Something
has been out of kilter this week. Hell, it has been for the last several weeks.
Me. Like a boxer in a 15-round heavyweight title fight, I’ve been struggling
from the 12th round on. I’m fighting to keep my form and stay on my
feet. For a couple of rounds, I’ve had trouble going back on the offensive. Defensive
fighting sucks and I hate fighting peek-a-boo style; think Pee-Wee Whittaker. Gah. I’ve had enough of this; it sucks.
This quick jab, cover, duck and dodge doesn’t cut it with me. I think I’ve found a way to
re-assert my ring generalship and go back to offense, but damn if I didn’t go
down and almost take a full 10-count.
In case
you couldn’t tell, I’ve been around boxing and boxers somewhat. I liken it to
music, oddly enough. I relate most things to either music or math. Applying analogies from the familiar to something new are how I learn; we all do and the pronation (rotation in the wrist, elbow and shoulder) in boxing is what I recognized first in the similarity to music. It is one of the hardest things to
learn, for bowing in string playing; and the most powerful tool you can develop
in boxing. If you’re a natural puncher, so much the better. The second most familiar analogy I picked up on was the rhythmic style of each boxer (1, 2, 3 or 1 .. 2, 3, wait for it ... 4) and the third, and actually probably the one that sucks the most to train, endurance. I've run into many a musician at boxing matches. It goes like this:
Me: "Conductor So-and-so. What a shock! What are you doing here?"
Conductor So-and-so: "Me? I could say the same thing about you. What are you doing here?"
Me: (Cheesy grin) "I like boxing." No shit. I thought you liked knitting. So does Conductor So-and-so. Lots of musicians and other types you wouldn't associate with blood sports do. Conductor So-and-so and I hate each other a little less after that. It's practically in the contract that all section musicians detest their conductors. Joke. He's an awesome conductor. I wouldn't want to conduct a symphony full of me. I digress.
Me: "Conductor So-and-so. What a shock! What are you doing here?"
Conductor So-and-so: "Me? I could say the same thing about you. What are you doing here?"
Me: (Cheesy grin) "I like boxing." No shit. I thought you liked knitting. So does Conductor So-and-so. Lots of musicians and other types you wouldn't associate with blood sports do. Conductor So-and-so and I hate each other a little less after that. It's practically in the contract that all section musicians detest their conductors. Joke. He's an awesome conductor. I wouldn't want to conduct a symphony full of me. I digress.
Right
now, the Detroit Tigers are ahead of the New York Yankees 3-0 in the AL
Playoffs. The San Francisco Giants have come from behind to win their series
and they’re one step closer to the World Series. This got me reminiscing… back during
the summer of 1984, I was pretty much just working, practicing and hanging out
in Ann Arbor. The Detroit Tigers came out of the gate with a roar. This was THE year, OUR year and everyone knew it. The Tigers had ended the previous season on a high note. The 1983
season had started typically shitty for the Tigers, 0-43 or something horrible.
In 1983 Sparky
Anderson had had 88 fits in the dugout and Dave Rozema, Kirk Gibson and Jack
Morris had been bailed out of jails and sewn up in hospitals more times than
anyone cared to count. I was watching “Magnum P.I.” and when I wasn’t drooling
over Tom Selleck and his ‘stache, I was out playing baseball. Ann Arbor is
baseball city and I played the shit out of baseball. Yeah, I’ve heard all that.
“Ooh, your hands! You’re a musician!”
I’d stand
out there in Center Field with my shades and my Detroit Tigers hat with an
orange “D,” not this and glove and attitude, all 5’4” and say “Fuck you,
I can catch,” lose the ball in the sun, get hit in the face and break my nose.
That happened twice. Once during a game. I’m tough. So, I had a coach one
season who noticed that I was little and thought I was going to be part of the
Whitaker-Trammell baseball city (you can look it up) wannabes and put me as
short-stop, which I was pretty good at.
Anyway,
Daddy is still out in California, bugging me about how he’s going to Spring
Training at the Cactus League and following Nolan Ryan around and all of this
cray-cray (see A-R theWorld4Realz here) and he’s calling me every other day to
needle me, because the Tigers just signed 2 hotdogs from the SF Giants named, Enos Cabell
and Larry Herndon. I’m already hating what I’m seeing. If I remember rightly,
and God forbid I should Google this and louse up a funny story, these 2 were
just horrifying. I was all like, “What in the Hell was Tom Monaghan (the owner)
thinking? These guys suck!” Daddy’s like, “Ha ha, they just count their money.
And Enos? He hits at everything! That bastard has never seen a pitch he doesn’t
like. It could be 50 feet on the outside. Enos is going to go down swinging
away at it!” Daddy goes on, “Larry will have a pocket full of gloves and stand
out in Center Field and count his money, he won’t catch a thing. Hee hee. Ho ho.” Great. Thanks. I'm laughing, because, he's laughing. It's our way of bonding.
He loved the Giants. He loved stupid English more. He used to get all kinds of hysterical over misprints in the newspaper. "Ha ha ha ha, The GAINTS. Ho ho ho, Tee hee hee." Far less than whatever warranted his delight, was whatever he was laughing at, if that makes any sense. Alas, I have inherited that in spades. The fact that I have "PD or, non-PD" just makes it so much worse. Emotional roller-coaster, they say? Nay, I say. Everything is perilously hilarious, to the point where I damn near lose consciousness, or cry me a river and die. Thanks. I laugh far more than I cry, but Jesus wept... or not.
Anyway, back to our tale of the "2 hotdogs from the SF Giants." It all
comes to pass. I’m just livid. Spring training of 1984 is just horrid. This was
supposed to be OUR year. God. I’m up in Ann Arbor watching this shit-fest on
lazy afternoons drinking beer, staring at an empty Joker Marchant Stadium in
Lakeland, Florida. Al Kaline and George Kell are trying there damnedest to put
lipstick on this bulldog. I’m thinking they need to take it out and shoot it.
One
afternoon in late March, I’m watching one of these games. Poor George; he’s fumbling
around. He was no announcer. He certainly knew baseball and I learned tons
about the game from him, he spit out this gem, “We’ll be right back. Be sure to
tune in for the Andro-Media Strain this Saturday.” M’kay. The umpires suck. They must have driven
over to the School of the Blind and picked up a bunch of students from over
there. After about the 12th blown call, a strike that was right up
the middle the ump said was an inside ball, one of the 2 guys in the stands
right behind the catcher, Lance Parrish hollered “Catcher, give the umpire your
glasses.” The cameras were so close, you could see Lance grin. I loved the
easiness of those spring training games. The slow somnolence of the rhythms of
the innings. Nothing was hurried, no haste. It’s one of the things I love about
life in the south.
Spring
training is for a reason; a strange alchemy occurred during the spring training
season of 1984 in the Detroit Tigers organization. The addition of Enos Cabell
and Larry Herndon from the San Francisco Giants, among several other players from
other organizations proved to be the key. But the addition of those 2 were the
pivotal tipping point. Here’s why I say that.
One
afternoon, late July, I was sitting on my couch, watching a rare day televised
game. I had been back and forth, talking to my father ever since the season had
started. The Giants were doing what the Giants had always done, which is, I can’t
remember. Not much. The Tigers tore out of the gate, and I don’t think they
were ever out of 1st place the entire season. They went 35-5 which
was unprecedented. That’s still not why I say what I said. Here’s why I say
that.
There’s a
knock on my door, as I’m watching this game in late July. I have the front door
open, just the screen door is closed. It’s my father. He’s flown in from Los
Gatos to take me to a game. I’ve been to bunches of games that summer; “game-parties”
have sprung up like sudden late-summer thunderstorms do in Michigan. I’m
gleeful. I haven’t seen him in quite a while and I’ve missed him. He looks
older, worn and tired. I don’t care. We are both kids again. Caught up in the
excitement of fun, riffing off each other and baseball.
Off we go
and climb up into the bleachers, like the true animals we really are. This is
the summer of the “Wave.” My father was not one for any of that. He just thinks
it’s all beyond silly. We’re right down front. I guess so he can pour his beer
on people. When the “Wave” comes around, he gives a half-assed “arms up” still
clutching his beer in one hand, cigarette in the other, or it’s perched in the
corner of his mouth. He’s been teasing me all fucking season about Enos Cabell
and Larry Herndon.
Enos swings
and strikes out. But damn; the Tigers are in first place in the AL East and it
is historically the toughest league in all of baseball. Sparky knows how to
manage a baseball team. He will go on to become the first to win Manager of the
year in both the National and American Leagues. He won the World Series when he
coached the Cincinnati Reds in 1970. Herndon drops a fly ball, that should have been an easy out. My father, the
deathless heckler shouts, “Quit counting your money and catch!” Herndon,
grinning, turns and executes a theatrical bow. I guess he’s used to hearing it.
My father is smiling in his urn that is underneath the flight path of SFO Airport
1 comment:
I will certainly come and look at your blog, Steve. Thanks.
Post a Comment