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Since I have always lived more in my mind than in the geographical location where I receive my mail, and since that mind has more often than not focused itself on baseball, it’s accurate to say I grew up not in any particular state or county but in the American League East. The Brewers were there, for the first few years a blurry, negligible presence, like a quiet, nondescript kid in the back of the class, the kind who never seemed to change from year to year (not that anyone was ever really looking, not even the teacher). Then gradually as the ’70s waned that kid hit a testosterone-heavy growth spurt and hair exploded from his face and he got suspended for bringing a switchblade to school and suspended again for knocking his vocational arts teacher unconscious and in general made you feel uneasy when you passed him in the high school parking lot as he leaned on his dented Camaro with his eyes hidden behind mirror shades and his hands on the Wrangler-bejeaned ass of his raspy-voiced world-weary girlfriend.
Ah, the Brewers of my puberty years. I didn’t realize I’d miss them when they followed that brief loud prime by receding into anonymity again, hair disappearing, muscles liquefying, bravado reduced to the occasional impotent beer-drunk rant against the many encroaching borders of life. I imagine as they first moved into this anticlimactic phase of their lives they resembled Bill Travers, still young, cleanshaven in accordance to employee rules, the only change from one year to the next the slight shift of facial expression from confused and questioning to confused and blurrily, sadly resigned.
Who even knows when they moved out of the American League East? One day you drove past their trailer where they’d spent the last several useless years, and the weeds spouting up through the engine of the dented Camaro up on blocks seemed even more overgrown than usual, no sign of the Brewers or the no longer scrawny but still world-weary woman or the couple's several nondescript towheaded quietly crying kids.
I still live in the American League East for the most part, i.e., in my mind, but I get my mail in a region affiliated most heavily with the National League Central. Turns out this is where the Brewers moved, like a factory worker who decided when the factory relocated that instead of taking severance pay he’d move the whole wreck of his life to another state entirely and take his chances there. Nothing really changed. Year after year the Brewers punched the clock. If a baseball card were produced to personify each of these years, the series of cards would again resemble the 1975 and 1976 cards of Bill Travers, as if the meek unchanging anonymity of childhood was the inescapable fate of their life.
Last night I listened to the end of the Milwaukee Brewers game on the radio. The crowd was roaring. Their newest acquisition, a towering, charismatic beefster, got the win, one of their two great young sluggers, an obese vegetarian, drove in a run, and their other great young slugger, The Hebrew Hammer, blasted a three-run homer. In other words, for the first time in many years, I looked straight at the Brewers, and it turns out the Brewers seem to have a glimmer in their eye like they might just throw a bowling ball through a plate glass window or put a guy in a headlock in the parking lot of a Molly Hatchet concert or find that long-missing part for their dented Camaro. In other words, lock up your daughters. Here come the long lost Brewers.
But then there are the Brewers, who have not been to the playoffs since 1982. It would be nice to see a small market team like them get in the playoffs. One way or another, one of those teams may not make it. But it seems as if the Wild Card ticket in is going to come from the Nat Central. So maybe both get in the playoffs? It's tough to think about. And sorry for such a disjointed posting. My head feels disjointed today. Like rusty wrenches, bolts and screws.
The BrewCrew have always been a favorite of mine probably because I loved the tandem of Yount/Molitor. I remember as a kid disliking Yount because he had the gall to want to play golf instead of baseball but then he became one of my favorites after Molitor joined the team.
Funny I was a big fan last year, this year I see to many holes to get me stirred. I think for the first time in my life since 1969 I may actually root for the Cubs since they had the balls to trade for Harden and Gaudin. Plus I like crazy Lou.
Anyone else think that these Bill Travers cards were two pictures from the same photo shoot? Unlike Bob Bailey's pictures (same pose, same look, but different background and different uniform), these two pictures look the same in almost every respect, just a slightly different angle.
Before scrutinizing these two cards I never really pictured the Topps guys taking more than one shot of each player during a shoot, but now I'm imagining the photographer snapping several shots while keeping up a yawning, desultory version of the prototypical fashion photographer (or pornographer) patter. Work it, Bill Travers, work it. Yes, yes, yes.
Looking at other '75 Brewers cards, I see Kevin Kobel in the old Yankee Stadium. Since it was being renovated in '74, and since he didn't have the yellow hat panel which was added in '74, the shot has to be from '73. He only pitched in two games that year--one in Yankee Stadium.
Go Brewers!!!! Been wearing my 1974-1977 Brewers Road cap (just like Travers) steadily this year. Grew up listening to Uecker and Merle Harmon and rooting for Boomer, Pedro Garcia, The Original Italian Stallion -Bob Coluccio, Davey May, Johnny Briggs, Timmy Johnson, the Money man, Jim Colborn and Kurt Bevaqua.
I, too, get my mail in the NL East while thinking constantly of the AL East. Messes up you regional football games, too-when I'd rather check in on the Jets or Dolphins or Bills, I get the Cowboys or Cardinals or Redskins game.
Josh, a wonderful site. I've been reading it in silence for several months now. Your writing is--as so many others have said--transcendent, and, as a baseball-card-collecting New Englander who lived and died with the Red Sox most intensely between 1976 and 1986, I often have an eerie sense of deja-vu as I read. Having recently moved overseas, Cardboard Gods has become a favorite escape where I can soak in memories of that most indelible of times, and enjoy your brilliant, poignant, and amusing flights of association.
A Travers quote from that 1977 baseball guide I keep citing:
"I was so sick, I thought I was going to die. ... I think my age and the fact I was an athlete and in good shape saved me."
Of course, he still managed to pitch 34 games and 240 innings in 1976, going 15-16 with a 2.81 ERA.
Boy, I wonder how well he would have done if he hadn't gotten sick.
And I get up and go to work in the AL East, but I will always be in the old NL East, before there was a Central.
Just as I will always be living (baseballically) in the 80s and 90s, and I will never quite move ahead again, like someone has just lifted the stylus off the record. I can see the world keep revolving, but the music is just a memory. RIP Les Expos, Nos Amours...
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