Happy Friday, Peoples.
And while yer at it, shake it, shake it:
Happy Friday, Peoples.
And while yer at it, shake it, shake it:
By Jeff Pearlman
My family hated baseball.
That was the worst thing about growing up a sports fan at 24 Emerald Lane in Mahopac, N.Y. My mom could not care less about sports. My dad could not care less about sports. My brother could not care less about sports.
Me? I cared. Boy, did I care. My walls were lined with one poster after another—Rickey Henderson next to Wesley Walker next to George Foster next to Bernard King. My closets were stuffed—stuffed!—with baseball cards, 30 … 40 together, rubber-banded in ways that left Mario Soto and Dan Pasqua positioned in the most awkward of poses. Dozens of baseball caps lined up neatly behind my bed.
But nobody cared.
Then, one day, my dad asked if I had any interest in going to a Yankee game. It was 1985 and Rich Green, one of his employees at Herz Stewart & Co., had an extra ticket. "You guys both love baseball," Dad said. "He wants to take you."
I still remember walking into the stadium that first time. We sat along the third base line, and my posters had come to life. There was Ken Griffey, Sr., his hat tipped high atop the front of his Afro, stretching calves the size of large dogs. There was Henderson, the great base stealer, twitching his fingers into white batting gloves. There was Henry Cotto, uhm, well, yeah. Henry Cotto. The grass was as green as a 7-Up label, Bob Sheppherd’s voice even more God-like then the one I’d heard on TV all those times. My seat was made of a hard blue plastic, and as the innings passed I must have bounced up and down upon it, oh, 500 times. Like Victor Mata, I was just happy to be there.
I’ve been told a game was even played that day. I recall little of it, only that Dave Winfield made an amazing leaping catch into the rightfield stands and that Butch Wynegar started at catcher. Doesn’t matter, though. What sticks with me is the magic of the day; the feeling of walking into a building and knowing love.
True love.
Jeff Pearlman is a writer for ESPN.com.
As I was walking down 50th street last night after work I thought about a friend who recently was in town. He couldn’t stand walking in New York–or at least in midtown where he was staying. He complained to me about the congestion. "Why are people stopping to take pictures of a cop on a horse?"
As a native New Yorker, I take it for granted that as I walk I’m thinking two people ahead, and that slipping in and around clueless pedestrains is second nature to me.
On the subway platform I ran into a guy I used to know in the movie business. A music editor. I hadn’t seen him in a long time. We met in 1988–twenty years ago, fer cryin’ out loud–when I was a messenger and he was the music editor on The Last Temptation of Christ. He snuck me into a crew screening which was one of the highlights of my summer. I recall that I was sent on a delivery to 5th avenue and 58th street with twenty minutes to spare before the screening. I ran from the Brill Building on Broadway and 49th street and back, dodging through the crowds doing my best Barry Sanders, and was a hot, sweaty mess, but I made the screening. The movie had been scheduled to debut at the New York Film Festival but there was so much commotion over it, they rushed the post-production schedule and it was released in August. When the screening was over, I remember Michael Powell, the acclaimed British director and husband to Scorsese’s longtime editor, Thelma Schoonmaker, a frail man, stood up and remarked on Peter Gabriel’s score.
I mentioned the incident to the music editor last night and he said, "I got in trouble for that." Which I also remembered. We smiled about it. Then talked about how much the business has changed, who has died who is still around. Then we said goodbye. But I’ll never forget how exclusive I felt, sitting in that screening, or how this dude went out of his way to do a solid for an eager young kid when he knew he’d get balled out for it.
The Yankee brass met yesterday and Hank Steinbrenner told the AP: "The plan as of right now is [Joba] Chamberlain is going to be a starter," the Yankees co-chairman said. "Everybody’s pretty much in agreement with that." (King, NY Post)
Apparently, Andy Pettitte would like to return. Perhaps Mike Mussina will be back as well, although I’m less sure about that. Still, it would be cool to see Chamberlain begin the year in the starting rotation. That would be nifty.
They won’t die. The Red Sox just don’t go away. They are a tough out and as much as I dislike them, I admire that as defending World Champs, they are making it difficult for the young Rays, who kicked away a shot at going to the World Serious last night. Evan Longoria with an awful play in the eighth (after making a nice pick) and then Gabe Gross with perhaps the worst pressure throw in recent memory helped the Sox tie the game. It was a forgone conclusion that the Sox would win it in the ninth. When Carlos Pena came to bat with runners on first and second and just one out in the top of the inning, Chip Carey said, "Pena’s only hit into two double plays all year…"
The kiss of death…Thanks, Skip.
Hey, the Rays now have a painful moment they’ve got to live with. They broke their cherry.
Funny thing is, I still think the Rays will win this series, in six. As a friend of mine pointed out last night, my belief about momentum vanished after that Albert Pujols dinger off Brad Lidge didn’t secure the series for the Cards a few years back. I sure wouldn’t be surprised if the Sox took it in seven. Upset, yes? Shocked, no.