At end of December the lad from Vermont sent me a Shohei Ohtani number 17 baseball shirt. He knows I join millions in respect and delight watching the dual-competent pitcher-hitter play the game. I liked him, and the Angels, even before he signed with the Dodgers. (I hesitate saying the LA Dodgers.)
The lad knows I've never stopped rooting for the Brooklyn Dodgers even after they left Flatbush in 1957. Such a refusal to acknowledge a reality makes me sympathetic to the former and to-be president refusing to acknowledge he lost the 2020 election. It takes a curious derangement to cling to something not true.
So there's the shirt.
It hangs on the knob of ironing board compartment in kitchen next to louvered doors hiding washer and dryer next to fridge.
It is a lovely short sleeved white shirt with blue lettering. I'll need a baseball under shirt (raglan shirt) with colored sleeves when I wear it. It's only right. As a third basement (with scatter arm) and first baseman (with fielder's glove) during sandlot years, I loved the ritual and sound of the game. As a skinny kid with little power and less raw skill I was little feared and less celebrated.
By the time I got to college there was a former Boston Red Sox pitcher who was our coach and threw batting practice. It was the only time as batter my swings sent balls deep into outfield. My first at bat in league game sent ball over left fielders head. The throw-in scooted away from cut-off man toward dugout and I made it home. If it was recorded as a homer it was my only one.
It was nice of the lad to send the shirt. I know LA won the World Series and Ohtani became the sole occupant of the 50-50 club (50 homers and 50 stolen bases in one season). And I know the odds are even that I'll drop my boycott of the dodgers someday now that Walter O'Malley has left the ballpark. But like giving up my subscription to The Washington Post and no longer watching Morning Joe over their capitulation to an undeserving politician, there has to be some standard of crankiness worth preserving.
For my recent birthday last year a former student sent me a battered baseball and a book on Yogi Berra. It made me smile.
I can't completely mask my appreciation of the game and its history.
There is some joy in Mudville.