Football
games were different from baseball as instead of minimizing the personal
interaction, motions and impacts, (base running for the former, smashing into each other like demented bumper cars for the latter) they were maximized.
The
most basic football "game" involved someone standing on the beach throwing passes to a
group of kids in the water. Those of us
in the Lake would batter and submerge our associates in what resembled a free for all game of aquatic whack-a-mole in efforts to make the most spectacular
diving catches.
Luckily,
for my sister, nearly the entire Frissora clan has extremely well developed
sports genes. I think the only two it
skipped were Antonia (who focused on the performing arts) and myself (who
focused on Pop Cultural modern mythology and useless trivia.)
Since there was nothing of value I could pass on, Cousin
Michael, from the other cabin on our lot, took pity on her and taught Kim to throw a perfect spiral at a very young age. When NICK was tossing the passes into the
swimming area, we all managed to smash into each other and come up nowhere near
the ball, as per usual. My sister picked it up and NICK mockingly
asked if the “little girl” could throw it back.
Kim fired a rifle pass directly into NICK’s chest, backing him up a few
feet and releasing yet another in a generations long string of expletives on the beach.
There
were times we played actual football in the water, but the methods we used on
land and in the Lake were similar.
Somewhat
like baseball, rules were modified due to having less than a full roster:
There
was a five Mississippi count before blitzing.
(Fine,
Technically there was a
five Mis’ippi count,
sometimes reducing the state name to a single syllable.)
Two completions earned a first down.
Stoppage of the play required the ball carrier to be almost completely beaten into submission, and display an inability of any visible motion.
On land, the touchdown lines were random and marginally visible natural markers.
In the water, we always used the rope.
Note-
This proved problematic for the shorter players who spent most goal line
stances in a fish like environment, and in greater danger of drowning than the
considerable amount already incurred by playing at all.
One
of the most impressive players was Big Billy from down in the field. Even before my Uncle Billy and others with that name started coming Up
the Lake, he was known as “Big Billy.”
The man was gigantic.
He was kind of like a hairy, Italian, musclebound mountain with a mustache, and a ridiculous number of tattoos. He'd reached the level of skin art where he had some just for winning bets, using cheesy pick up lines, or some combination of the two. Billy definitely served in the Navy, possibly the SEALs. Considering everyone knew everyone else their entire lives up there, detailed personal information about what happened when we weren't Up the Lake somehow remained a mystery in many cases. The most likely reason is...it didn't matter.
In
one water-based game when I was in high school (and taking up far more mass and
space than I had any right to) I tried to stop him from throwing the ball. I heaved the considerable largeness of my entire body
onto his passing arm. This had as much effect as if I'd heaved the largeness of my entire body at a passing passenger jet aircraft. He threw the
football using said arm with no impact to speed or force. Then dunked me sixteen times before tossing me the same
distance as the football into the weeds.
Land
games were played with similar gusto and intensity. Fortunately, the small size
of our teams usually prevented massive injuries. This is not counting an “over the year” get
together at Linda’s house for Richie’s communion, confirmation, or some other
religious ceremony that we probably should not have been celebrating with group
bloodshed.
Or maybe we should have. It was a hallmark of the Up the Laker's. Nick's grandmother's wake was held on the day of a Giant's playoff game. A group of us were in the downstairs waiting area with the game on someone's tiny transistor radio. Linda found us, and Nick pointed out, "Gram would understand." Linda replied, "Gram would have kicked all your asses."
Linda was absolutely correct and I have no doubt that "Gram" could have easily done this to the entire group of us. Them Up the Lake old ladies were a tough breed.
Once
again, Nick’s brother Joe used the same creativity that led to playing
“Gauntlet” to arrange the teams. He and
his brother-in-law (also unsurprisingly a Joe) were both married with kids at
that point. They pulled me on their team as I was at full size by then, and was
around their height and weight. The other team was Nick, Skip (who our team of three were all easily taller than and outweighed by a significant percentage at that
age) accompanied by the vast sea of every young child there.
Most
of our plays involved one of our large three acting as a one man offensive line and plowing their entire team down like least years wheat crop. This was
followed by a quick pass between the remaining two. Then the one with the ball would try to make
as much headway before the knocked half-senseless smaller, but faster mob of
kids would swarm onto them. It ended up
feeling like wading through a swamp of children, usually carrying
several on each limb as we plodded across Linda’s back yard.
Unfortunately,
for us, they finally figured out an effectively damaging tactic for everyone
involved to stop us. Richie’s cousin
John, (a skilled grade school wrestler then, who grew up to be a coach) positioned
himself as a human battering ram. Up to seventy-five other children would hold
our limbs as far apart as they could without playing “the wishbone game.” At
this point John would charge, full speed and head first, directly into our
stomachs. This knocked the wind (and several other items) out of us completely and allowed the rest of the gang to pull off a tackle, once
they were sure we were not going to empty any contents of our Heimlich noggined
innards on anyone but John.
As for Up the Lake locations, there
was a volleyball net permanently set in up in the second field, which we used
only about once a summer for volleyball. Instead, it was a key element in two
other physical activities:
The first was
being the completely out in the open (and much harder to guard than the rock in
the pines) Base Location for Capture the Flag.
The second was as an Ultimate Warrior
level self-inflicted clothesline from running into it at full speed when playing “how
long can we keep the owner looking for who’s sneaking around in the fields
tonight without getting caught.”
Aside- My
minor contact with another sport, tennis, came via a volleyball game, but not in
that field.
The
tennis lesson came when Nick’s sister Janine set up a volleyball net in front
of their cabin one summer. She then organized a large number of us into a
game using tennis rules. Since she (and
her kids) were the only ones who knew those rules at the time, how
they worked did not appear immediately clear to anyone without PhD level
mathematical degrees. Somehow, after
playing for a spell, our side was down 30 points despite our missing the ball only twice and them missing it repeatedly.
I think it was based on who served, the word “love” and the current
angle between the two largest clouds in the sky at that moment.
Though I existed directly next to useless for most athletic related activities, I was responsible for bringing one sport home from the E-Dorms into the Second Field.
Though I existed directly next to useless for most athletic related activities, I was responsible for bringing one sport home from the E-Dorms into the Second Field.
Hey Jeff. I read your up the lake sports. Funny story. Even funnier is yesterday I was trying to remember what your shirt used to say that you wore up the lake. I remembered it was like a baby blue shirt with dog and chair on it. Than today I came to my sister Daune’s house to celebrate her birthday and she mentioned you had something on Facebook about the lake. I don’t do any of those web site things or social media types so I typed in what I could remember what your shirt used to say and I found your blog. Small world. Within 24 hours I found the answer to what I tried remembering what your shirt used to say. Great fond memories Jeff. It’s easy to forget that the lake has that ability to leave such impactful memories for all the campers that were blessed to say they had a cabin up there. Our grandparents gave us such a treasure. Thanks for the walk down memory lane..... Geoff.
ReplyDeleteHey Geoff, glad you found it. Up the Lake magic still exists. We certainly all were blessed having the Lake to share for all those years.
ReplyDeleteIf you click the index link at the bottom it goes to a post with links to all the other Up the Lake stories I've written. You figure heavily in a few of them.
Thanx for sharing the times.