They Mighty Be Giants

by Paul Kocak

Who did they think they were
Traipsing through here
Laying waste
Smashing baseballs
Shutting us out
And sending us home

Home to wallow
Home to pine
Lick our wounds
Bow out heads

But before we left
They handed us brooms
Detritus and debris
To sweep and to clear
Memory to erase
Shame to shun

They mighty be Giants
We defeated be Dodgers

 

The Legend of Dock Ellis

by Ron Halvorson

Two hours before the baseball game,
Dock Ellis ate acid.

In his hotel party room,
Blacklight hallucinations.

Jimi Hendrix on the Hi-Fi,
“Electric Lady riffs.”

Whoops! Sports page don’t lie—
“Dock Ellis Pitching Tonight!”

What you gonna do, Dock? She asked.
Dock just smiled, took another hit.

The partying Pirate strolled to the mound.
“higher than a Georgia Pine.” (his words)

The hapless Padres were no match.
Dock’s lively fastball whistled.

90 miles per hour,
Rolling with flaming comet tails.

Sent with fire and brimstone,
Strikes exploding into his catcher’s mitt.

“Steee-rike”, called the Grim Reaper,
Ringing up the stunned batters.

Next came Dock’s curveball,
Floating like a Frisbee.

Ball spinning through a rainbow,
Surrealistic, sublime.

Baseball in slow motion now,
Frozen in its altered state.

Dock pounds the zone,
Sasquatch bellers, “Outta there!”

A gorilla strides to the plate,
Dock whiffs the phantom.

Dock pitching in psychedelia,
Spinning colors to the plate.

Now the strangest apparition:
Nixon behind the plate.

Jefferson Airplane in Dock’s head,
Nixon screams, “Strike three!”

“One pill makes you larger,”
“One pill makes you small.”
Bewildered Padres swung wildly,
Hitting that pill “not at all.”

Purple Haze, Sandoz,
Orange sunshine, Windowpane.

Dock levitates still higher,
High above the stadium.

Mind and body now separated,
Into the cosmic realm.

Dock wills the pitcher onward,
Below, the glassy hyaline.

He’s pitching effortlessly,
So far away from the blue planet.

“It’s all so beautiful,”
And still no hits for the Padres.

Dock’s throwing daggers, thunderbolts—
Like the enraged God.

He’s ever so wild,
Trippin’ so hard.

Where’s the plate?
Dock sees only a river of tie-dye color.
Nine free baserunners,
Eight walks, one hit batsman (who looked like Frankenstein).

Twice Dock loaded the bases,
Sorcerers on first, second, third.

Not even Don Juan would score,
Dock’s electric Kool-Aid too strong.

Padre hitters were getting scared,
That crazy look in Dock’s eyes.

Pitches from the third dimension,
Dock’s tell-tale dilated pupils.

Ninth inning coming,
Still no runs, no hits.

Dock descended from the celestial sphere,
Holding a baseball light, tiny.

Dock fired that last pitch,
A meteorite at light speed.

Through a cloudy vapor trail,
Last man out!

LSD no-hitter!
Dock gazed into the Infinite.

Jewels of the Heavens sparkled,
The Luna moon smiled.

“I pitched a fucking no-hitter!”
The Gods of baseball applauded.

Thus in 1970,
Another folk hero was born.

“What did you see on that last play?”
The confused sportswriters wanted to know.

Dock just smiled like a Cheshire cat,
“Man, you wouldn’t believe what I saw!”

The legend says Dock met Timothy Leary,
An autograph and baseball card for the acid guru.

Leary’s proclamation,
To day-trippers everywhere:
Behold Dock Ellis:
First pitcher to “turn on, tune in, and drop out!”

 

Teamless

by Ellen Adair

With apologies to Lord Byron

I had a dream that was not all a dream.
Some large misfortune overtook the coasts,
And their tall cities were abandoned, only the blown
Forgotten newsprint scuttling down the street.
Exiled elsewhere, I marveled at the ways
That life persists: baseball was still played
By all the teams based in central states,
Their match-ups limited and circular,
While only ghosts played in my home parks,
Swinging blind at nothing in the moonless air.
Who’s my team now, I thought. No Phillies, Sox,
Or A’s. No Mets. Is it the Diamondbacks?

 

Ellen Adair is an actor, with recurring roles on shows like “The Sinner,” “Homeland,” and “Bull,” and a contributing analyst to the MLB Network show “Off Base.” Their book of poetry, Curtain Speech, is available from Pen & Anvil Press. They also host the podcasts “Take Me In to the Ballgame” and “Love Takes Action,” and draws baseball players by commission.