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"The basketball guys just don’t know how to win," he boomed. He always boomed whatever he had to say. By contrast our coach, a disheveled English teacher, most often muttered. (Sometimes he whined.)
During the pickup game the soccer guys looked like they might be able to prove the athletic director's point. I started to get flashbacks to similar semi-official demoralizing basketball contests from my youth. Twice the guys from the grade younger than my grade challenged us to a game, once when I was in 8th grade and once when I was in 10th grade, and both times they beat us. During a battle for a rebound in the grim late stages of the second game, my last contest before I went away to boarding school, my hand inadvertently landed on the face of their best big man and out of frustration I yanked down, throwing him to the ground. The varsity coach was watching from the risen stage behind the basket. He started screaming at me. Luckily the guy I threw down, who could have ripped me limb from limb if he’d wanted to, was one of those genial, slow-to-anger behemoths, and he just stared at me, stunned, as he got to his feet.
"Get out of the game, Wilker!" the varsity coach yelled. "Go cool down!" I went into the locker room and I think I cried a little. It was shameful to get beat by younger guys, especially since the beating was implicitly sanctioned by the varsity coach, who looked down on us with disgust. It made me feel like I was nothing.
So here we went again a few years later, the soccer champions matching us basket for basket even though basketball was just something they did once in a while when they weren’t winning soccer tournaments, raising championship banners, and having sex with all the prettiest coeds. But eventually we just started feeding our bad-breathed center the ball. Sean was considerably bigger than any of their players, and he had a nice turnaround jumper, which he hit several times in a row to give us a victory that, though it didn’t wipe the smirks off the soccer guys’ faces, at least spared us total humiliation.
Anyway, I guess that’s where Doug Bird’s beard is pointing today. I didn't think that's where it would lead but I'm like a saxaphone that's been run over by a pickup truck. Everything comes out crooked, wheezing. I thought I would be able to capture my many feelings about the expression on Doug Bird's face. His mirthful, somewhat unhinged expression and his unruly hair exploding from every available pore makes him look like one of the backwoods guys who used to sail past our house once a year in pickup trucks to get to the nearby Tunbridge Fair. They had girlie shows there in one of the tents that wasn't being used for livestock displays, and though I never went I imagine the audience was full of guys who looked like Doug Bird, drunk, cackling, wearing jeans and red checkered hunting jackets and John Deere hats, stomping their dirty shitkickers on the sawdust to the rhythm of the music accompanying the disrobing dancers, the air laced with the rural carnival aromas of smoke and cotton candy and manure. I guess some people know how to win; the rest of us follow a more crooked path, taking our pleasures where we can.
"Yeehaw!" Doug Bird shouts, his beard pointed up at the show.
Here's a 2003 article about Bird (some of my friends who have worked on young adult books might recognize name of the author, Norman Macht) in which Bird reflects on his career, making sure to express his gratitude for an anonymous antiwar activist:
"There were two weeks to go in the semester," Bird recalled, "and I just packed up my car and went home. Two weeks later I got a notice to report for a physical and immediate induction into the Army. Then somebody blew up the draft board in South Pasadena. All the paperwork went up in smoke. By the time they got everything straightened out, they had switched over to a lottery system where they drew lots with birthdates on them. My number was up in the 280s, and they never called me.
"If I knew who blew up the draft board, I'd thank him, cause otherwise I'd have been gone. End of baseball career."
Who knows how many lives were changed by that one act.
Nater fancied himself as a golfer and he would use my Mom's old golf clubs to play with. Then he broke one and didn't bother to replace it. I thought that was so lame, this seven footer using clubs made for a woman 5'4". After that, every time I saw him I began continually asking him in the form of a greeting, "How's the weather up there?". Oh, Nater didn't care for that at all.
So Mr. Bird, how are your Weathermen doing today? You owe them, don't you think? Peace.
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