An Old Man’s Fancy

by Hilary Barta

I’m longing to turn on a game
Hear color guy trip on a name
But, Baseball, you’ve left
I’m lost, I’m bereft
Without you, Spring isn’t the same.

Go Out and Play Already

by Hilary Barta

A field and a bat and a ball
A love of the game, and that’s all
No need for a crowd
(Aren’t even allowed)
To cheer or to boo ev’ry call.

 

Casey @ the Bat

by Mitchell Nathanson

The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day;
The score stood four to two with but one inning more to play.
And then when Cooney whiffed again, the eighteenth K that night,
A sickly silence fell, for somehow baseball wasn’t right.

A straggling few got up and left, annoyed they even came;
And most who stayed were kind of drunk or wagered on the game.
Yet still to come was Casey, whom the fans had long extolled,
Though at the age of 31 the metrics deemed him old.

But first ahead of him was Flynn, a player much accursed;
His BABIP was atrocious, and his WAR was even worse.
Another guy came up as well, his name recalled by few;
Confusion sowed by double switches made in hour two.

But Flynn defied the numbers, making contact with the ball;
And sent it on a mighty arc — it caromed off the wall.
“The guy should be on third,” a salty graybeard spat and cursed,
As Flynn removed his batting gloves, a jogger still at first.

The other guy? A double by the waiver-wire addition;
(His former owner dumping salary without contrition);
And when the blaring music stopped, fans noticed what occurred,
Instead of crossing o’er the plate, young Flynn was still at third.

As Casey stepped into the box, the scoreboard roared “Make Noise!”;
The crowd most surely would’ve done, if not for all their toys.
About 5,000 hometown fans were checking in on Twitter;
So most remained oblivious to Casey as the hitter.

Ten thousand eyes were elsewhere as he scratched upon the dirt;
And Velcro-strapped his gloves and touched six places on his shirt.
And kissed his bat, then tapped the plate nine times or maybe 10;
Then from the box did Casey step, and start it all again.

The pitcher’s antics on the mound were also quite a show;
Whole seasons seemed to pass before he hinted at a throw.
Yet here it came, the cowhide sphere, arriving at great speed;
“Strike one,” the umpire firmly called. But PitchTrax disagreed. Continue reading “Casey @ the Bat”

Bombing in the Bronx

by James Finn Garner

The Yankees teams of old–
Skilled, determined and bold–
Have been held in reverence
Which prohibits severance
And shapes the perception
Continues deception
Of how to field nine
Worthy of the big time.

No longer ball contact
But the size of the contract
No longer who’s hot
But the publicity got
No longer runs plating
But the latest Q-rating

Mickey and Yogi and Thurman
Use to celebrate in the bars.
Now the Bombers are as exciting
As “Dancing with the Stars.”