Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2012 04:50:51 +0000 From: Douglas DD DD Subject: The Big Time Chapter 8 Welcome. In this chapter we continue the State Tournament game with the boys in high school. Going back to middle school we find out more about Marty's issues and learn about a couple of boys who are developing a crush on each other. There is no sex in this chapter, but you will learn more about some of the boys of Mayfield and their relationships with each other. The story is mine. Be 18 to read and be safe at everything. And please, donate to Nifty to keep the stories coming. Please email me at the thehakannen@hotmail.com. My email box has been empty and is looking to do something useful...like having email in it. State Semi-final Mustang Lineup 1. Jerome-Center Field (Senior) 2. Noah-Second Base (Junior) 3. Rich-Shortstop (Senior) 4. Marty-Third Base (Senior) 5. Scott-First Base (Junior) 6. Vince-Designated Hitter (Senior) (hitting for Kraig-Right Field) (Junior) 7. Kevin-Catcher (Junior) 8. Eric-Pitcher (Junior) 9. Hunter-Left Field (Junior) CHAPTER 8 SLIPPING AWAY Here we were in the top of the fourth inning, playing a State Tournament semi-final game against the undefeated Grant Valley Jackrabbits, trailing 4-0, and actually thinking we were in a position to win. Now that I was getting my head screwed on right I remembered why I love these guys. They finally had me thinking the same thing; that we were going to win, and considering the hole my mind was in when I stumbled out of bed this morning, that was an amazing change in my thinking. Well, if you've been in sports for a long time then you know that it isn't a good idea to get too happy when you're competing, especially when you're behind by four runs almost half-way through your game. Happiness has a way of coming around and biting you in the ass. At the same time I seemed to be learning my own personal lesson, we still had a lesson to learn as a team and the top of the fourth was going to be our teacher. The first batter was Paul, the Jackrabbit pitcher. He was batting in the six hole and had walked his first time up. He was the runner Marty doubled off of second when he made his great diving catch. On a 2-1 pitch Paul hit a dribbler to Marty at third which Marty had to charge hard. He made a good pick-up, but Paul was running all-out to first. He was surprisingly quick for a big guy. Of course, looking back at it, we all knew that Marty should have eaten the ball, but sometimes competitive juices say otherwise, and Marty made a hurried throw to first that went over Connor's head and ended up bouncing off the concrete wall in front of the stands and rolling along the wall towards the bullpen. Before Kraig could come from right and get to it, Paul ended up at second. The Jackrabbits had a man in scoring position with nobody out and we knew we couldn't afford to give up another run. It was time to suck it up and get out of the jam. My teammates had covered my back for the first three innings; it was time for me to return the favor. It seemed almost too easy when I got the next batter to strike out looking on a sweet change-up. The next batter was the one who hit the home run off of me in the second. I was still trying to figure out how I gave up a home run to the number eight batter in a ballpark that was 335 feet down the line. Our home field is 318 down the line which seems plenty big enough to me. I would say that Marty and Scott, and maybe Carl if he was healthy, were the only players we have with the power to reach that 335 mark without a bit of help from the wind, and they are in our three and four power spots. On the other hand I did throw him a pretty fat pitch. This time, however, he hit a sky high pop-up to left on an 0-1 pitch. I watched Hunter camp under it and then move around some and finally get his glove up in front of his face. It was obvious that he had lost the ball in the sun. It was even more obvious that he hadn't taken his sun glasses with him to the outfield. He finally started backpedaling, which was akin to death for an outfielder. Sure enough the ball dropped behind him. The runner on second saw that Hunter was in trouble, but didn't gamble that Hunter would miss the can of corn and stayed close to second. When the ball dropped in he could only make it as far as third. The batter ended up at second with a sun aided double. The Jackrabbits now had runners on second and third with one out. Coach had the infield come in for a play at the plate. The strategy almost paid off when their number nine hitter grounded to Rich at short. But Rich didn't field the ball as cleanly as he needed to and his throw to the plate was offline allowing the run to score. It was now 5-0 with runners on the corners. Things were unraveling in a hurry. The leadoff hitter for the Rabbits was up. Coach told the ump he wanted to put him on, so the ump awarded him first base. This now gave us a force at home. Bases loaded, one out, and the game felt like it was getting out of control. There was a lot of noise coming from the Jackrabbit fans as well as their dugout. I think the Jackrabbit players and their fans were sensing the kill. We had the infield in again knowing we couldn't afford to give up any more runs. I took some deep breaths. I had to throw strikes and I had to throw good ones. The two hole batter for the Jackrabbits had tripled and struck out in his two times to the plate. Coach Sanders came out of the dugout and headed for the mound and Kevin came from behind the plate. This was his second visit in four innings and I know he wasn't happy about it. A coach gets three free visits during a game and Coach Sanders didn't like using his visits early. Noah arrived from second just ahead of them. He was always there for one of my mound conferences. Usually Marty, as team captain, was the infielder who wandered over, but he knew how I liked having Noah there when I was pitching and he usually hung around third kicking the base staring into the stands or up at the sky. "Keep it low, see if we can get a grounder," Coach said. He knew when I was throwing well my pitch had a good sink to it and led to a lot of ground balls. "He's yours kid," Kevin said. "Sinker on the inside part to start." "Wind-up or stretch?" I asked Coach Sanders. "This is a team that likes to overpower their opponent. I don't see them playing for a single run. I see them going for a lot of runs at once so they can ten run us, so I'm not worried about a squeeze. Besides we have the infield in. Go ahead and pitch from the windup." The stretch was how a pitcher kept a runner close to his base. Pitching from a windup allowed the runner to wander farther away from it. Coach Sanders reminded everybody in the infield to go home if it was an easy play, but to be sure to get an out no matter what. A lot of teams, including ours, had a way of getting excited and forgetting how important getting an out was. Kevin and Coach left the mound. Noah gave me a pat on the butt and said, "Remember, it's all about focus." Noah is probably the only high school player in the state who would leave a mound conference talking about focus. The noise in the ballpark was reaching a high level as their fans were really raising the decibels. There was some noise from our side, but we hadn't given our fans much to cheer about. As I got ready to engage the rubber I swore I could hear a loud, deep voice yelling, "HOOF `EM, ERIC!" I smiled inside. Whether I heard right or not I knew my good friend the Donkey was in the stands and cheering for his alma mater and for me. My first pitch showed that Coach Sanders was right. The batter was so eager to get four runs in at once that he took a huge swing at my sinker and generated a lot of air but no contact. The next pitch was a tummy-tucker as I went inside to keep him off of the plate. While I had to throw strikes I also had to pitch smart. I had enough confidence in my control to send him a little message about crowding the plate. He took another big swing on the next pitch, barely getting a piece of it and fouling back against the screen. The count was 1-2. The next pitch was one of those pitches that happens to every pitcher. If you are a pitcher you know that most pitches leave your hand okay. You're pretty sure you did everything right and you threw a decent pitch. Some pitches you're just not sure about and some pitches when you let go you know you screwed it up. Then there are those pitches that, as soon you release it, you know you threw the pitch exactly the way you wanted to throw it, that the pitch was nearly perfect. Now that doesn't mean the results are perfect, since hitters have a way of hitting even your best stuff, but you know you threw the absolute best pitch you could throw. That is what happened on my 1- 2 pitch, which looked like it was coming in fat, but then the bottom dropped out just as the hitter swung. But he was a good hitter and he got enough of it to send a hard grounder to my left, a two hopper right to Noah. Noah fielded it cleanly and fired right to home for the force, and Kevin, not hesitating for a second, threw it to Scott at first to get the batter by a step. It was a thing of beauty to watch, a gorgeous second-to-home-to-first double play that took the Jackrabbits out of the inning. Suddenly all of the noise was coming from our side of the ballpark. I pumped my fist, knowing it couldn't have been done better at Safeco Field by any team. My pitch had done exactly what it was supposed to do. Of course even the best moments have their downside and as I walked across the foul line their first baseman passed me. "You faggots got lucky, but don't forget who's ahead." If he'd just reminded us he was ahead I would have been okay with it, that's part of the game. But the faggot part got to me, just like the whole party atmosphere in their dugout in the second had gotten to me earlier. Apparently what I had to say to him last inning at first didn't register with him. I was ready to say some smart ass comment back when I remembered what Coach Sanders said about these kinds of situation. "Talk's cheap," he would tell us. And Noah liked to remind me that karma had a way of coming back and biting someone in the butt. Whatever, this time I said nothing and walked to the dugout like I'd never heard anything, although I know that he knew that I had heard every word. Noah led off the bottom of the fourth. When it came to baseball smarts the three smartest players on the team were Noah, Kevin, and me. Hell, Noah was up at top when it came to any kind of smarts. Now, if I saw a little 5'6 kid like Noah come up to the plate and I was playing third I'd be playing him in. I mean how hard is he going to hit the ball? Besides, small kids seem to love to drop down bunts. A lot of smaller boys liked to take a walk, too, using their small strike zone to their advantage. That is their reputation. But while Noah never turned down a walk to get on base, he was an aggressive little hitter. We were all eager to see that he had in mind to lead off the inning. Like everybody else at the top of the order he'd struck out his first time up. Marty was the first to point out where the third baseman was. He was playing Noah deep, his whole attitude seeming to day, "You can't hit our pitcher, so I'm going to sit back here and watch you strike out again." Noah saw the situation just like the rest of us did. Coach Sanders didn't give us a sign to bunt our way on or anything like that. He left it to us. In fact he pretty much left the first five innings to us. Almost all of his signs were decoys. "But I own the last two innings, and it would be best if you never forgot that." Noah didn't keep us in suspense. On the first pitch he dropped a perfect bunt along the third base line. All the third baseman could do on a hit like this was charge in and leave the ball alone hoping it would go foul. Who knows, it might have done so, but the attitude of the Jackrabbits was too arrogant to do that. It now seemed to me to be saying, "Bunt all you want, but I'm going to throw your little ass out at first." He picked up the ball and then made the first Jackrabbit mistake of the game as he threw a ball to first that he should have eaten, just like Marty had done in the top of the inning. Only Marty's mistake was one of being a little overeager, while this mistake was just plain dumb since Noah was almost at first when he threw it. When all of the dust settled, Noah was on second as a result of the single and error. Rich followed that up with a ground out to second, advancing Noah to third. Sure it was a productive out, but we were down by five and needed all of the hits we could get. Still, we were in a good position to score our first run. Now Marty, our cleanup hitter, was up. Marty had his own brand of baseball smarts. Maybe baseball instincts would be a better term. He had a way of reading situations and coming through without analyzing things the way Noah or I did. He took the first pitch down the middle, getting his timing down. Not a bad idea considering their pitcher was still throwing nothing but heat. The next pitch was like the first, only it ended up bouncing off of the left field fence as Marty got it all. As he chugged around the bases the left and centerfielders ran it down and by the time they got the throw to the relay man Marty was heading for third. Marty and the throw got there at almost the same time, but Marty made a great slide to the inside of the bag to avoid the tag and was called safe. Noah scored easily off of Marty's triple and we had our first run. Scott was up next and he didn't even bother to let a pitch go by. He lined the first pitch up the middle for a run scoring single. Our fans were now getting very noisy and that noise went up a few notches when Vince blooped a single to right and Scott made it all the way to third. We had runners on the corners and one out. With Kevin the next batter I was supposed to go out on deck, but Coach had Danny go out instead. Since nobody was warming up I knew I'd be going back out to pitch the fifth and Coach wanted me to not worry about hitting. Running the bases wouldn't be a problem since he would have used a courtesy runner for me if I had been hitting. I should have been disappointed, but Danny was a good hitter and a good friend and I was happy he was getting a chance to get into the game. Kevin hit a fly to center that scored Scott and we were suddenly within two. A game that had been on the verge of a blowout at the top of the inning was suddenly a contest. Danny ended up striking out and we ran out on the field now down by only two runs at 5-3. A good pitcher stops the other team after his team has scored and the time had come for me to show that, faggot junior or not, I was a good pitcher and I was determined that the Jackrabbits were not going to score. ++++++++++