Baseball Toaster Cardboard Gods
Log in | Register | Help
Voice of the Mathematically Eliminated
Hot from the Toaster
Search
Google Search
Web
Toaster
Cardboard Gods
Archives

2008
12  11  10  09  08  07 
06  05  04  03  02  01 

2007
12  11  10  09  08  07 
06  05  04  03  02  01 

2006
12  11  10  09 
About The Author

Josh Wilker

Email: jawilker68 at yahoo.com

Lowlights and Miscellany

Team Archives
Atlanta Braves
Hank Aaron
Brian Asselstine
Barry Bonnell
Bobby Cox
Adrian Devine
Jamie Easterly
Carl Morton
Rowland Office (with team)
Rowland Office, 1976
Jerry Royster
Jim Wynn
Baltimore Orioles
Mark Belanger
Al Bumbry
Mark Corey
Mike Cuellar
Rich Dauer
Tippy Martinez
Kevin Millar
Jim Palmer
Boog Powell
Sammy Stewart
Boston Red Sox
Jack Brohamer, 1979
Bill Buckner
Bill Campbell
Denny Doyle
Dwight Evans
Carlton Fisk
Mario Guerrero, 1974
Mario Guerrero, 1975
Terry Hughes
Bill Lee, 1977
Fred Lynn
Mike Paxton (with Don Aase)
Jim Rice
George Scott
Bob Stanley
Luis Tiant, 1975
Mike Timlin
Mike Torrez
Jason Varitek
Ted Williams
Larry Wolfe
Carl Yastrzemski, 1975
Carl Yastrzemski, 1977
Carl Yastrzemski, 1978
Carl Yastrzemski, 1980
Carl Yastrzemski, 1981
Don Zimmer
California Angels
Don Aase (with Mike Paxton)
Mike Barlow
Lyman Bostock
Ken Brett
Andy Etchebarren
Bob Grich
Mario Guerrero, 1977
Mario Guerrero, 1978
Bob Jones
Rudy Meoli
Rick Miller
Jerry Remy
Nolan Ryan
Frank Tanana
Chicago Cubs
Larry Biittner
Bill Buckner
Jose Cardenal
Cubs, 1977
Ivan DeJesus
Carmen Fanzone
Greg Gross
Darold Knowles
Steve Ontiveros and Doug Capilla
Bruce Sutter
Geoff Zahn
Oscar Zamora
Chicago White Sox
Cy Acosta
Bucky Dent
Brian Downing
Rich Gossage
Ken Henderson
Fred Howard
Wayne Nordhagen
Ron Santo
Ron Schueler
White Sox Future Stars
White Sox, 1977
Wilbur Wood
Cincinnati Reds
Bob Bailey
Johnny Bench
Darrel Chaney
Dave Concepcion
George Foster
Joe Morgan, 1976
Joe Morgan, 1979
Dale Murray
Tony Perez
Bill Plummer
Pete Rose
Champ Summers
Cleveland Indians
Larry Andersen
Jack Brohamer, 1976
Jackie Brown
Bernie Carbo
David Clyde
Ed Crosby
Dennis Eckersley
Toby Harrah
John Lowenstein
Sid Monge
Jeff Torborg
Rick Waits
Rick Wise
Detroit Tigers
Ed Brinkman
Mark Fidrych
John Hiller
Willie Horton
Lerrin LaGrow
Ron LeFlore
Ron LeFlore (update)
Phil Mankowski
Ben Oglivie
Dick Sharon
Johnny Wockenfuss
Houston Astros
Astros, 1978
Brad Ausmus
Cesar Cedeno
Mike Cosgrove
Ken Forsch
Skip Jutze, 1976
Bo McLaughlin
Joe Niekro
Randy Niemann
Gene Pentz
Gene Pentz (flipped)
Gordy Pladson
Terry Puhl
J.R. Richard, 1977
J.R. Richard, 1978
J.R. Richard, 1979
Bob Watson
Kansas City Royals
Doug Bird
George Brett
Jim Colborn
Al Cowens
Clint Hurdle
Hal McRae
Freddie Patek
Marty Pattin
Dan Quisenberry
U.L. Washington
Willie Wilson
Jim Wohlford
Los Angeles Dodgers
Ron Cey
Steve Garvey, 1976
Steve Garvey, 1978
Tommy John, 1978
Davey Lopes
Ken McMullen
Johnny Oates
Team Picture, 1980
Derrel Thomas
Bob Welch
Steve Yeager
Milwaukee Brewers
Hank Aaron, 1976
Hank Aaron, 1975
Jerry Augustine
Kurt Bevacqua, 1976
Bob Coluccio
Bob Hansen
Von Joshua
Sixto Lezcano
Gorman Thomas, 1975
Gorman Thomas, 1980
Bill Travers
Clyde Wright
Minnesota Twins
Vic Albury
Steve Braun and Steve Brye
Tom Burgmeier
Rod Carew
Ray Corbin
Dave Johnson
Harmon Killebrew
Ken Landreaux
Jose Morales
Johnny Sutton
Montreal Expos
Stan Bahnsen
Bob Bailey
Dennis Blair
Dave Cash
Nate Colbert
Pepe Frias and Pepe Mangual
Woodie Fryman
Ed Herrmann
Tom Hutton
Bill Lee, 1980
Chris Speier
New York Mets
Bob Apodaca
Bruce Boisclair
Steve Henderson
Dave Kingman, 1976
Dave Kingman, 1977
Jerry Koosman
Ed Kranepool
Ed Kranepool (reprise)
Lee Mazzilli
Len Randle
Tom Seaver
Craig Swan?
Joe Torre
Joel Youngblood
New York Yankees
Wade Boggs
Ron Guidry
Steve Howe
Reggie Jackson, 1977
Reggie Jackson (WS record)
Tommy John, 1980
Alex Johnson
Sparky Lyle
Billy Martin
Rudy May
Gene Michael
Thurman Munson
Lou Piniella
Luis Tiant, 1980
Cecil Upshaw
Oakland A's
Vida Blue
Dick Bosman
Steve Dunning
Mario Guerrero, 1980
Rickey Henderson
Reggie Jackson, 1975
Mickey Klutts
Paul Mitchell
Joe Wallis
Herb Washington
Philadelphia Phillies
Warren Brusstar
Steve Carlton
Nino Espinosa
Terry Harmon
Bud Harrelson
Tom Hilgendorf
Ryan Howard
Jim Lonborg
Greg Luzinski
Garry Maddox, 1976
Ron Reed
Pete Rose
Mike Schmidt (with Dick Allen)
Pittsburgh Pirates
Mike Easler
Dock Ellis
Tim Foli
Richie Hebner
Grant Jackson
Tim Jones
Doc Medich
Bob Moose
Ed Ott
Willie Stargell
Kent Tekulve
St. Louis Cardinals
John Curtis
Rich Folkers
Bob Gibson
Mario Guerrero, 1976
Bake McBride
Ken Reitz
Ted Simmons
Reggie Smith
Garry Templeton
Mike Tyson
John Urrea
San Diego Padres
Paul Dade
Rollie Fingers
Danny Frisella
Oscar Gamble
Randy Jones
Willie McCovey
Gaylord Perry
Vicente Romo
Ozzie Smith
Bobby Valentine
Dave Winfield
San Francisco Giants
Jack Clark
John D'Acquisto
Darrell Evans
Vic Harris
Marc Hill
Johnnie LeMaster
Garry Maddox, 1975
Greg Minton
Bobby Murcer
Bill North
Joe Strain
Seattle Mariners
Glenn Abbott
Kurt Bevacqua, 1977
Bruce Bochte
Pete Broberg
Larry Cox
Skip Jutze, 1978
Mario Mendoza
Larry Milbourne
Tom Paciorek
Mike Parrott
Bill Stein
Stan Thomas
Texas Rangers
Jim Bibby
Bert Blyleven
Jeff Burroughs
Leo Cardenas
Dock Ellis
Bill Hands
Bill Hands (correction)
Jim Mason
Brandon McCarthy
Jim Sundberg
Don Stanhouse
Jeff Terpko
Ramon Vasquez
Bump Wills
Toronto Blue Jays
Bob Bailor
Rick Bosetti
Bob Davis
Luis Gomez
Balor Moore
Dave Roberts
John Scott
Tony Solaita and Craig Kusick
Otto Velez
Behold The Unsortable
Big League Brothers
Bobby Bonds
Mitch Cohen
The Cardboard God All-Stars
Carmen Fanzone?
Father & Son
Mario Guerrero, 1979
Mike Kekich and Fritz Peterson
Byung-Hyun Kim
Eddie Leon
Cory Lidle
Paul Lindblad
Major League Leading Firemen, 1975
Paul Mather
1976 Victory Leaders
Dick Pole and Peter LaCock
Tim Redding
Rookie Infielders
'78 Checklist
'78 Rookie Outfielders
Turn Back the Clock
Dan Uggla
Roundball Interludes
The Basketball Kid, Part 1
The Basketball Kid, Part 2
The Basketball Kid Takes a Stand
The Basketball Kid Takes a Victory Lap
The Basketball Kid's Official Results
Bucks '80-'81 Team Leaders
Darryl Dawkins
Gerald Henderson
Swen Nater
Mike Newlin
Dennis Johnson
Magic Johnson
Wayne Rollins
Play Ball!
Love versus Hate
The World Is a Cardboard Rectangle
The World Is a Cowhide Sphere
The World Is Wide
Syndication

rss2.0

Add to My Yahoo!
The Basketball Kid Takes a Victory Lap
2008-06-18 06:26
by Josh Wilker
 
Untitled

This photo was taken in the fall of 1983, when I was 15 years old. I had been at boarding school for a couple of months. By then I’d played enough pickup basketball at the school to understand that my place in the school’s basketball universe was marginal at best. I looked like my brother, who had directly preceded me at the school and who had served as a human victory cigar on the excellent varsity team, fans chanting for him during blowouts, but I wasn’t as big or as skilled as my brother. I knew this already, even before I’d come to the school. All the teams I’d ever played on had sucked, each season horrific, a Donner Party pantomime, and I’d been far from the best player on even those teams. At the end of the last of those seasons, my 10th grade junior varsity campaign, I told the varsity coach I was going away to boarding school. He had gotten angry with my brother for doing the same a couple years earlier. I was expecting the same treatment, an impassioned lecture on why I shouldn’t leave. He just looked at me and shrugged, then turned back to some paperwork.

"Good luck," he muttered.

Still, I clung to the hope that basketball would be a way for me to find some place in the world. How could I not? I didn't see that I had anything else.

To get in shape for basketball season at boarding school, I took distance running as my fall gym class. A turning point in my life came the day, a few weeks into the semester, when I discovered I could show up for pre-run roll call, then let the instructor lurch way out ahead of me with a pack of untroubled youth who had enrolled in the class, and then veer off the path, dart behind a building, and saunter back to the dorm to laze around for the rest of the afternoon. The seed had been planted: it was frighteningly easy to fake it.

But I didn’t seize upon this discovery, at least not at first. I still wanted, at least on some level, to be more than a faker. I went on most of the distance runs, and by the day the above photo was taken, I was in pretty good shape. That day was the running at the school of something called the Pie Race, one of the oldest footraces in America. Everyone who ran the race under a certain time got a pie.

When I first saw this photo, a week or so after it was taken by my dorm parent, I was mortified. The kid who had begun to learn how to fake it wanted to be the kid who didn’t seem to care. It struck me as painfully uncool to be captured in a moment of puke-coaxing effort. But it was the home stretch of the race, and even though dozens of runners had already finished ahead of me, reinforcing my status as a marginal, I still very much wanted to do my best. The picture embarassed me.

As I look at it now, twenty-five years later, I see a kid who was trying. Soon enough this kid would begin to embrace his lot in life as a marginal type, a goof-off, a loser, but in this moment he’s still trying to miraculously discover himself among the ranks of the winners. If you look closely, you can see a familiar figure on the shirt he’s chosen to wear on the day of the tradition-haunted school-wide race. It’s the same winking, cane-leaning, basketball-spinning leprechaun that, late last night, Kevin Garnett put at the center of his first act as (to use his term) a "certified" winner.

Comments
2008-06-18 07:15:22
1.   chiros13
Just looking for some closure....were you fast enough to get a pie?

Our HS cross-country team was ridiculously good. Some multi-decade long undefeated streak or something like that. I figured anyone could do it, so in the summer between sophomore and junior year I got a copy of their summer training schedule from the coach. I think I ran once that summer, then went back to playing stickball and pickup hoops. If I couldn't outrun them, at minimum I could outrebound them.

2008-06-18 08:19:48
2.   Josh Wilker
1 : Yeah, I got a pie, an apple pie I think it was. However, I have an aversion to all fruit (someday I'll delve further into this personality defect), so after I got my pie I put it down on the ground and walked away. When I looked back a golden retriever was eating it.
2008-06-18 08:25:21
3.   turkeyleg
This post reminds me of that great story by Alan Sillitoe, The Loneliness of The Long Distance Runner.

http://www.amazon.com/Loneliness-Long-Distance-Runner-Contemporary-Fiction/dp/0452269083/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product

2008-06-18 08:45:30
4.   chiros13
It'd be terrible to lose you and this blog, Josh, if you got scurvy. Just be careful out there.
2008-06-18 08:46:22
5.   Chyll Will
2 Ah, such is life. Blondes get everything while the rest have to make sacrifices.

3 What about "Pie Goes To the Runner"? >;)

2008-06-18 08:56:08
6.   Bob Timmermann
And I thought I was bad because I don't like peaches. But I eat most other fruits.

No scurvy for me.
My rickets went away.
The pellagra and beriberi are gone too.

2008-06-18 08:57:47
7.   Josh Wilker
4 : I have a couple loopholes in my unusual dietary orthodoxy that I hope will continue to keep scurvy at bay. Because I grew up drinking Tang I'm able to stomach orange juice. I also willfully side with the shaky-ground-standing vegetable-sayers in the great "What is a tomato?" debate.
2008-06-18 09:18:19
8.   Ken Arneson
I have the same aversion to fruit and berries. I'm a "supertaster", so I find their tastes too intense. Juices are better, because I can water them down.
2008-06-18 09:29:12
9.   Josh Wilker
8 : Compadre! For my early years I thought I was the only fruit-avoider in the world and guarded what seemed to me my shameful secret. Now I don't care quite so much and am used to the inevitable curious questioning that ensues ("Even [fruit name]? How could you not like those? Well, what about [another fruit name]?"

Interesting to hear the "supertaster" explanation in that I'm a "sub-taster". I have a severely retarded sense of smell, which I guess dulls my taste, and I've theorized that it's the offensively over-the-top textures of fruit that disgusts me.

Funny that my sideways attempt to revel in a day-after chat about the team that helped carry me through adolescence has veered into a discussion about fruit. Celtics talk? Anybody?

2008-06-18 09:37:01
10.   turkeyleg
9 Garnett's post-game, on-court interview w/ Michelle Tafoya was one of the most amazingly bizarre things I've ever seen.

In case you missed it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THC90MvNE5U

2008-06-18 09:45:58
11.   Josh Wilker
10 : The athlete's frequent moment-of-triumph phrase--"Words can't describe it"--was both illustrated and obliterated by Garnett in that interview. He was a momentarily insane volcano of joy, pride, gratitude, and probably a bunch of other things lost in translation.
2008-06-18 10:10:48
12.   Josh Wilker
As I revel in the Finals aftermath, I came across this anecdote about the rivalry (to me, last night's pummeling evens the score for the '87 baby skyhook) from an ESPN interview with Bill Walton:

Interviewer: Is there a moment that comes to mind that encapsulates the NBA's greatest rivalry?
Walton: I'd go back to my very first Lakers-Celtics game, an exhibition game in the fall of '85. The Lakers had just beaten the Celtics that June, and on the opening tip, a fight broke out, and everyone was involved. Both benches, the coaches, the media, the fans, everybody. And I look over, and I see our great coach KC Jones—the coach most like John Wooden that I've ever played for—kneeling on Michael Cooper's chest. He's got Michael's shoulders pinned-back, and he's just pummeling Michael in the face. Now, Michael never cut his fingernails—which used to upset us because he'd scratch us up—so Michael is cat fighting with KC, trying to get him off, and KC is just pounding him. Finally, the fight breaks up, and everybody goes back to the benches and KC Jones, our brilliant leader—who has blood on his shirt, scratches all over his face, tie totally disheveled—looks at me, gives me a big right-handed fist-pump, and says: "I love this game."

2008-06-18 10:44:25
13.   wireroom
Watered down juice is the only way I can drink it!
2008-06-18 11:35:40
14.   Jeb
12 Josh -- I'm trying not to be too much of a party pooping Yankees naysayer. I'm not an NBA fan so I really don't view the Celtics like I view the Red Sox, but damn, has ESPN gone overboard or what? I like all the still shots on sportscenter of players hugging the trophy. It's like they've declared a sacred religious holiday in Bristol. I don't remember seeing any of that when the G-Men (who I also don't like) took the Pats down this year.
2008-06-18 11:36:02
15.   chiros13
The Lakers needed Andrew Toney.
2008-06-18 11:43:35
16.   Josh Wilker
14 : I hear you. No matter what happens in the world of sports, count on corporate overkill to stomp the life out of it.

15 : Toney was awesome, but I think the Lakers have a more pressing need for someone like Charles Oakley. In the first half last night they got zero offensive boards.

2008-06-18 11:48:29
17.   chiros13
OK, so maybe they needed Toney and Oakley.

But now I'm thinking maybe one of the players' moms (or Jeanne Buss) brought down quartered oranges to the locker room at halftime, just like my mom at those god-awful soccer games. Most of the Lakers were like Josh and Bob Timmerman, yet too noble to turn them down. They then played the second halves sick to their stomachs.

Yeah, that's the ticket!

2008-06-18 11:49:43
18.   Jeb
16 when my Cowboys win the Super Bowl this year, I am expecting that ESPN will have a month long parade through Bristol.
2008-06-18 12:30:59
19.   Bob Timmermann
I like oranges.
2008-06-18 12:42:27
20.   Brent is a Dodger Fan
They had a class in distance running? At my school, one ran for the Cross Country team or had a gym class in something more sport-like, but didn't just run distance.

Oh, and I need no reminders today about last night's thrashing. Though this is nothing like the 80s, it feels very very wrong to see the Celtics win.

2008-06-18 12:50:34
21.   Josh Wilker
20 : Yes, I don't know why. They had a lot of phys. ed. classes; it was a big school. I think every faculty person had to teach or coach some sort of sport-related thing. Distance running was taught by a nice guy who taught Russian history and language classes. He often did a cornball stunt while running where he pretended to smack his head into a road sign (he just thumped them with a hand up near his head and pretended to recoil). He also had a T-shirt with a commie hammer and sickle that had been shaped into a smilie face. He was probably in his forties. Despite all the running he died not long after I left the school, something I think of practically every time I manage to go for a run.
2008-06-22 23:19:05
22.   brer Ian
I'd never heard the tale of KC and Coop. Very toothsome.
2008-06-23 00:31:41
23.   walbers
josh, what was your school name? i'm a former distance runner of modest national success (a lifetime ago) and i seem to recall that this race launched the career of someone famous...either Frank Shorter or Bill Rodgers. Perhaps that legend still exists in school lore. 1983 would only have been maybe 10-20 years from their heyday. rgds, will
2008-06-23 03:22:29
24.   Josh Wilker
23 : Right, it was the first race ever run by Frank Shorter, in 1963 or '64 (Northfield Mt. Hermon is the name of the school.)
2008-06-23 16:25:49
25.   walbers
bingo! that's it Josh.... now it won't be driving me crazy trying to remember which guy it was. rgds, will
Post a comment   (Help)

To comment, please log in.

Not a member? Register!