A Sporting Chance
Or
Fields of Getting Creamed
Playing a normal game
never happened because dribbling was nigh impossible. Any time the ball would bounce off the uneven
surface of the road or parking space (which were indistinguishable from each
other on the best of days) the soon to be lonely basketball would rocket off
in random direction. At its calmest
careening, it looked to be controlled only by chaos theory. However, no matter which direction it started
going, it would eventually ricochet, hop and roll into the swamp near the road valley known as the "Outhouse Triangle." I’m convinced there was a colony of the orange spheres living below the surface
down there having a great time, free from their former masters.
There
were brief brushes with other sports.
Occasionally, radios would be turned to the big horse race in the
summer. I was about to indicate it was
the Kentucky Derby…which runs at the beginning of May, meaning that clearly
couldn’t have been the one. Whatever it was, we’ll just say it got listened to,
cheered at, and skedaddle back to participatory sports before I reveal any further ignorance.
As
most of the Up the Lake clan were very traditional about sports, the main two activities
I’d find myself roped into, against my better judgement, were baseball and football.
Baseball
was always the wiffle variety. Everyone had several bats, which served as
lightsabers, rug beaters and multiple other devices when not employed in the
sport. Games would begin when someone
got into town to pick up a set of wiffle balls.
The rules were passed down to our generation, as were most things, by
Joe JOE, joe and NICK.
Even
on the rare occasions we had enough people to run bases, we never did, using the "Imaginary man on Second" method. This was partially due to maintaining a
consistency of “Up the Lake” rules no matter who was playing. It was also, more likely, due to the strange
shape of the playing field and having no idea where the bases could go that would
make any logical or geometric sense.
In
most cases, the foul lines were parallel, and the exact delineation between
infield and outfield was speculative at best. The games were more like playing atop
one of those old-fashioned mechanical baseball games that looked like pinball
machines and had success based on the hole the hit ball fell into, than on a true diamond.
The rules
for playing in The First Field were straightforward:
If
the ball didn’t make it to the road when hit it was an out.
If it went into the poison ivy behind you it was a "foul ball" (for several reasons)
If it went across the road after touching the ground it was a single.
If it went over the road in the air, it was a double.
If the ball left the Field and went down to the "Snake Pit," it was a home run…
Unless, of course, it flew into the big pine tree on the right side of the border to the “Pit.”
This was known as the “Triple Tree,” due to obvious implications of the name.
Balls
that reached the “Snake Pit” were often lost, due more to overgrowth than obvious
implications of that particular name.
When all the wiffle balls that had been purchased on the foray off the
mountain became irretrievable, the game ended.
The
play would last quite a while, due to the complete inability of most of us to
hit the ball during the early innings. Joe (Nick’s Brother for those not
wishing to check the “Joe Guide” post linked to above at the list of names)
could throw sentient curve balls from hell. Others his age emulated his style, and he
taught his brother what he could.
However, no one equaled the demonic possession level of control he had
over those wiffle balls
I’m
convinced several of his pitches orbited my head at least three times before landing
smack in the middle of the ribbon backed lawn chair that defined the strike
zone. Hits would happen sporadically in the early game, and due to the
principal of momentum would expand exponentially as the game progressed.
Older
guys insisted on taping the bat, a questionable practice at best with wood or
aluminum gear, but a quantum leap in lethality for plastic. The bat was wrapped in electric tape to give
the flimsy polyethylene more weight and power, imparting a much stronger swing.
The
problem with this practice is that the poor defenseless wiffle ball, while following complex geometries
due to Joe's throwing ability, received no such boost in strength. A random hit would inevitably create a large
fault line along the wiffle ball, connecting one or more of its designed in holes together. This damage would be quickly repaired with
the same electrical tape.
The
more tape holding the rapidly deteriorating ball together, the less ability it
had to follow Joe’s will to change directions like an inebriated dragonfly midflight, and the more likely
for subsequent damaging blows by the augmented bat.
Eventually
a solid wad of tape would be lofted gently at the lawn chair strike zone, in
spite of any effort from Joe to exert his magic on it. This led to that wad of tape being smacked
deep into the Snake Pit, occasionally completely over the triple tree, often never to be
seen again, unless it pulled left and hit JOE's cabin down the hill.
Anabelle
got to play once when Rich came up with his family and initiated a game. In
either a rare assemblage of enough players, or more likely a breakdown in communications after many years without play,
they actually ran bases that day.
Anabelle had the “best time playing an organized sport in my life.” The reason for this was the same reason I
enjoyed sporting up there. “I didn’t
care about playing, and everyone else let me not care about playing.” She had one hit where she strolled easily to first
base to allow Morgan (then about age two) to finally tag someone out and feel
like he was contributing.
If it went across the road after touching the ground it was a single.
If it went over the road in the air, it was a double.
If the ball left the Field and went down to the "Snake Pit," it was a home run…
Unless, of course, it flew into the big pine tree on the right side of the border to the “Pit.”
This was known as the “Triple Tree,” due to obvious implications of the name.
Up the Lake
sports, it’s all about enjoyment.
Click to Continue on to football (Next week when it posts)
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