Rivalry

by January O’Neil

.

I came to the party late,
long after Babe was sold to the Yanks
past the magic of Ted Williams and Yaz
and Buckner’s ball through the legs.
Didn’t understand The Curse
but the years without a championship
added up like runners on base
and no one to bring them home.
Generations of Red Sox fans
passed away without a World Series win.
The velocity of our hatred
was unmatched, and we liked it that way.
In 2003, we were Dirt Dogs.
A tribe. A nation. Even the anticipation
of spring training became a torture so real
it bordered on beautiful,
how beauty is supposed to reach us,
with a temporary luster,
with nothing to show for it
but our longing.
If you’re a member of this Nation
you’re full of hunger and angst,
there’s nothing you can do
to ease the silence. Win
or go home is the only option.
We watch no matter what,
learning to live with loss,
that soft hurt that never goes away.

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Posted 8/19/2009

Name Recognition

by Rube Goldberg

But here the son broke in and said,
“These guys are new to me.
I never heard of Taft or Hughes
Or Bryan, honestly.
I never saw those queer old names
When looking through the score,
I’d understand you better, Pa,
If you mentioned John McGraw.”

Taken from Crazy ’08 by Cait Murphy.

Published 7/27/09

Mutual Baseball Almanac, 1959

by Doug Fahrendorff

Last week
My brother returned
My copy of
The 1959 Mutual Baseball Almanac.
He had given me the book for my birthday
That year.
I paged through the articles
Describing how to play each position:
Roberts on pitching
Campanella catching
Musial the outfield
Statistics of yesterdays heroes
The book a mirror
Into a time long past
When baseball was still
Only a game.

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Posted 7/1/2009

Tears for Jack (Buck and Herges)

by Todd Herges

I.

Hundreds – over a thousand –
the nights spent lying in bed,
sitting in the yard with grownups,
slouched against dusty teammates
in the back seat of a car
on the way home from an out-of-town game.

The nights spent listening to Jack Buck
call games on KMOX –
radio home of the St. Louis Cardinals –
relayed across the air
to seemingly every AM station
in the entire Midwest.

The games broadcast from Busch Stadium,
from Wrigley Field,
from Shea, the Vet, Three Rivers,
and from those long western swings
through Chavez Ravine, the Stick
and Jack Murphy

From whichever hallowed place
he walked right into my room,
sat down in our back yard, by the lake,
squeezed into the coach’s big old car.
The voice pure honey.
The picture crisper than a color TV’s.

Wherever we were, there was Jack.
A hundred sixty-two times each summer
starting April 1st and lasting through September.
(Those who thought summer was just the school break long,
or for ninety days starting June twentieth,
only shorted themselves.)

Of each one sixty-two, I caught at least half
and from first Little League pitch
to the altar fifteen years later
accumulated around 3,000 listening hours.
A Hall of Fame number
if it were base hits or Ks.

II.

As years flew past, value expanded.
As grownup responsibilities crowded in,
the times to just sit listening,
to be there in soul, if not as a ticketed body,
grew rare, thus treasured.

And then in the blink of an eye,
in no more time than it took to say “I do”
and have four children,
the voice was wavery,
grown weak,
graveled with phlegm.

Realization hit like a high hard one
from Andujar, Forsch or Worrell,
only in the gut, not the shoulder:
it wouldn’t last forever.
But please, just ‘til my boys
can hear and understand and enjoy
and gain insight into our glorious national pastime
as presented by the master.
But it was not to be …

The newspaper mentioned it
with unjustifiably small type.
The headline should have been huge
like the impact he had on me
and so many tens of thousands.
Like D-Day, Pearl Harbor, Kennedy in Dallas:
BUCK PASSES.

III.

I cried more than one time
upon hearing, upon reading,
upon realizing the awful fact
that my boys, especially Jack,
would miss the privilege
of falling asleep in the 8th with the clock radio low,
the Redbirds holding a solid lead,
the game safe in Buck’s good hands,

And the thrill of letting that voice –
deep and clear over the buzz of cicadas –
generate a kind of adrenal electricity deep inside
as he tells of two in scoring position and Pujols at the plate.
Of the late inning 6-4-3 double play
to snuff out another would-be Cub rally.

Especially my son Jack
with his intense curiosity, his encyclopedic knowledge,
evidenced by questions few 6-year olds ask,
like why’d it take Hack so long
to be voted into the Hall?
He STILL has the season RBI record with 191!
Do you think Helton will make it?  Nobody else
has ever hit 35 doubles 10 years straight!

I cried for more than one person upon hearing,
upon reading,
upon realizing the awful fact . . .

that Jack Buck had lost the chance
to see again his surely favorite thing,
the Cardinals winning another game;

that Jack Herges had lost the chance
to ever let Buck’s voice
paint crystalline situations on the canvas of his mind;

that I had lost the chance
to share with all my sons
one of the best parts of growing up in the Midwest.

.

Posted 6/24/2009