

When I spied the black-and-white

notebook with COMPOSITIONS on the

cover, I immediately knew what it was. A

quick look through the pages of box scores

told the story of part of the Summer of

1962, at least as it looked from a backyard

in Linwood, N.J.

But the page that caught my eye was

the lineup for a game that was never

played: sort of a Wiffle Ball version of

Beethoven’s Unfinished Symphony

.

That summer, my brother Bob and I

waged a Wiffle Ball Home Run Derby

battle that pitted the Yankees (Bob’s

team) against the Phillies (my team). Our

Home Run Derby was patterned after the

TV version featuring major leaguers, which

meant it was all or nothing. If the ball

didn’t clear the string we had connected to

trees across the perimeter of the outfield,

it was an out.

Because my brother is 6½ years older –

at the time, I was 8 and he was 14 or

15 – it’s not surprising that the Yanks

won all nine games of the series, by an

aggregate score of 58-35.

The 10th game was to be a matchup of

aces (OK, one ace vs. one journeyman):

the Yankees’ Whitey Ford (now in the Hall

of Fame) vs. the Phils’ Cal McLish. We

kept a box score and statistics on the

games, and in checking them I discovered

that Ford already had three wins and

racked up 40 strikeouts in the process. My

brother always threw a little harder when

Ford was pitching, but I did manage to get

back-to-back HRs in one game against

him (Frank Torre and Bob Oldis, of all

people).

For the never-played game, my level of

desperation was apparent in the lineup I

had cobbled together: Tony Taylor, Ted

Savage, Roy Sievers, Johnny Callison,

Bobby Wine, Tony Gonzalez, Jim Coker,

Ruben Amaro, McLish. Wine hitting fifth?

Coker? Amaro? I must have been going

with lefty-righty percentages. But why had

I benched Don Demeter, a righty who had

power, and used both Wine AND Amaro,

two guys who predated the Mendoza Line?

I must have been desperate to sit out

lefty swinger Wes Covington, who had my

all-time favorite batting stance to copy –

hunched over, bat parallel to the ground,

right elbow pointing straight toward the

pitcher. Bob and I were both switch-

hitters, so we emulated each player’s

stance (short of Taylor crossing

himself before he batted). When my sons

were younger and I played ball with them,

I frequently used the Covington stance.

They, of course, looked at me as if I were

nuts.

The only lefties I had in the lineup were

Callison and Gonzalez, “Little Dynamite,”

whose bat waggle also was fun to copy.

Callison had five homers in nine games to

lead the Phils in our series, but still had

only half as many as Mickey Mantle and

Clete Boyer.

I’ve been trying to remember why the

10th game was never played, and I’ve

come up with some theories:

The loss in the ninth game was

especially heartbreaking: 7-5 in 13

innings. The Phils had fought back to tie it

in the bottom of the ninth on a two-out

homer by Roy Sievers.

They tied it again in the bottom of the 12th

on a blast by Covington (my man!). But

Art Mahaffey, who was apparently the

Phillies pitching staff’s sacrificial lamb,

surrendered gopher balls to Hector Lopez

and Bill Skowron in the top of the 13th,

and that was it.

I can remember running inside crying

after some defeats, but we usually ended

up back outside for another game.

Perhaps this time Mahaffey’s lackluster

performance had pushed me over the edge.

Another theory involves the string that

marked the home run line. I can recall one

night about dusk that my father was

returning from a visit with the neighbors

and he clotheslined himself on said home

run boundary. I think we put the string

back up, but maybe I saw his mishap as

my opportunity to bow out gracefully.

It could have been that Bob realized it

wasn’t cool for a teenager to be playing

Wiffle Ball with his kid brother, or else he

just tired of the lack of a challenge.

Looking back now, I realize it was

pretty remarkable for him to spend that

much time with me at all during his

teenage years.

Whatever the reason, when I found

the notebook I thought that playing the

game would be a good idea. But there

were a few obstacles, the biggest of which

is that the vacant lot where we played is

no longer vacant. That means no matter

where we played, it’d be impossible to

duplicate the conditions.

Another obstacle is distance. Bob still

lives in South Jersey, about 15 minutes

from where we grew up. But I now live

outside Atlanta. I usually make it to New

Jersey only one or two times a year.

To be honest, though,age may be the

biggest reason I haven’t continued

pursuing the idea. I’m now 55 and Bob is

61. Clearly, our best Wiffle Ball days are

behind us.

I found out several years ago that I have

arthritis in both my shoulders. My right

(non-throwing) arm is even worse than my

left. I can still throw sidearm with some

accuracy, but little velocity. But overhand

deliveries are out of the question. These

days, my pitches aren’t just fat; they’re

morbidly obese.

Besides, I hate to burst my older

brother’s bubble. I can remember how

much joy I got when I got taller than him

and was finally able to defeat him at

basketball. I thought that suffering a

Home Run Derby loss after a winning

streak that had spanned 40-plus

years would be too much for him.

The notebook didn’t have any dates

listed, but I turned to The Baseball

Encyclopedia to figure out the games were

played in 1962. That was the only year

that the two teams had some of these

players on their rosters.

In real life that year, the Yanks went

109-53 and won the World Series over the

Giants. The Phils went 81-80 and finished

in seventh place. Mahaffey did much

better than in our back yard, leading the

real-life Phillies staff with 19 victories.

I guess it was better we played our

series in 1962 than 1964. If I had been the

Phils that season, the end – just as in real

life, when the Phillies collapsed down the

backstretch and lost the National League

pennant to the St. Louis Cardinals —

would have been even more painful, I’m sure.