
I
love sleeping. I also enjoy, in descending order, napping, resting,
lying around, sitting there, staring off into the middle distance,
leaning on girders, slouching, standing, and aimlessly walking. It's
possible that my slack physical--or is it moral?--makeup is one of the
reasons I have spent such an inordinate amount of my life contemplating
baseball. With one notable exception, baseball affords its players
significant spans of empty time, outfielders often free to wonder about
their disintegrating marriages or what kind of cheese to get on their
next cheeseburger, infielders in their more anxious moments between
pitches at liberty to polish the tics of their various
obsessive-compulsive disorders, relief pitchers able to loaf and laze
for most of the game like natives of an imaginary island paradise that
smells of tobacco juice and Tiger Balm, starting pitchers buoyed on
their occasional work days by the knowledge that they can, if they so
choose, spend the following few days reorganizing their record
collection or gambling at the dog track or, like the long-successful
southpaw Mickey Lolich, becoming morbidly obese without any of these
lifestyle choice necessarily having a negative impact on their
abilities. And designated hitters, of course, can pass all but a tiny
fraction of each game in the clubhouse eating Pringles and watching
pornography. Only the catcher, wrapped in heavy pads and armor,
involved in every play and busy between plays with the planning of the
next play, is barred from taking pause. He is like a drummer in a
go-nowhere acid rock band, chained to the beat while his cohorts
explore all manner of irrelevancies, or like that one thin pale guy at
the hippie commune who washes all the dishes and mails in the
zoning-fee checks while everyone else has chant-filled orgies and
wanders through the forest to carry on tearful conversations with moss.
Jim
Sundberg, winner of seven consecutive Gold Glove awards, caught 90% or
more of his team's games in more seasons (six) than any man in history.
In each of these seasons his team played 81 home games in the
blast-furnace heat of an undomed stadium in Arlington, Texas. In two of
those seasons, 1977 and 1978, he even finished 15th in the MVP voting,
despite the fact that he was only slightly more imposing at bat than
cartoon-oriole-haunted Rich Dauer. His worth was based almost
completely on the fact that he adhered so fully and competently to that
most coachly of all exhortations--"keep your head in the game"--(a demand
which, because of my consistent failure to follow it, still grates on
my ears all these many years after it was repeatedly shouted in my
direction) that he was able to prop up his entire team like Atlas
supporting the world. His Texas Ranger squads were known to stake early
claims on first place only to wilt as the heat continued to pound down
throughout the summer. But while the Bump Willses and Jim Umbargers of
the world faltered, Jim Sundberg continued to perform his demanding job
effectively day in and day out, an Atlas who remained in his
world-supporting squat even as his precious burden crumbled to pebbles.
With all this in mind, I can't help thinking that in this card Jim
Sundberg's penetrating squint, which seems to be directed straight at
me, betrays a keen premonition on his part that I too will disappoint
him, that I haven't got what it takes, that I am, just as I have often
suspected, a fairly tall but mostly worthless pile of shit.
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