
"But the point is to live." -- Albert Camus
And
now, in the final of my digressions honoring or at least mentioning
players clad in the uniforms of all eight qualifiers for the 2006
playoffs (with a pause to honor the munsoning of Cory Lidle), here is
the incomparable Lenny Randle, caught in the midst of an apparently
enjoyable moment of homoerotic horseplay with a San Diego Padre first
baseman, possibly Gene Richards.
Happy thoughts come to my mind
when I think of Lenny Randle, the first being--as it probably is for
most baseball-minded people not named Frank Lucchesi--of a third baseman
refusing the apparent doom of a perfectly bunted ball by cartoonishly
pitching to his hands and knees to try to push the ball foul with deep
exhalations from his lungs.
But then I think of my dad, who
always put aside his triple-hatred of riding the subway, sports, and
crowds to take my brother and me to a ballgame at Shea once during each
of our yearly visits to see him in New York City. While he spent most
of these games either glaring at the
New York Times or
jamming his fingers in his ears to battle the sound of Laguardia jets
passing close by overhead, my brother and I took a break from the grim,
ominous march of rooting for the Red Sox by yelling carefree
encouragement to the late-'70s Mets, who seemed paradoxically
spectacular and incompetent: first baseman Willie Montanez making
incredible scoops of wild throws that were already several seconds too
late; catcher John Stearns forming a brick wall at home plate in hopes
of impeding the runner as the relay peg sailed into the dugout;
centerfielder Lee Mazzilli, cap flying free to reveal his immaculate
Scott Baio feather cut, sprinting across the brown Queens grass in his
notoriously custom-tailored, form-fitting uniform and diving stylishly
for line dives that touched down yards away from his outstretched
glove. Even the lingering vestiges of the Mets' glory days seemed
affected by the glittering ineptitude, Jerry Koosman dashingly
windmilling and firing his way to a 3--15 record, Ed Kranepool clouting
pinch-hit drives to the warning track.
But nobody epitomized
this thoroughly enjoyable style of Rockette-kicking defeat from the
jaws of victory as much as Lenny Randle. Lenny Randle may have been to
some a talented disappointment but to me he was one of the few viable
answers to what Camus would call the absurdity of existence. I mean,
here we are, born to this life only to, well, put it this way: in
baseball terms, we're going to eventually get thrown out, and it's not
even going to be close. So why not ridiculously but sincerely try to
stretch that bloop double into a triple? Why not fly into the stands to
try to catch a foul ball headed for the loge seats? How many breaths do
we get? Why not cartoonishly pitch to the grass and use a few of those
breaths to push that perfect dying bunted ball to the other side of the
white chalk line?
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