Play by Play

by Jim Daniels

For Ernie Harwell

My grandmother holds onto Ernie’s words, a gospel
of speared line drives, shoestring catches.
Robbed of a base hit: she curses softly.
Going, going, gone: she watches it sail.
Even at the ballpark, she squeezes her transistor.

She sometimes cries after a tough loss.
Ernie calms her, talks about
tomorrow’s game, the starting pitchers.
Instant runs, she says
in the middle of making tea,
wiping the table. Or Pull up a Stroh’s
and stay awhile.

A small crowd on Ernie Harwell Day
cold rainy September. She stayed home–
applauded her radio. Ernie Harwell.
When he says a man from Paw Paw
caught that one, she sees that man spill
his beer, lunge across an empty seat.

She sees him driving west toward Kalamazoo
sipping coffee to stay awake, his son
asleep in his lap. Sees him smile,
palm the ball, check the runners,
throw a curve.

* * *

My grandmother turns up the radio
against her deafness, shoves the earjack in
a little deeper, wiggles it. Ernie,
where are you? she laughs nervously.

Tonight September wind breezes
in the open windows, a late west-coast game
drifting through the air. In the kitchen
I see the red glow of a burner she’s left on.
I flick it off and peek into her dark room.
She is mumbling to herself
against the tinny static.
Let him hear her little prayers.

Jim Daniels is the Thomas Stockham Baker Professor of English at Carnegie Mellon University, where he has taught creative writing for 30 years. From The Long Ball (Pig in a Poke Press). Copyright 1988, Jim Daniels. All rights reserved.

“Got Nothing to Do Today But Smile”

By HoraceClarke66

With apologies to Simon and Garfunkel, and with all good wishes to The Master:

John, get to the park on time,
I know that your procedure is fine.
Come back, we’re gonna play Col-o-rado.
Suzy’s waiting and here you are:
The only living voice in New York,
The only living voice in New York.

“Downtown goes Frazier! That Frazier will amaze ya!”
“Bern, baby, Bern!”
“This is the dawning of the age of Gregorius!”

Oh, I get the news I need from the Yankees Report.
Yeah, I can gather all the news I need from the Yankees Report.
Hey, you got nothing to do today but smile.
Suzy’s waiting and there you are:
The only living voice in New York,
The only living voice in New York.

“The Giambino! The Sanchino! The Bam-Tino!”
“Aaron’s the Judge, but Brandon’s the Drury! Judge and Drury!”
“Back to back and belly to belly!”

Half of the time it’s gone
But you don’t know where
You don’t where—

“That ball is high, it is far—”

Half of the time it’s caught
But you don’t know where
You don’t know where—

“Thairo! Hits one to Cairo!”
“And like a good Gleyber, Torres is there!”
“Robinson Cano, don’tcha know!”

John, get to the park on time.
I know your procedure’s gone fine
Hey, let your honesty shine shine shine
Like it shines for us,
The only living voice in New York—

“Gio Urshela! The most happy fella!”
“C’est lui! C’est lui!”
“Tu-lo-hitz-ki! The Man of Troy!”

The only living voice in New York—

“He opened his Golden Gates and hit it in the seats! It’s a Ben Francisco treat!”

The only living voice in New York—

“Oh, there’s no predicting baseball…”

 

From the indispensable Yankee blog, It is High, It is Far, It is …. caught.

No Apologies

by James Finn Garner

Poor ol’ Mickey Callaway
Cursed the guy from Newsday
Because Mick gave the game away
Poor ol’ Mickey Callaway.

Combustible Jason Vargas
Decided to add to the fuss
Offered a punch right in the puss
Combustible Jason Vargas.

GM Brodie Van Wagenen
Had to douse the fire again
(Looking to manage? Send your CV in)
GM Brodie Van Wagenen.

 

He Gone

By James Finn Garner

A hero on the Sout’ Side of town
Hawk was a homer renowned
For phrases he’d rain
But he never explained:
What the hell was I s’posed to “strap down”?

Illustration by Joe Ciardiello for Chicago Magazine.