Game 2 ... But I Digress

By Mark "Salt and Pepper" Smith
Special Correspondent and Studly Right Fielder

Though it isn’t my strong suit, I am going to try and be brief – 
for two reasons: 

    1)  I am typing this with one finger (right pinky) because it 
is the only part of my body that either doesn’t hurt or isn’t  numb – 

and

    2)  I want to finish up quickly so I can go watch the late-night 
rerun of Baseball Tonight and see my catch on Web Gems again. 

But I digress. Again… To be brief…

(Note: As the honorary substitute recapper for our fearless leader, 
I will do all I can to emulate his customary compassion, generosity, 
and positive outlook – and those who know me will understand that, 
being the spiritual progeny of Darth Vader and always feeling the 
tug of the dark side, it will be no easy task for me. But I shall 
try and look away and walk toward the light.) 

So…

We really hit the ol’ cowhide casaba tonight, didn’t we? Really 
smacked the hell out of the honeydew, huh? And how about them runs?
14 sets of cleats clomping down on the magic pentagram that isn't
where home plate is supposed to be but is, as we used to say in
the 60’s, close enough for the blues.  

14 runs in six innings… That’s 2.33 every turn of the merry-go-
round. That puts the other guys’ pitcher’s ERA at a cool, Roger 
Craigish 21.00! And that doesn’t include the last run we scored 
in the 6th that the ump decided didn’t count (or, with two guys 
still on base, the others we would likely have brought around to
surely break those chumps’ ungodly spirit and bring them to
their arthritic knees.) Yes, as Mikey likes to say – “It doesn’t 
get any better than that” – with the possible exception of…winning 
the game. But again – to be brief… 

But a moment…
About ‘the little run that wasn’t’...
It seems that in the off-season the league’s brain-trust (rumor 
has it, all former General Motors execs) held their annual Donner 
Party Memorial Rules Meeting and decided that ‘yelling’ on the 
basepaths by the offensive team would no longer be tolerated 
because, well, it’s offensive. (I, for one, agree, having felt 
for some time now that, especially in these sobering, more modest 
times, making noise at softball games is very much at odds with 
the serene, kharmic nature of the ritual.) The law being what it 
is, Jimmy The Pez was called out while swiftly approaching third 
base and exhorting his slower-footed teammate in front of him 
to continue his quest toward the magic pentagram (the one that 
isn’t where home plate should be but is close enough for…well – 
you get it) at a volume judged to be rude, disruptive and 
insensitive. Please, my callow compatriots – in the future, take 
this to heart: Don’t be noisy running the bases. It isn’t nice. 
There are other children playing, and they may not like it. What’s 
worse – they may not want to play with you again. Be careful or 
you may end up like Jimmy The Pez. (‘Mommy, I don’t want to play 
with Jimmy anymore. He’s loud.’) Sadly, Jimmy is going to have 
to live with this the rest of his life, and it’s a heavy burden. 
Trust me, I know all too well from whence I speak. At my eighth 
birthday party, I emerged the victor at pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey 
and chirped (a little loudly) “I won!” At my ninth birthday party, 
the only kids who showed up were Boris Silverman, the class geek 
(who went on to become the assistant CFO of AIG) and my cousin 
Natalie (whose parents made her come and sat in the corner all 
afternoon braiding and unbraiding her pigtails.) For my tenth 
birthday, my parents took me and my sister (“Mom… I don’t wanna  
go! Marky's loud!”) to see The Parent Trap (Hayley Mills,
not Lohan.) Since then, it’s been a constant struggle.
Angela Fisher wouldn’t let me get to second base with her, 
I almost flunked out senior year at Horace Mann, got rejected
by NYU and only made waiting-list at Harvard, got fired from
numerous jobs, had two ruptured disks, three knee surgeries,
lost over forty percent of my hair, developed GERD, got divorced,
been in analysis, and became addicted to Cialis (but understand –
that doesn’t mean I need it). So, dear, dear boys… I implore
you: Be quiet on the basepaths. Respect the rights and audial
space of others. Clearly, there will (and should) be no exceptions. 
If, while legging out a dribbler to the pitcher’s mound, you have
a massive coronary episode, lie there in a seemly fashion until 1)  someone comes to your aid, or

 2)  you die, dirty and dusty, but demure. You don’t want to 
be remembered as the lout wriggling on the ground between 
first and home screaming “Oh God, my fucking heart!” Think 
of your kids. You don’t want them to have to live with that.

But again… To be brief…
We sure did lash the ol' giant lemon, huh?

Yes, it’s true that half the runs those chondroitin-laced clowns 
scored were unearned, but in the spirit of our new, tranquil, 
muted and humble approach to the game, let us look at it this way: 
I believe most of us increased our chances of going to heaven by 
doing good works, by being charitable. As it says in the Bible 
(King Babe’s version) – ‘Consider the willies on the field, 
how they grow: they toil and spin; and yet I say to you that 
an error committed is a gift given, that a run unearned is a 
blessing earned. Let he who casts the first stone wide of the 
base know that others surely will follow in his path, and that 
the Lord cares not what misdeeds are done in the name of the
 game, but that ye do them humbly, and quietly.’ (My italics.) 

But I digress.

Now… About that catch.
I saw it right off the bat, that it was sinking and slicing toward 
the line, so I zigged left while I went into fifth gear, and then ---

Wait a sec. SportsCenter’s coming on again. Gotta run.


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