Thursday, September 21, 2006

9.17.06: Rehash

Wanted: Softball Players. Cannot be afraid of potential rain. Must enjoy playing softball. Must not be a ten year-old girl. People who play in a cold rain are gamers. One guy is afraid of water, and he played. That makes him a gamer-sissy. The guys who didn't show just because of a little rain are suckers. The game could most charitably be described as "not quite as bad as it could have been."

But to make tonight's game out to be meaningless or halfhearted would be unfair. Both teams wanted to win, one was just far more capable of doing so. Our team had more soft spots than Kathy Bates's nude scene in "About Schmidt." Then a couple of guys came in off the street, and things picked up. We had one lefty glove for three lefty players, which always makes life interesting. One of the "off the street" guys was a lefty who had to play righty, and in fifteen minutes he was better at "catch the ball, flip off the glove and throw the ball with the glove hand" than Jim Abbott ever was. Granted, Abbott only had one arm.

Game One:

First, let's discuss the Bounty Hunters(!). They played because Matt is producing a doc about a family of bounty hunters and the ties that bind and some such shit. It sounds good. Plus, the bounty hunters were real nice guys and brought a big audience of family members, who were also nice (and I’m not just saying that so they won’t hunt me down and break my spine). All in all, they were a welcome addition to the game. In fact, when a couple of people started grousing (you know who you are), newly-minted egomaniac Dan the Recap Man started yelling at everyone to shut up and play. You want to make a statement? Try adopting a child from an impoverished nation, "Dan." Step up to the plate and do something, instead of running around in that stupid hat acting like King Shit of Fuck Mountain.

At one point, we pulled a "dropped pop-up double play" when Mark failed to run out his pop-up. This was the culmination of a long evening spent arguing about the Infield Fly Rule, and whether it applies only with first and second/bases loaded, or if it also is in effect with just a man on first. Since we had not established the rule, our DP was overturned. This saddened Benge, who was right and knew it.

While the argument raged, I was busy directing some guy and his dog, who'd been walking down Leroy Street and sportingly searched for the ball. (They found it, incidentally, about twenty feet fair, but ricochets are tricky.) I don't know why I tried so hard to recover that ball. I hate that doughy, assy ball. If you don't hit it right on the nose, it goes a maximum of six feet. And any ball that is popped up comes at you with such ridiculous spin it is nearly impossible to catch:



More than the game, though, what fascinates me is the seemingly unlimited supply of do-gooders who only want to help us retrieve the ball. Innocent bystanders, all, who see us grown men pound a ball out of a children's field, smashing cars and windows and people's heads - and they can't wait to get it back in to us. They fetch it out of sewers, from beneath cars, fetid reaches of the park's garden, the pool, the handball court, wherever. We haven't found a place to hit it where someone won't rush to help us out. I mean, what the fuck? Isn't a New Yorker not supposed to help? I suppose there is that immediate instinct, perhaps bred into us all as kids, to run after a ball when we see one rolling around. Not unlike a dog in some ways.

Note: on gay pride day, it’s the women you want to have throwing the ball back into the park when someone hits it out. The guys can’t throw worth a shit.

Game 1 was won by Scissors 1-0, their first-ever victory over Rock in over 100 million tries.

Closer Hans Bungle (is that right?? or was it Rob?), pitching for Scissors, recorded at least three and I think actually four of our final six outs 1-3 or 1 unassisted. That's what I call a lights-out performance. I think I saw M. Rivera spying from Hudson Street, trying to figure out what if any adjustments he needs to make to get the Pinstripes on the right track.

Hans had himself a huge cheering section in Right Field. Curiously enough, that’s where he ended up for several innings. There were all kinds of chants for him, my personal favorite being: “Hans, we’ve got condoms!” Those are true fans.

And where was the Mantis? Busy working? Feeding? Beheaded by his woman during coitus?

Game Two:

I got caught in a hotbox. We missed Dinny in this one, although there was sufficient chaos. I actually feared for my life for a moment. There was a real sense of relief when I was tagged out but permitted to live. There is something glamorous about getting in a hotbox. It's like you're battle-tested after you've been through it, and you can brag to the kids about what it was like. It got to be such a badge of honor that people were purposely trying to get caught in the rundown, and one guy even brought a camera and began snapping pictures from the inside of the hotbox. I guess that cheapened it a little bit, because to me, the ultimate thrill of the hotbox is the sense of both abject terror and utter defiance you feel when you are caught in one. Like, "I may die here in this hotbox, but I am taking some of you down with me."

Danny hit a scoreboard home run. The ball hit the very top of the scoreboard with a satisfying “THUNK!” and everyone started screaming. As we all know, the more screaming, the better. Danny was screeching like a banshee as he rounded the bases and we all congratulated him as he passed by us. Then he was greeted by his own teammates in a big group hug at Home. It was like Hank Aaron’s 715th. All we needed were some drunk, tripping hippies storming the field and it would have been the same thing.

Lots of balls were hit over the fence, many with the wooden bat. The wooden bat is kind of good. Culprits included D. Lee, Justin, myself, Sandals, Alexi, and Eugene. Eugene's shot landed on a sleeping homeless man who cheerfully lobbed the ball back to us.

Alexi hit perhaps the hardest shot since The Thing With The Teeth showed up a couple of seasons back. It left the park in about an eighth of a second, and a debate ensued as to whether it went over the fence or through it. We couldn't find any holes in the fence, so we had no choice but to call him out. But if I had to testify in court as to what happened, I would say that he hit the ball so hard he changed its molecular structure, and it liquefied as it went through the fence. By the time we retrieved it, it had calmed down and become a solid again.

Joe Monkeyweb, who was catching, signaled that it was a HR. Kissel, from the mound, correctly called it foul. Like a scumbag, I pretended to be unsure. Our team attempted to lobby for the runs to count. I didn't tell them not to. After all, we were down by 4 runs with 7 minutes left. It was cheatin' time.

Kissel immediately moaned the stupidity of the called shot. The other balls were too hard to use without risking death upon bystanders. Soccer players swarmed the field thinking our game is over...

(Soccer players. Oh, boy. They are the devil’s business. Up to their usual bullshit down the right field line. Stretching and doing jumping jacks and twirly-whirlies and all kinds of shit. None of us like that. Not one little bit. Hans decided to do something about it. So, hitting lefty, he raked one down the line and hit a player mid-stretch. Well done, Hans.)

Next inning. We've managed to pull within one. Bases loaded, no outs, and Danny comes to the plate. "Call it!" we shout from the bases, but Danny shakes his head. The police are still out there, talking to Justin. So what does Danny do? Bam, first pitch, deep to left, over the garden, into the street maybe fifteen feet from the cop, who was just about to drive away. The cop himself tossed the ball back over the fence. Danny fell to his knees as the game -- and the moral high ground -- slipped away.

We won Game Two, 12-11, in the bottom of the "ninth" inning. The D. Lee's pulled an "Ambrose Shift" maneuver that really hadn't been set up properly in advance. One of their fielders sprinted over to the left side of the infield at the last minute to try to protect that entire side of the diamond. Matt G. made an incredible throw to the plate from deep in left field, but Dan K. came in high and hard like Pete Rose and jarred the ball loose. Pretty much kinda like that. I was quite worried he wouldn't make it, especially when he smashed into the wire fence "dugout" after rounding third. It was a little reminiscent of Sid Bream scoring on Francisco Cabrera's single to put the Braves in the 1992 World Series.

After the game, Big Jim Lang and I sat in the dugout, collecting our belongings and wondering what exactly cost us the game. I offered up an apology for my big fuckup. It went something like this:

Me: Shit, that was a tough one tonight. I really messed it up with that bad throw to second.
BJL: Oh, yeah. That was the game right there.
Me: Thanks.

T.W.I.S. Notes:

-Ambrose can no longer throw the ball. He claims to be experiencing no pain, but his throws are just terrible. I feel OK about this.

-Matt redefined "minimum effort" on a one-out grounder back to the mound. When the batting team is supplying a pitcher (its other simple duty), the pitcher is supposed to give a minimum effort in fielding his position. Most of us are comfortable with this concept from our work experience, but some truly take it to another level. On this play, Matt could have thrown home for an easy out (or a potential hotbox), or he could have thrown to second for an easy force, but instead, he took the out at first, allowing the run to score and the lead runner to advance. However, he did it with such calm smoothness, nobody on the other team really had the nerve to invoke the "sub-minimal effort" rule. It was like they were mesmerized. The run counted. Well done, Matt.

-Nothing quite like the sound of softball hitting little girl, not even the trappy sound.

-There were two bizarre urinating incidents. I will spare names and details, but come on, people. If you need to piss, remember that's what they made the desolate sidewalk down the block for. You're acting like a bunch of common soccer players.

-Some Dude playing CF had a terrific jumping catch that protected the fence from further damage - I liked that play. Otherwise, nothing too special vis-a-vis the leather. There was a beautiful girl in the stands for part of the game. I did not see her as she left, but I hope she's with a good man.

-Alexi looked like Yaz out in left; he has completely mastered the art of playing the ball off the Wire Monster.

-Ambrose beat The Shift with a hilarious, victorious, intentional check swing blooper to left field. Mark seemed upset by this obvious abuse of the rules, or at least the spirit, of the game. He grumbled mildly and and made a whiny face, even though his team was ahead something like 7-0 at the time. I saw that, Mark. You just cost yourself a game ball. Too bad, you had a hell of a week.

-Chris Lee was pounding the ball, especially when he heard or saw pretty girls by the fence, though they may not have been girls.

-*Item removed at D. Lee's request

-Recap Dan made an amazing backhanded stop at 3rd and nailed the lead runner at 2nd. Well done, especially for a guy wearing a first baseman's mitt and a ratty O.S.U. hat.

-Speaking of hard-ons, I am typing these words with one of my very own. I am thinking of that beautiful, mushy, malleable, pliable gray ball we played with on Sunday. It was like clay, like the ass of a girl I once knew: you could pinch it and your fingers would meet. That ball deserves its own card, its own page on Verbungle.

-Injury report: AJR's arm looked awful, and despite some good hustle, it looks like the arm is done for the season. SRC threw someone out from RF, so the howitzer may be on the mend. We'll see. My arm feels great, but I can't hit worth a damn. I think it's because I have a sore wrist. I also think it's because I suck.

Game ball:

In what will be known as the Jordan exemption, Justin will be ineligible for the game ball from now on as well. He is the best player every week, and the game ball will be given to the Best Player Besides Justin.

Close runner up was Big Handsome, who made what will probably be his only appearance of the season, as he lives in California, where he is known as Big Average Lookin'. He smashed the ball the way you should if your nickname is Big Anything.

Game ball to Little Girl for taking one for the team and striking fear into the hearts of those shitbird soccer players.

Soccer players. Gas face. Again.

Monday, August 14, 2006

8.13.06: Ambrushed

By Kissel

It was an absolutely beautiful night at JJ Walker field, perhaps the best weather we have had all year. It was unclear if we would have a full compliment of players, and at the time that DLee and PeteB moved to the deliberation chamber to choose up sides, we had only 14 guys. Eventually, some late comers would show up, bringing the final number to 17.

Team names were not used during the game. For the sake of discussion, we will call DLee's team Sgt. Elias and PeteB's team Sgt. Barnes. Those who recall the movie Platoon will note that Barnes ambushed Elias, and the same fate would befall DLee's squad. At first sight, it appeared that Elias was a bomb squad, with mashers like Justin, Hussar, DLee and Deion.

Barnes also had a tough team (PeteB, Lex, Wazzo, Evan, Doug, CSDave, Matt H, Andrew C), but somehow we were confident, too confident, of victory. In the first inning, that overconfidence seemed to be justified; Elias put up 8 runs with only one out, capped off by Justin's massive CSHR that landed on the far side of St. Lukes Place (Leroy Street). Evan came in in relief and put out the fire, but it looked like it would be a laugher for Elias. The movie tagline for Platoon was "The First Casuality of War is Innocence." The first casuality of this war would be arrogance.

Our swagger only brought out the competitive spirit in Barnes. By the end of the second inning, the score was 8-5. Then the wheels came off the Elias cart. Barnes busted out with a 13 run third. Much of the rally was aided by inept defense on the part of the Elias squad, and Team Barnes took full advantage. Balls not booted by Elias, were crushed by Barnes. PeteB hit the first of 2 CSHRs, and I believe Andrew C also had a CSHR.

With the score 18-8, DLee and company finally realized that this was going to be a real battle, one that they would likely lose. You can tell when DLee gets serious by the fact that democratic defensive positioning gets tossed out in favor of a rigid defensive alignment. It didn't help. Team Barnes utilized a trio of tough pitchers to baffle Elias. Doug and Wazzo used the spin ball to great effect, and Matt H. used speed and location (his location-he stood about 5 feet from home plate) to stifle the Elias bats. DLee, still confident of a comeback, allowed
latecomer James to join the already dominating Barnes squad. He promptly crushed a CSHR that earned him the "Better Get Maaco" award by denting a parked car.

On a play that typified the evening that Team Elias was having, Deion, playing left field, lost a ball in the lights. After calling off DLee, he charged in, but then dropped to his knees, and held both arms up in the air. A perfect rendition of the Willem Dafoe's death pose as the ball bounced in front of him. Despite a last inning mini-rally, Barnes crushed Elias 26-16.

***
TWIB Notes:

1)As mentioned, Pete had 2 CSHR's. The first was a meaty semi-line drive that easily cleared the trees, and the second was a moon shot that traveled a linear distance of 400 feet. He also hit what appeared to be an uncalled HR, but it was ruled foul. That led to a rule change: any
non-called shot that clears the fence ends the inning. We will see if that rule sticks.

2)CSDave had a nice game in the field, especially the infield, making several nice pickups and throws over to first.

3)Andrew C is a fearsome hitter, and his glove was sharp too. He came within one foot or less of a scoreboard shot. He also told me that he has decided to not step into any pitches for fear of another IEHR. He also came through with pork rinds and beer.
4)One bright spot for Elias was Kissel Sr., who hit the highest portion of the center field fence twice, and came just short of a opposite field CSHR. This prompted DLee to ask if he was on the juice. He also made a diving stop at second complete with a throw over to first from his back that nearly caught the runner.

5)James hit perhaps the hardest laser-beam shot off the fence that I have ever seen. He blamed his aggression on being stuck in traffic for 2 hours.

6)Hussar was a Hoover at third making some awesome plays.

7)DLee hit a nice shot that looked destined to be a CSHR but was eaten and spit out by the tree
in left field.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

8.6.6: Let's Play Two, I Mean One

First of all, and most importantly, THERE WERE TWO GAMES TONIGHT. If we get nuked tomorrow and this blog post is all that remains of what was a wild and stupid Sunday night of softball, let our children remember that we won Game 1 5-4 and they won Game 2 something like 9-6.

We were up 5-0 going into the top of the "9th" in Game 1. We all agreed that it was their last chance to tie the score. They rallied, and came up with 4 runs, but when I caught a fly ball to center to end the inning, THE GAME WAS OVER. I threw the ball in to the infield behind my back in celebration and got ready for Game 2. OVER. GAME 1. OVER.

Then they were all, no, let's keep playing wah wah wah and so we reluctantly agreed. We put down the mushy ball and switched to a much harder ball that gave their big bats an edge. And they put a hurtin' on us. But it should have been the second game, and so it officially will be.

We came back in the bottom of the 9th and cut the lead to 9-6 (13-11) with one out, but then AC hit a GEHR and that was that.

I suggested Ray Parker Jr. and Huey Lewis as team names but DLee said it was too obscure. oh well, I'm going with it anyway.

Now on to the non-recap:

My JV baseball coach Mr. Piazza* was a real character, a classic hardass with a heart of gold. He had that Bobby Knight thing where you hated him but you loved him at the same time and you'd do anything to gain his approval. He had a saying, "After nine innings, if you don't smell like a homeless person, you ain't hustling."

Well, Coach Piazza, I must have hustled tonight, because when I got home I reeked of beer, urine, sweat, and maybe even a little unidentifiable general homelessness. And I wasn't alone.
The stench was with us tonight, and I doubt there was a person out there who could look me in the eye and say "It wasn't me."

Coach P. also used to make a big point about "No matter how you played today, there was something you could have done better and something you could have done worse." The morning after every game he'd leave a note in each of our lockers with the paper divided in half by a line. In the left hand column it was "Things you should be ashamed of" and on the right it was "Things you should be proud of."

Ok, Coach P., this 18-player postgame evaluation is for you. No order, and remember that I was kinda drunk.

1) Ambrose:
Should be ashamed of: failing to run out his infield dink shot in a close game (he'd have easily been safe); failing to come up with a better excuse than "I don't take charity"; threatening to call a strike on John Red Sox fan when John did his usual semi-swing at the first pitch of an at-bat.
Should be proud of: almost killing a couple of soccer players with a hard hit shot to right; running hard and fast several times; consuming 24 ounces of beer in under three minutes after the game ended.
2) Joe M.:
Ashamed: failing to acknowledge that Game 1 was a legitimate, self-contained piece of history; attempting to switch balls to gain an edge.
Proud: an amazing play at third base, reaching behind the bag to snare the ball and then firing a strike to get the dude at first; driving me home from the game; bringing beers.
3) DLee:
Ashamed: failing to acknowledge Game 1's legitimacy; somehow avoiding playing catcher for more than a minute or two; denying my Ray Parker Huey Lewis team names after I gave his suggested names from a coule weeks back big kwachas.
Proud: finding his hitting stroke; making a great play at third that was ruined when Matt Danbuddy dropped his perfect throw; inviting Kathy.
4) Matt D.:
Ashamed: dropping DLee's perfect throw; misplaying a couple balls at first; throwing his weird junkballs up there when he was pitching.
Proud: bringing a bat; lining some nice hits all over the field; being a nice guy.
5) Cigarette-smoking Dave:
Ashamed: Wearing jeans to the game; pitching real bad; cursing when he made an out.
Proud: Showing some good intensity; helping keep good mushy balls in play.
6) James:
Ashamed: Not living up to his Bunyanesque status -- failed to hit a mushy-ball CSHR.
Proud:hitting some terrifying shots as usual; showcasing primal, beastlike ability; spreading goodwill.
7) Doug:
Proud: Solid overall play including a couple of big hits in their rally innings; constructive "bitching and whining" at soccer ref.
Ashamed: using term "bitching and whining" to describe his own actions.
8) Hussar:
Ashamed: thrown out trying to take extra bases approximately 17 times; tried to murder Wazzo as Wazzo rounded third.
Proud: on base almost every time and hit several mushy balls to deep outfield; played some nice overall ball.
9) Leigh:
Ashamed: failing to muscle up and smack one out despite arriving in muscle-showcasing wifebeater.
Proud: improved D and fine, samurai-like HR call.
10) Dan K.:
Ashamed: failing to hit huge CSHR even after I offered to touch him in his special place if he did so.
Proud: Solid hitting and fielding; best line of the night: "Since this game was so close, why don't we just continue it next week?"
11) Wazzo:
Ashamed: not hitting any freaky Australian CSHR's.
Proud: Great play at 3rd to get us out of a scary inning; good speed on bases; bringing beers.
12) Red Sox John:
Ashamed: wearing jeans to a softball game; taking too long in the batter's box; not charging the ball in the infield; liking the Red Sox.
Proud: some decent rips and two absolute game-saving plays in leftfield, both in the same inning.
13) Kissel Sr.:
Ashamed: jeans, Red Sox; playing too close to the fence in the OF.
Proud: Some excellent hitting, including a beautiful double to right field; continuing to prove that he is the best opposite field hitter there is.
14) Me:
Ashamed: several errors, including the first two plays of the game and a dropped throw from Dan K. on a play where we could have nailed James at the plate; not putting up a stink when they failed to acknowledge our Game 1 win; being drunk; wearing the same outfit I wear every week.
Proud: Brought beer, pretzels; got some good hits and knocked in a few dudes.
15) Pete B.
Ashamed: letting his anti-soccer player rage get the better of him, causing him to strike out; spiking the ball in the outfield for no good reason, allowing a run to score.
Proud: the game's only CSHR, a real nice meaty shot that I think may still be stuck up in the softball tree; fine play overall; screaming at the stupid fucking softball players several times.
16) Evan:
Ashamed: Nothing
Proud: A couple of good hits; a tremendous over the shoulder catch on a popup with men on base; generally intelligent conversation.
17) Andrew C.:
Ashamed: two IEHR's, including the game-ender; wearing a football jersey to a softball game.
Proud: two nice IEHR's; a mushy ball shot to left center that would have gone 450 feet with a regular ball; brought beer and snacks, including pork rinds.
18) Kathy:
Ashamed: not playing quite as well as she did last time; wearing baseball pants.
Proud: a great barehanded pickup and throw to first; wearing baseball pants.

There you have it. A doubleheader split. Work on your weaknesses and we'll see you next week.

* I never had a coach named Mr. Piazza. I never had a coach, period. I have never played one second of organized sports. Anybody else with me on that?

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

7.30.6: I Want To Kiss You


tha pbdotc: is it me or does it smell like No. 2 in here?
darvin ham: haha
darvin ham: there will be 20.000 bottles of that shipped out to india this time next year
darvin ham: reecap today? a bit lsater on?
tha pbdotc: i kind of like the smell of old No. 2
tha pbdotc: oh, this is the recap MAng!!!
darvin ham: ill wait for the Zimmer fragrance
tha pbdotc: eau de Helmet
darvin ham: deer urine and listerine
darvin ham: you can float your dentures in it
tha pbdotc: hey who gets your game ball?
darvin ham: the guy
tha pbdotc: that guy?
darvin ham: yup
tha pbdotc: the guy who had the hit?
darvin ham: the drunk guy
tha pbdotc: oooohhh yeah ... kissel aka dave
tha pbdotc: oh he was in mint form
darvin ham: i thionk he was drunk. at least thats what i tell myself. makes me more comfortable about him staggering over and saying "I want to kiss you"
tha pbdotc: he kissed you too? hans gave him his only bottle of gatorade after the game so he could hydrate
darvin ham: dave had some clutch cracks though. the juice suits him
darvin ham: i sensed massive testosterone spike
tha pbdotc: plus the diving stab at 2nd and the turn and throw and fall down
tha pbdotc: the game also featured the first-ever IIEHR*
tha pbdotc: * intentional inning-ending home run
tha pbdotc: from the bat of Just
darvin ham: very noble.
tha pbdotc: how bout Test vs. Tost? for team namez?
darvin ham: [work calling]
darvin ham: [i may go dormant for strecthes with work]
tha pbdotc: we'll take this easy like sunday morning
darvin ham: speaking of game balls, that ball was the softest yet. i saw more bounce in a goat carcass in a game of Afghan Buzkashi i played in 02
tha pbdotc: are you doing a graphic of castro wrapped in a large intestine for your page?
darvin ham: i was in afghanistan for a story. it was weird. Warren was there
darvin ham: he said he was a "translator" but wouldnt let me take his picture
darvin ham: he also slept in a spider hole and tackled a spooked camel with his bare hands
tha pbdotc: did you see what spooked the camel?
darvin ham: i think i spooked it. i spooked a few people that day. it was hot so i was wearing my rasheed wallace bullets jersey and nothing else
darvin ham: i call this photo "fear pouch"
tha pbdotc: btw warren is a nice player ... i mean for a CIA agent.
tha pbdotc: HTat is one of my favorite pics!!!
darvin ham: he had that leaping snare late in the game
darvin ham: he must haave thought he was back playing cricket as a Grammar boy, playing Silly Mid-Off
tha pbdotc: i hear his nickname in astoria is OMnibus because he'll play any sport with a ball in it except waterpolo
darvin ham: its a real position, you can look it up
darvin ham: nice
tha pbdotc: you have to have a midoff when your bowler is spinning googlies
darvin ham: is that because of the jellyfish in the astoria pool?
tha pbdotc: thoooooose aren't jelllllllly fish!!
tha pbdotc: who was the guy with the 'red sox fan for life shirt'?
tha pbdotc: he made a nice, athletic play at first
darvin ham: hes no kathy
tha pbdotc: kathy hasn't been there lately she's working on her "Ripken Way for Girls" instructional DVd
darvin ham: i think we need a mascot.
darvin ham: people should hop on the comments board and suggest mascot names
tha pbdotc: agreed. best mascot name in Hans's judgment will receive 5 Verbungle Genius Points
darvin ham: and a bat boy
darvin ham: maybe Mathew Brodericks kid
tha pbdotc: how bout an Irishman named Clincher McDrinky for mascot
darvin ham: we wouldnt even need a costume
darvin ham: and we need to sell naming rights to the field
darvin ham: maybe to a pork rind manufracturer
tha pbdotc: we could change the generic scoreboard to an AD for rindz
tha pbdotc: and if you hit it the loudspeakers go OINK OINK each base as you touch em all
darvin ham: heres our mascot
tha pbdotc: Rindy
tha pbdotc: do you remember any other in-game feats?
tha pbdotc: i know Hussar made a good catch in right cuz i made the outdarvin ham: Danny made a fancyboy polay at short
darvin ham: in the tips oif the webbing and a spinning throw
darvin ham: he even looked like he had impressed himselftha pbdotc: indeed that was a good one ... he got a golf clap
tha pbdotc: that was just prior to the onslaught
darvin ham: and he think he had a tough grab in the field
darvin ham: there was a nice grab, maynbe by justin? at second
darvin ham: on a low line drive
tha pbdotc: Danny gets the Game Ball!
tha pbdotc: justin is like a vacuum out there
darvin ham: i feel like manute bol when i play 3rd
tha pbdotc: too tall?
darvin ham: big heart, long legs, comical play
tha pbdotc: i saw one go under the reggie mitt. but later on you threw a BB from dead CF right into my mitt at 3rd
darvin ham: im like a circus freak. not the kind of cirecus freak you want in the infield though
darvin ham: not like some circus lady with giant vagina hands
darvin ham: that would be better
tha pbdotc: baseball is like that. lots of ups and downs. i think harold reynolds once said, "baseball is a crazy game: you never know when you'll make an out and you never know when you'll bang an intern."
tha pbdotc: hey did you get the digital stills onto your computer?
darvin ham: let me try now
tha pbdotc: okay ... send em to me or bungmeister at verbungle dot com
tha pbdotc: that's hans's work email
tha pbdotc: and i'll catchya later ... must begin my day of toil
darvin ham: cool. ive got to work up an interactive web feature at work
darvin ham: its a photoessay on "The F**king Jews of Malibu"
tha pbdotc: lol
tha pbdotc: that'll go down in history with the yeltsin obit

Editors Note: Our team, Time, beat D. Lee's team, All Living Things, 12-5 and 4-3 in the two games of the twinbill. 18 men showed up. D. Lee and I both hit CSHR's in game 1. Not sure about anybody else. Pics courtesy of James and Leigh in no particular order. I have more pics if you want 'em, let me know and I will email you.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

7.23.6: Crying Tiger, Hidden Tall Boy

By Pete B.

Why don't I use this first moment, where everyone is probably still paying attention, to say that I was touched by Tiger Woods today. I watched all of his final 36 holes and he played with discipline and precision and then when sealed the deal he cried for his father. It can't be easy being Tiger, with all of his drive, and I'm sure it's not easy losing your dad at the age of 26. You only get one life Tiger, don't feel obligated to keep winning golf tournaments for us. Just do it if you want to.

Well Tiger didn't show up for Bungleball tonite but just about everyone else did. I felt like a stranger in a strange land and at first the vibe wasn't good. It's never good when Hans doesn't show up. One feels as if a lynch pin has popped from the door hinge and you wonder if it will continue to function or whether it will simply all come apart. Luckily D. Lee showed up and he's the freaking glue too. Many stalwarts did make it as did a big contingent of folks who either pre-date me or were new. When all was said and done we had 20 players.

D. Lee and I choose up teams and pulled off a blockbuster trade and somehow I ended up with both latecomers: Hussar and Deion. The only way I can figure that I that D. Lee is a kind person.

Um. Miss Universe is on. What was I saying? Miss Mexico is so hot I want to cry... whoaaa Mex-i-co.

But Danny had a lot of guys who he felt comfortable going to war with too. Guys like Ambrose and Dinny. Guys like um that guy Matt with the glasses who hits a ton and .5. Guys like Doug. Guys like Dave. Guys like Jose. Guys who you want next to you in a knife fight because you know they'll never give up and they'll never give in. Guys like Ernest, who will pop a hammy, rub a little dirt on it, and leg out an infield single.

Oh wait. Jose was on my team.

What we lacked in guts, we more than made up for in talent. In fact, we has so much talent the first game was a 9-1 reset after two -- two -- innings. How often do you put up a nine-spot in 10 v 10 short field assball? Not often. Dave admitted later that he was the pitcher for the nine-spot. It takes a man to admit that. Dave also roped like six doubles and a couple base smackers to boot. He had a bad day on the "mound" -- there was no mound -- but a good day at the plate. He hit one down the right-field line while I was playing first and I swear I could hear the ball singing "Bolero" on the way past.

The second game was tighter than Miss Paraguay's glutes. At this point I have to wonder out loud: Who's banging Miss Paraguay? Probably some Andean slickster... really this ought to be deleted. I had a 2nd-inning bases-empty CSHR and our opponents -- we again failed to name the teams -- came back with a CSHR off the bat of Matt the Masher who emulates Jim Thome at the plate except he's a righty and Thome is lefty. Then they took a 2-1 lead later with I don't know goddamn what can't remember but you can bet they just raked that goddamn ball all over Southern New York Town until the raking was done.

It turns out that having Chris Hussar on your team is a good thing. Hussar, after a couple innings of 2-1 razor's edge TITENESS, led off with a double and we played a little small ball. Dave had a FC, moving Hussar to third, and then Evan had a sac fly to bring home CH for the tie. After that Leigh pounded a double and we took a couple extra runs off 'em for make it 4-2.

Ultimately their comeback was stifled because, while Hussar bliffed a taylor-made double play and we let a run in, he followed that up two batters later with what was the closest thing to a triple play we'll ever see out there. With the bases loaded he snared a one-hopper, tagged the runner moving off second, tagged 2nd, and then threw just wide of 1st to miss the triple dip. The runner of 3rd was tagged out at home one play later after Deion made a sick diving play at 3rd and a throw home to yours truly and we nailed Adam with a tag out.

I can't even remember what I was thinking I just got so excited thinking about the D we played that inning.

A lot of other stuff happened too. We de-tarped with great alacrity, fearing the disapproval of Hans Bungle. You don't want to be on the wrong side of Hans Bungle and I'll tell you why: It's not easy to get there. You have to work at it. He'll pretty much let anything slide. But when you're there, boy it's a lonely and dark feeling. I sure hope Baby Bungle never ends up there. Or if she does it's only brief. Like Hans will just sit her down and say, "Look, you can do want you want. I know this, but I think perhaps you should have just cleared it with us first before you had a kegger here while we were on the Vineyard for the weekend." And she'll say, "Yeah Dad. You're right. I don't know what I was thinking." And that'll be that. Anyway, I digress...

Also a great deal of beer was brought to the game. Andrew C. brought a twelver, Dinny and Ambrose (not sure which one or maybe both) brought like six cases of Budweiser, and there were many private stashes about. I brought a Foster's oilcan and then um promoted one of Dinny's tall boys. The amount of beer brought was kind of surprising but was really surprised me was the goddamn dugout was cold drunk bone dry by the first reset. Apparently 20 guys with mitts can drink a lot of suds on a Sunday night when the put their minds to it.

Another thing that happened was it was just a really beautiful night weather-wise and there were some clouds floating around and the temp was just so. And the soccer players were tame. Did someone put the fear into them last week?

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

7.16.6: Free Beer Tomorrow

Sitting alone on a bench at 9:13 pm slurping down the rest of your beer is no way to sober up.

That was one of the things I figured out last Sunday night.

Here are some other thoughts and observations from our 16-10 (?) win over the other guys:

1) The season: I think it's been a pretty good season. A lot of regulars have become irregular, which saddens me, it's like they've graduated and moved on, but I am always encouraged by the way excellent new people step in to take their place. Games have been good, beer has flowed, soccer players have been appropriately annoying. I have fun every time.

2) CSHR's: in addition to an IEHR (which, let's face it, still feels sorta good), I hit probably my best CSHR of the season this week. High and far, slightly Kingmanesque. Wazzo blasted a nice garden CS (which he later retrieved) for us as well, and Chris H. achieved what may be the first 2 CSHR day of the season. Hats off to that dude. Great personality, good power to all fields. He does need a little work on his attitude, though -- it's like he has taken the no-hustle baton from Ambrose this year.

Julian went deep for the D.Lee's.

3) Tame Names: once again, no fucking team names. What a lousy year for team names. Maybe it's because we're always trying to get in two games so things are rushed, but whatever the case, this cannot continue. Team names are one of the four reasons I show up every week.

Please come up with some team names and add them to the comments section so we are prepared come Sunday.

4) Pride: here's to D. Lee for showing some at around 8:10 when he refused my offer of a reset with his team down 10-5. Maybe not the right move strategically, but the right move from a heart standpoint. I think maybe we should just play one game every week unless it's a real blowout.

5) My whining: last week's recap was essentially an extended bitch session where I railed on everybody else for beer-mooching, no-tarping, and generally failing to live up to the ideals of the 1960's. I felt kind of bad about it but then I got to the field this week and it was like: tarps done, bases set up, beers on hand for all to enjoy. Looks like the whining worked! Great job everyone. In other wonderful news, D.Lee has recouped his money for the season and from here on out all game fees will go into the kitty. What does this mean? It means, in addition to buying a new ball when we need one, we will have AUTHENTIC COMMUNITY BEERS every week until further notice. Place your vote for whatever 16 ounce domestic can has been kindest to you over the years.

6) The Key: we were saddened when it left us, so let us rejoice now that it has returned. D. Lee has once again PROCURED A KEY TO THE FIELD! Good job dude. No more squeezing through the hole in the fence like a subway rat. Feel free to give D. Lee a low two next time you see him.

7) The Recaps: I think obviously we could have been a little more consistent with the recaps this year, but we've all given it a good effort. Let's face it, I think every one of us has a more complicated life than we did last year or the year before. Considering that, we're doing pretty good. I wish I had time to knock it out of the park every week, but I don't. For instance, this week I was going to write it in the voice of Billy Packer, but who has time for shit like that? What I'd like to see is some new blood stepping up and churning one out every now and then. Everyone is eligible. Variety is good.

8) Dan K., punch and judy hitter though he may be, is perhaps the most underrated player out there. He gets a hit nearly every time and he plays great D. He is also maybe the only reliable thrower we have from week to week. No wasted motion, no rearing back and heaving it twenty feet over the first baseman's head. A key pickup in the early rounds of any draft. He may have been the difference for us. Still...

9) Hussar gets the game ball. Belting two solid CSHR's is a rare feat. It is enough to overcome his baserunning lethargy and defensive mindfarts. Congratulations.

10) Soccer players: after an off week last Sunday when they were all home presumably head-butting one another, they were back this week. But only like eight of 'em. Maybe they are going extinct. We can hope.

11) The turnout: we had 19 guys this week. As much as I am digging the infusion of new humanity, part of me fears that we are going to top the unmanageable number of 20 at some point. I guess we'll worry about that when the time comes.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

7.9.6: Tarp Up, Bitches

For today's softball recap I will intersperse my next-day, sober recollections of Sunday's action (in regular text) with my italicized in-game drunken thoughts, as they occured to me live on the field. The result will hopefully be an entertaining, if obviously incomplete, description of what happened on the diamond Sunday night.

6:50 pm:
Joe Monkeyweb, Ambrose and I show up at the field. Some goofy Europeans, clearly swept up in W. Cup fever, kick a soccer ball around pointlessly in right field. Kissel sits alone in the dugout. We all agree that we can't kick 'em off just yet because the permit doesn't take effect until 7. But their presence annoys us.

I hate soccer players. Even when they have big Swedish girlfriends jumping around and jiggling delightfully.

6:58pm:
Our crew has begun to arrive. We are at 12 guys right now and it's time to administer the boot. Kissel Sr. attempts to do the dirty work, telling the soccer dudes it's time to go, wrap it up, etc. They respond by moving the soccer goal into centerfield. He readministers the boot, assuring them that indeed we will need the entire field, and they leave slowly but peacefully. DLee and I retire to the decompression tank for the draft. I open a beer. Joe and Ambrose smoke cigars.
We pick teams. Justin is there, the big equalizer. DLee picks him like he always does. Everyone else mills around uselessly, not bothering to de-tarp the field or get the bases set up. I go and dig out the dirt that has filled in the base-hole at second so we can plant the base there. Leigh does the same thing at third. Our fingers are dirty and sore and for the wrong reasons.

I wonder why most of the people who show up refuse to help unless begged. Do they think I want to grab the bases and set them up? Do they forget that it must be done? Do they think that I am being paid by the league to handle such inglorious tasks? Or are they just feigning ignorance so they don't have to get their hands dirty? This inevitably costs us five minutes of playing time. I am a grouchy motherfucker.

7:10pm:
We start the game and we have a wonderfully mushy ball tonight. Assier than Le Petomane's easy chair. CSHR's, IEHR's and ACSHR's are all gonna be scarce. That's OK because we are no longer keeping stats. There is also some new blood out here tonight. Kissel Sr. has brought a couple of dudes. One of them is wearing a Red Sox jersey and blue jeans. That's not good in any way that I can think of.

This beer is delicious. I don't want to go to work tomorrow. Or the next day.

7:30pm:
We've got a good one going here, back and forth. We have a huge musclebound guy named Jose who has a rifle arm and plays good D. He's keeping us in the game. Dan K. is on the other team and he brought his friend, a guy named Matt who's lefthanded. Kissel Sr. asks me in the dugout if the beers we brought are "community beers." I don't really know how to answer that, so I say, "If by 'community beers' you mean I bought them with my own hard-earned money, then yes they are community beers.' I'm not sure what my point is and neither is Kissel Sr. He goes and grabs a community beer.

Again, I am wondering about what people see as my role here. Am I the guy who has so much money that I want to buy beer for everyone every week all season long? If that's how they see me, I need to reshape my image, because I ain't rich. I'm happy to share a beer or two or ten, but damn people somebody else bring some fucking beer one time or throw me a fiver. Just sayin'.

7:45 pm: The game is like 3-3 and it turns out Dan's friend Matt brought a whole cooler full of imported, delicious, "community" beer. That's how you do it. Not that I really want to drink a Stella while I'm playing softball, but everybody else -- have at it! Matt has earned his stripes with one simple gesture. However, I am finding it very difficult to hit his pitching, and I don't really know why. None of us can hit him. Is he pitching too close? Is he too inaccurate? I don't really know, but I bitch to DLee about it anyway.

Two beers in and I love everyone. I love you. I love America and softball and I want to share my beer with you. Have one.

8:15pm:
DLee's team (damn are we slacking in the name department) has built a 5-3 lead and we are struggling like crazy to mount any kind of rally against the series of junkballers he trots out. There are some good plays I think. Kissel muscles up and hits one off the CF fence. I leap at it but my feet forget to leave the ground and he's in with a standup double. That shot probably would have left a major league park if not for the immense assiness of tonight's game ball.

Red Sox man, Johnny I think his name is, keeps checking the score of the Boston game on his cell phone. Refresh Refresh Refresh. Apparently it's in like the 89th inning. I yell at him playfully. Maybe I'm drunk.

If I live my life as an asshole, but I'm always trying to improve, does that make me a better man than someone who's an asshole on purpose? Is a repentant asshole, one who swears to get it right next time, any better than an unapologetic asshole, or is he somehow worse? My name is Joe Roberts. I work for the state I'm a Sergeant out of Perrineville, Barracks number 8. I always done an honest job, as honest as I could. I got a brother named Frankie and Frankie ain't no good. Are Ortiz and Manny the best 1-2, or rather 3-4, since Ruth and Gehrig?

8:30pm:
The wheels come off. DLee's squad lays a severe beating on us in like the 13th inning, going up 12-3. In a gesture that touches me deeply, Evan keeps calling out "1 out" after each batter, as if we are still in the game. It's hopeless. Kissel Sr. makes a sweet sliding catch in CF, but the Puma races home with another run. Did he leave early? Nobody knows. We argue anyway. It's all we have left.

I want to kiss you. I couldn't care less about the team struggling. We're looking to next season. We're looking to make some noise now. And I want to kiss you. Yeah!

8:42pm:
There are no soccer players in sight. We decide to reset our laugher and play a quick three inning game. I have to pee. I cross Hudson and run down Clarkson to my usual spot. I'm already unbuckling my pants but there are two homeless guys camped out on blankets right in the golden zone.

Homeless Guy: Yo, not here man. Not here.

I keep running and find a good spot. I do my biz and I jog back past the homeless guys again.

Homeless Guy: I gotta go clean that up, you know.

Is he trying to shake me down? Like he's never had to go on the street.

Whatever. I am handsome. Really, really handsome. I have a little pee pee on my shorts maybe but I am handsome. Perhaps I should lose a few pounds but damn I am handsome. Definitely. I'm not handsome. Soul Patrol!

9:12:
The second game is a tight one. We are tied at two after three innings and then we are tied at three after an extra inning. People are starting to grumble about going home. We need to settle this. Ideas are bandied about.

Somebody: Let's have a home run derby.
Somebody else: In honor of the World Cup, let's have a shootout.
Me: Sounds good, but we have no soccer ball.

Various unuseful suggestions follow. Then:

Dan K.: Listen to me for five seconds, I have an idea.
Me: OK
Dan K.: Let's do a shootout, but you have to throw the softball past the goaltender instead of kicking it. He gets to wear a glove as he tries to stop it.
Me: That is the single greatest idea of the past 500 years.

We set up the soccer goal. We march off what seems to be a reasonable distance. Each team picks five throwers. Now we need goaltenders.

Evan (whispering to me): just so you know, I used to be a goaltender in hockey and soccer.
Me: Get in there, goalie!

D. Lee picks Dan K. as his goalie.

I throw first. I shoot for the upper right corner. I miss by about three feet. D'oh! Baggid'oh!

We trade off. Justin throws. He misses wide left. He mutters something about how ashamed he is to be a part of this ridiculous contest.

Ambrose fires low and hard, and it bounces past Dan K. to give us a one goal lead. We keep alternating, and nobody can get it past Evan, who is remarkable in goal. Finally Kissel steps up and fires a one hopper past Evan, who lays out in a futile attempt to stop the shot. However, Kissel was like 4 steps beyond the starting line when he threw, so we force him to make another attempt. Evan lays out again and makes a diving, clean catch to preserve the lead. I collapse on the floor, paralyzed by happiness.

One more thrower each. We miss. Their last attempt is blocked by Evan, who gets on the ground and gets his body in front of the ball. Team player. Winner. He cements his status as my official favorite player, and he gets the Game 2 Game Ball. Game 1 goes to DLee for thoroughly outpicking me and for having a good night at bat and in the field despite a lingering case of poopy tummy.

This is the most fun I have had in years. Why do we even play softball? This is way better. I wonder if that girl Julie in my 11th grade English class liked me. I liked her. Can you look that shit up on the internets? Where's my beer? Holy cow it's 9:30. Let's tarp up, bitches.

Monday, July 03, 2006

7.2.6: power of the rainbow


pbdotc: first of all i want to talk about kathy

koisdan: me too

pbdotc: i think i might be in love

koisdan: she was an all star, pure and simple

pbdotc: werd

koisdan: i count four sparkling defensive plays at first

pbdotc: james and i were completely abusing our right to play infield and she kept coming up with amazing scoops, not to mention clutch base hits .... it's not a stretch to say we could never have had a chance to win without her at first

koisdan: two bad-throw pickups for outs, including that nasty short hop from james

koisdan: and then two plays where she was pulled off the base by bad throws, but dove back to the base to get the out

koisdan: including the final out of the game

pbdotc: totalemente and i don't even want to mention the, um, injury

koisdan: PLUS she sustained the injury of the night going after your overthrow

koisdan: oops

koisdan: i mentioned it

pbdotc: i hope she doesn't have a desk job

koisdan: it is possible that injury made her even more alluring

pbdotc: james sez she's the michelle wie of bungleball

koisdan: because we are writing this recap for posterity, i will explain:

koisdan: pete charged a ball at third

koisdan: tough throw, maybe shouldve eaten it

koisdan: but i appreciate the effort

pbdotc: def should have eaten, but ...

koisdan: and the throw went wide

koisdan: she made a quick turn to try and get it, lost her footing, and totally wiped out at first

koisdan: big-time wipeout -- if we had instant replay they would have shown it from five different angles

pbdotc: with appropriate surf music playing over it on the 11 oclock news

koisdan: YES

koisdan: she ended up with one of those round, bleeding scrapes you get when you try and slide in shorts

koisdan: high on the back of her left leg

pbdotc: it was a legitimate injury ... ximara said she would have retired had she suffered such a thing

koisdan: totally legitimate -- she is probably still picking gravel out of it today

koisdan: she had to hike up her shorts so they wouldn't get bloody, so when she batted for the rest of the game she flashed the pitcher a lot of leg and a huge bleeding battle scar.

koisdan: very intimidating, i would think

koisdan: PLUS several clutch hits, one of our only two RBIs in Game 1, scored once or twice.

koisdan: overall: wow

pbdotc: werd

pbdotc: here's why i didn't eat it tho: hans bungle was having ambrose -- who was "playing" catcher - peek at our defense and say whether i was protecting the line and i moved off the line and there it went, right down the line, so i was like ok i'm throwing this ball no matter what

koisdan: i sympathize

koisdan: the other team -- thunder? -- had some wack shit going on at catcher all game

koisdan: often they played three catchers

koisdan: when i pointed this out, hans responded, "we're only playing one, dan, you must be drunk"

pbdotc: i don't remember the first game v well ... i know we lost but we also squandered like six outs in a row because there was a rush on

koisdan: my memory of the first game consists of me being a chickenshit asshole

koisdan: first i argued for a full half inning that we had three runs

koisdan: despite everyone on the other team and on my own team disagreeing with me

koisdan: i got really vehement

koisdan: but i was wrong

pbdotc: it happens ...

koisdan: (except even now i suspect i was right)

koisdan: (no, no, i was wrong, i accept it)

koisdan: (i was right)

koisdan: and then the rain came and I had grabbed my glove and was almost out the hole in the fence before it was made clear to me that we were still playing

koisdan: i was positive we were going to get killed by lightning and hail

pbdotc: hans had a CSHR in the rain and claims to have exclaimed "SOUL PATROL" upon rounding the bases

pbdotc: hans is a beefy guy

koisdan: hans's homer was impressive

pbdotc: when the rain is flying and the ball is assy, he's the only one who can muscle it out

koisdan: maybe james

koisdan: but yes, no one else had a shot at a HR, called or uncalled, during game 1

pbdotc: james def has the muscle but, in one of the funny lines of the night, he came up to me in the dugout and said, quite earnestly, "i'm in a slump"

koisdan: god, grant me james' slump as my everyday hitting stroke

pbdotc: still makes me LOL when i remember it

koisdan: speaking of earnest -- hans's 6-out scheme was presented as the natural solution to a rainy night

koisdan: with great, straight-faced enthusiasm

pbdotc: he's all standing there, the apocalypse is upon us, and he's all, "let's save time!"

koisdan: monkeys are falling from the sky

koisdan: buildings collapsing

pbdotc: i think i saw a harpy getting a dozen sprinkle donuts

koisdan: yup

pbdotc: dinny and ambrose were smoking stogies and pretending they were branch rickey

pbdotc: they were all, "you look good see? i'll sign the lot of ya!"

koisdan: i suggested to dinny that he pick the player on his team who wasn't giving full effort and put the cigar out on his arm

koisdan: "this is how we do it in the big leagues, kid!"

koisdan: several excellent plays were made with cigars/cigarettes ablaze

koisdan: james had a nice one at short too

pbdotc: yeah ... i made a low throw and he still almost got a DP out of it

koisdan: game 1 ended 6-2 in favor of thunder

koisdan: game 2 was exciting

koisdan: first of all, there was a rainbow

koisdan: a big, beautiful rainbow

pbdotc: danny lee said it was the first rainbow he ever saw

koisdan: that's impossible.

koisdan: what??!

pbdotc: i wanted to hug the big galoot

pbdotc: when i saw the rainbow i knew we had to win it for danny

koisdan: wow -- that is a lovely sentiment

koisdan: but who hasn't ever seen a rainbow???

koisdan: has danny ever lived anywhere besides new york?

koisdan: has he ever left his building?

koisdan: does he spend all his hours playing poker at night and sleeping during the day?

pbdotc: (i think he drinks)

koisdan: ah

pbdotc: he did mention something about "the pollution" but i can't remember what that was

koisdan: i assume that's a reference to drinking

koisdan: heavily

koisdan: thunder bolted out to another lead in game 2

pbdotc: i was getting scared that we simply didn't have a good enough team.

pbdotc: that lightning just didn't have the sticks

koisdan: it seemed like we should have, but we sure could not get a rally going for inning upon inning

koisdan: it seemed like we would get two guys on base, then squander it, over and over

pbdotc: with james in a "slump" it wasn't easy

koisdan: we had two or three singles-into-fielders-choices

koisdan: those are always rally killers

pbdotc: hans bungle was a predator out in CF

koisdan: true

pbdotc: but we started going to RF and had success

koisdan: including an unprecedented two stand-up triples

koisdan: and i scored from first on a hit -- that may have never happened before

pbdotc: and pulled "all your groins"

koisdan: it really hurt

koisdan: Lee had that triple -- who had the other one?

pbdotc: i had one

koisdan: right

pbdotc: i hit me a triple!!

koisdan: in our big rally

pbdotc: the rally was sweet

koisdan: we were down 4-2 and scored four in the eighth

pbdotc: the soccer players were getting real itchy

pbdotc: kathy sparked it w/ leadoff hit

koisdan: then one error

koisdan: then more hits, including your triple

koisdan: was it you that referred to the storm as "god's version of the soccer players?"

pbdotc: no but that's funny

pbdotc: i have never seen so much gear for such a crappy soccer league

koisdan: there were many "wonderboy" references during the most lightning-y parts of the storm

koisdan: james and i joked that lightning would hit one of the light poles, splitting it in half and revealing a superpowerful aluminum bat

pbdotc: who gets the game ball for thunder?

koisdan: for thunder -- hans

koisdan: great plays in CF, big game one homer in the rain

pbdotc: probably. i was impressed with connie at 2b too

koisdan: she was strong but hans takes it i think

koisdan: game ball for lightning is clearly kathy

pbdotc: no doubtsky

koisdan: good games all around, very fun -- plus a rainbow, as dinny never stopped telling us

pbdotc: it was a nite like no other.

pbdotc: want me to send this to hansel?

koisdan: i'll post it later today

koisdan: good work

koisdan: laters

pbdotc: thanks man. have a good day. rub some ben-gay on them groins.

koisdan: am doing so right now, thanks

Monday, June 05, 2006

6.4.6: To be Named Later

By Pete B.

First of all, sorry. Sorry to "the other team." (Did we ever choose team names?) In the early going, I insisted there were two out. But there was only one out. And I got kind of mad about it. I might have uttered a swear word. But I was wrong. Jon in fact did not catch the liner to CF. Jon even informed me in the dugout afterward that I in fact fielded the dropped liner. I have no memory of this and quite honestly, this scares me. Anyway, my bad. At least I wasn't arguing in bad faith, I really actually thought there were two out.

Softball was fun on Sunday. It was good to have D. Lee back. He looked all tanned and whatnot; braised by the Italian sun. I could tell he was kind of holding back because it's clear he bedded like nineteen olive-skinned Tuscan virgins and he just didn't want to make us jealous. His game was a tiny bit rusty too -- lots of ill-advised attempts to throw out the lead runner when it's clear in Jimmy Walker land the smart play is to keep the tailing runner from advancing to second.

In fact, one would think there was a new stat for assists given the number of times "our team" tried to throw out a runner and cost us runs instead. This is not a knock on D. Lee because his game is tight and even with a little rust, he's the man.

And I know it's not even that important who wins and who doesn't, but if you are trying to gun down runners, you better have a play, that's all I gotta say, cuz I'm not chasing down your poorly thrown attempts at glory. I'm a fielder, not a golden retriever.

Ernest and his (expanding) crew showed up for more and -- ain't it a bitch? -- Ernest popped a hammy trying to beat out a double play ball. Ernest's young son (pretty sure it's his son) Terrence pinch-ran for the E man the rest of the way. And with the pressure off, Ernest was hitting like another famous right-handed E--man who couldn't run but boy could he mash. For 6 Verbungle GP's can you name him? I'm stoked he brought like three bodies, not including the pinch runner, because we needed players, but I'm not sure if anybody has brought up the bad news yet to Ernest and Company that it ain't free to play. Maybe it doesn't matter; it doesn't really matter too much to me.

James was back for more and he provided an impressive display of raw power with an IEHR in approximately the 7th inning using the softest, mashtest, assiest ball I've ever seen. Most of us couldn't get it out of the infield. Anyway he got hold of it and deposited it in the garden out in left for a first-pitch IEHR. Ouch. The proved to be a bad break for "the other team" because "our team" came up in the bottom of said inning and promptly banged out seven runs using the livelier ball that entered into play, erasing a 5-2 deficit and pulling ahead by 9-5.

We almost ran the Puma to death out there in left; he had to field about ten balls.

Dan Kois made it to the game and he was raking line drives all over the joint. Some of them found mitts, some didn't. He made a couple of nifty picks at third and he has the "cross diamond sling" down pat.

Chris Hussar also made it. What can you say about this guy? He's the David Wright of Bungleball ... just an infectious character who knows what it's all about and he packs the game to boot. At short stop for "the other team," he had us on level six lockdown until the lively ball entered into play, turning DP's like it was going out of style not to mention slapping BBs off the wall in left center.

At 8:40 p.m. the skies opened up and by the time we had it all packed in and the soccer players were taking the field, things were getting good n soggy. The soccer players were pretty well-behaved actually. Nobody ran onto the field of play. But I have never seen so much gear for such a low-rent game. Doods were all sporting like $100 game jerseys. It's World Cup fever...

Other CSHRs included Jon's post-HR reset called grand salami*, my 2-run job, which I'm told hit two cars and set off a car alarm, and Deion's mashus collusus, with two out in the last and the rain coming down, after which it was agreed the game was OVER.

Final Score: Our Team 12, The Other Team 6

* I'm 98 percent sure it was Jon, but correct me if I'm wrong

Hans's addendum: since I wasn't at this game (DNP-sniffles) and the scorecard was in my possession, I can only assume that no stats were kept. I am open to suggestions on how to handle this. We could allow it to derail the entire stat-keeping process, but I'd rather not let that happen. My first thought is we treat this game as an "exhibition game" but I don't want to sell short the efforts of the fine men (and children) who showed up and played. I also like the idea of only counting HR's from this game, and nothing else -- maybe an "ACSHR" column for Anecdotal Called Shot Home Runs? Please tell us your thoughts.

Monday, May 29, 2006

5.28.6: Can We Get A Jimmy Key?

By Ambrose

BOX SCORE
LEADERS

First things first - on this Memorial Day weekend, before there's any talk of our feats and accomplishments on the turf at Jimmy Walker Park (and there were many), let's give a shout-out to, pour a little of the 40 out for (I'm enjoying one as I type this), everybody serving in Iraq and Afghanistan right now. Whether you're Blue or Red, pro- or anti-war, blogger or reader, top or bottom, it's impossible to be against a sincere wish that no one dies in combat, for any reason. Good luck to our armed forces, both on the battlefield and in the bars of Manhattan tonight (it's Fleet Week).

But enough sentiment - on to the ball!

Tonight was, naturally, Roe v. Wade (or, as some doofus wrote for Game 2: "Wade v. Rode," which is less historically accurate but probably a better description of what actually happened to Roe).

That there were any games to recap at all is a surprise. The owners had evidently locked the players out. The park was tighter than a virgin on prom night. How is it we don't have a key? Didn't we pony up $40 a head to use the goddam field? Luckily, Hans and I espied a chink in the field's armor (I know: racist), and thus did a group of grown men... lawyers, professors, writers, TV producers, architects, power-bottoms, and promiscuous college students... perform a kind of limbo beneath a section of chain-link fence. It felt very early-80s, if you ask me. We should have all gone for a Chipwich instead, listened to Yaz, talked about what we'd do when we were grown-ups.

Game One felt like a bunch of boys playing against their older brothers. Roe, my team, managed only five hits in as many innings. Our opponent scored more than that - eight runs, to be precise. The ball was, to borrow a term, "assy" as hell (or was it "assey"?) and wasn't jumping off the bat. The kind of ball you need to place well. We didn't. Futility at hitting a softball feels like the worst kind of impotence. And wouldn't you know it, didn't my wife choose this very night to come to her first game in at least five years? Another childless summer. Wade pummels Roe, 8-2. Somewhere, Antonin Scalia is smiling.

And yet Game Two was worse. It was more like playing your Alzheimer's-addled granddad in a game of "Simon" (remember that, you children of the 80s?). I couldn't remember how to field a groundball, Dinny couldn't remember how to catch a pop-up, and no one could remember how to hit a ball that seemed to be filled with sand. Of course, Wade slapped the old beanbag around the field with impunity, mounting rally after rally, and cruising to an easy 9-0 win.

Let's now pour what's left of that 40 out in memory of the athletic careers of myself, Dinny, Steve, and a few others. When I was a kid, I followed the Mets. I recall being astounded that analysts thought Keith Hernandez was over the hill at age 35. I couldn't conceive of a reason a player would hit a wall at such an age. Now I'm amazed anyone lasts that long.

Game One Ball goes to James, for a gallant 4-4 performance full of several rips right down the third-base line... moreover, it was his first baseball or softball game in years. Now ice that elbow down.

Game two ball goes to Jon, for a 4 for 4 night of his own in the face of several never-before seen defensive schemes concocted by Dinny (who knew a box-and-one zone could be used on a softball diamond?).

Sunday, May 21, 2006

5.21.6: It Ain't Raining

BOX SCORE
LEADERS

Crack open a history book and have a close look: tucked in among the stories of war, slavery, famine and oppression you might just find a few reminders of what the human race is capable of when people work together towards a common goal. The Freakin’ Pyramids, for instance. The Great Wall of China. That crazy-ass indoor ski park in Dubai. Fast Times at Ridgemont High.

And now, on the page covering May 21st, 2006, you'll find a tale of 14 men getting together to play a game of good softball on a night when it was less than 70 degrees outside and it had rained earlier in the day. We can do it! Be a part of it!

What makes this achievement even more remarkable are the names of some regulars who were absent.

Out: D. Lee, chilling in the Tuscan countryside with a bottle of vino, scribbling notes into the margins of his in-progress NBA Draft Preview.

Out: Ambrose, preserving his stats and shaking his moneymaker at a gay wedding in Massachusetts.

Out: Deion, possibly still stuck in traffic.

Out: Tin Man, off in an underground batting cage somewhere helping the Mantis plot his comeback.

Out: Joe Monkeyweb, once again the victim of The Man's unquenchable appetite for labor and production.

Here's how Joe's week usually goes, as far as I can tell:

Wednesday: The sign-up sheet goes up. Joe, still a little pissed about having to miss last week's game because of work, immediately puts himself in as a "Yes." There's no way I'm missing another game for work. Fuck that, he thinks, I have a life.

Friday comes, and The Man calls Joe into his office. The news isn't good. Infuriated, Joe privately maintains that he will still be free in time for softball, but posts the first of his many status updates to the website: "In-work permitting" he says cautiously.

At this point, I know he's out, Lumbergh knows he's out, and I suspect even Joe knows he's out. But he still tries to put on a brave face. That's why he's a gamer.

Sunday comes and the work is still raining down on Joe's head. He posts an update: "Looking less and less likely for me."

Finally, after the clouds get thick and it looks like rain, Joe accepts his fate: he'll be tied to a desk until night comes. "Definitely Out" is his final update.

Poor Joe. I feel for you, dude. I guess this is what you have to deal with when you have a real job. If you had stuck it out with me, you'd be free by 3pm on Sunday after overseeing the Chef du Jour set turnaround.

Sorry about that digression. Just making the point that a lot of regulars weren't there but we trudged on and had ourselves some fun.

On to the game.

Like I said, 14 dudes on a 52 degree night that was a little cloudy but never really threatening. Tall Boys were in hand. Dan K. showed up munching on a chocolate ice cream cone. Evan came and brought a dude named Mark who lives in his building. Good job, Evan. Hussar brought his positive attitude in from Jersey.

As we waited for the Little Leaguers to get off the field, a homeless couple got in a spat on Clarkson street. The man snuck up behind the woman as she walked away, and then he poked her in both ribs. In a voice that resonated with all the sorrow of her miserable lifetime, she screamed, "Don't you fucking touch me! I'm an evil motherfucker! Call the cops! Help!" Then she realized it was her man and got even madder. Eventually they agreed to disagree and they went their separate ways.

All the signs were there for a strong night.

Without D. Lee we were a little lost at first. Pete reluctantly agreed to step in and choose teams with me, and he turned out to be a natural. The teams were evenly matched and the game was tight throughout.

We never got an official set of team names so we are going with Dan K.'s suggestion of Brown v. Board of Education (henceforth BOE).* Since I'm writing this recap, we'll be Brown.

There was a whole bunch of wind blowing around and, as illustrated by 3 accidental inning-enders over the first 3 innings, it was probably blowing out.

BOE threatened to blow the game in each of those first three innings, but only managed a single run in each frame. When I stepped up to the plate with two on and none out in the 3rd, I knew I had to call my shot. And on the first pitch I hit a solid homer out to left, tying the game at 3-3.

Here's the thing: I really enjoy hitting the ball out of JJ Walker field. I know, as a grown man who's over 6 feet tall and close to 300 pounds, I shouldn't. It's like 150 feet. But it feels good. Especially when there are men on base.

So we tied it and blah blah blah and then they scored again blah blah and some guy made a nice play here and there and then blah blah and we came back again and took the lead whatevs and then when we were in like the 6th inning Leigh came up and called his shot and muscled out a towering blast to dead center to give BOE the lead for good.

That put them up 7-6 and then like a minute later Pete was on 3rd and he was like, "That was a big shot." I had already forgotten about Leigh's homer from 30 seconds earlier and assumed that Pete could only be talking about mine from like a half hour earlier. "Mine?" I asked hopefully, honestly moved that he was still marveling at my 158 footer from the 3rd.

"Um, no...Leigh's," Pete said incredulously.

Another unwanted reminder that there are other people in the world besides me. Whatever the case, BOE tacked on a couple more and went on to win Game 1, 9-6.

Game 2 was one of those laughers that got out of hand pretty early. New Guy Mark's girlfriend actually showed up at the field and told him he better get his ass home, which may be a first in Leroyball history. Not even the angry cellphone call -- she hit him with the full-on in-person swing-by. Completely humiliating, if that's what really happened. We'll have to check back with New Guy Mark, if he ever shows up again. Once he left it was 7 on 6 and we donated them an extra fielder when we batted. The extra fielder (which was a composite of several of us) did a rather poor job and helped Brown score a bunch of unearned runs, and Kissel launched his first called shot of the season, and the final was like 7-1 or something in an abbreviated 4 inning 2nd game.

TWIS NOTES:

-The soccer players are getting out of hand. They made several snide and wholly incorrect comments about how we had played past 9:00 last week (wtf? that was our mother's day debacle when 7 guys showed up. plus we've never played past nine. maybe the dude is stuck on GMT) and they encroached annoyingly down the line in right. I did turn around and bat lefty once Game 2 was out of hand so I could take a couple potshots at them. I managed to hit one screamer that almost decapitated a few of them, which was even more satisfying than my 158 foot homer. Stupidly, I yelled "Heads Up" and they managed to get out of the way. There will be major beef with these guys very shortly. They need to understand the rules of the park and respect our permit-granted rights, and maybe line drive to the head is the only language we can both speak fluently.

-Justin is a ridiculous player. He was roaming CF like an antelope. He leaped up against the fence to rob us of one hit, and he made several other big plays as well. At one point after he effortlesly cruised about 80 feet to catch a looper, I said to Adam R., "Would a major leaguer look much different than that while chasing down a flyball?" Adam said no, probably not.

-Doug gets a gold star for climbing into the garden/bocce area at the end of the night to retrieve two of our balls. He also had 4 hits in Game 1. Climbers are key. Without Original Mark, it's down to Doug and Deion. They deserve something extra for their troubles. Next week I will bring them each a donut of their choice, and one for Original Mark if he re-enters the fold.

-Jon R. may be my favorite player. He's fast as hell and has plenty of skill but he's got some weird clumsy streak that causes him to take huge awkward dramatic spills where it looks like all his limbs are gonna pop off and roll around. Tonight he took one at first and one at third. He's also a hell of a nice guy.

-Justin hit a gargantuan homer that somehow failed to be entered in the box score. I think it was in Game 2 and it went so far out of the field that it reminded me just how teeny our little park is and how chintzy my homers are in comparison. It was both awesome and humbling.

-Evan had an off night with the bat but played some excellent D, including a nice play on a line drive and an over the shoulder Jeter-style catch on a popup.

-Leigh is the opposite: his D remains shaky as he wrestles with the middle-aged man's understandable reluctance to buy new glove, but his bat is lethal. He can rip it.

-Pete B. was all over the field in both games, and he went 5 for 5 in game 1. He has established himself in the top non-Justin tier among Leroy ballplayers. Right now I'd put him and Jon R. there for their athleticism and all-around play. Julian might be getting there but we need to scout him a little more. Oh, and you. You're there.

-Dan K. had a strong all-around game as well. He's one of the better early-round picks you can make because he's always on base. He's got a swing that was custom built for Clarkson, hard liners every time. He did manage his annual drive off the fence in this game, too, and it was in a called-shot situation. Maybe next year.

-I hereby put forth a motion that if Game 1 is close and it's around 8:10, we just play one game instead of two. The second game is sometimes a rushed dud. I would say we can reset the called shots at 8 o'clock but the park is closed at that point so all balls hit into the park require a climb.

-The Puma had another good night at the plate, but he proved his real value in directing street-retrievers away from the garden before they threw our balls back to us. Incredible, it was like he had the Jedi mind trick going out there. Pete observed that Lex could probably be bringing in 747's if the architecture career falls through.

-The Kissel brothers are breaking down physically. I hope we can get a full season out of them. Kissel Jr. has a serious wrist injury and big bro Adam is all banged up as well. But they are toughing it out for the glory of love.

-Game Balls:
Game 1: Pete/Leigh
Game 2: Hussar/Kissel Jr.

-I'm not gonna harp on the scorekeeping because I know it's a pain. I will however gently remind you to please make sure you mark down runs and rbi's. It helps.

***New Feature***

Recapilogue:

When the game was over and all the ballplayers had gone home, I noticed that I still had three Tall Boys left in my Tall Boy sack. Without Deion and Ambrose there I guess our Tall Boy consumption was down a little bit.

Since I was going to ride my bike home and I had to pick up some stuff at Whole Foods, the idea of lugging three Tall Boys home with me didn't make a lot of sense. I considered leaving them on top of one of them newspaper dispenser things and letting some hobo make a wonderful discovery. Then I decided that such a move would be much better if I could be there to present the hobo with his Tall Boys, so I could actually see his face light up.

Then I was like, what the hell is the matter with me? I'm treating hobos like doggies, tossing them a little treat in exchange for some weird sense of superiority. Plus, if a guy is all down and out on the street and he's addicted to booze, should I really be giving him more booze?

The answer: probably yes.

But I didn't feel right about it so I crammed the tall boys into my gym bag and got on the bike for the ride home.

I rode down Leroy and passed the Village Tavern on Bedford. The Yankee-Met game was on. I slammed on the brakes. Jeter was up, 4th ininng, 2 outs, men on 2nd and 3rd. I had a perfect view through the window.

So I cracked open one of the Tall Boys and drank some of it while I watched the game. Jeter came through with an RBI single. Then Giambi walked. Then A-Rod lined out and it was time for me to go. I rode home through the cool night, taking tugs on my brown-bagged Tall Boy the whole way. Breeze, Bike, Bud. No worries. It was as close as a man can come to Spicoli's model of complete personal satisfaction.

I rode east across 8th street and headed up University Place, passing the spot where nearly every day for four years on the walk home from high school the Puma would hand me his leftover Twix wrapper and I would inexplicably take it. As I hit 11th street I drained the last of my Tall Boy save a half ounce of backwash. As I hit 12th I spied a garbage can on the right hand side of the street, next to a streetlamp. The window of opportunity was small. The lamppost was blocking about half of the can, leaving only a sliver of can available to me. I knew I had to attempt the shot, and of course I knew that slowing down would be cheating. At around 19 mph, I let it fly. Money. I thought of that line from the first Lethal Weapon movie: Ten guys in the world coulda made that shot.

I went to the store and bought food for the nanny and then I rode home buzzed and content.

* Although perhaps using this name frivolously is inappropriate.

Monday, May 15, 2006

5.14.6: You Don't Need a Weatherman

By Pete B.

To all those dads who sneak out on Sunday to play softball and leave Mom & the kid(s) at home to sort out the bath & the pj's, the DVD player, and the homework, you are hereby absolved for staying home on Mother's Day. However, the single most insidious thing about Mother's Day in my book is it always falls on a Sunday, which means it always packs a punch in terms of its high guilt factor and its rampant commercialism. But I might as well be telling you the Sun sets in the West; you already know and there's not much you can do about it.

If you had planned to play and decided against it because some weatherman told you it was going to rain, I want to give some friendly advice: Don't listen to the weatherman on TV, please. Those guys are instructed by their bosses to hype 'weather events' because they are in a constant fight for ratings. They are always going to err on the side of predicting bad weather, and that's what they did yesterday. This isn't a myth; it's a true fact about the news business and god knows I know it firsthand. You just can't trust the weatherman with a key decision like that; not only is he generally kind of dumb, but he's also not acting in your best interests. Instead, I recommend going on the computer and checking out Accuweather and clicking on the 'local radar' page. This page never fails to give you reliable information on whether it will rain in the next few hours; one time using Accuweather animated radar I predicted the arrival of a summer thundershower within five minutes of its arrival and departure. The weatherman is fine for getting comme ci comme ca forecasts for a few days out, but when it gets down to the nitty gritty, you want to go with the Internet.

Softball had these two strong factors working against it Sunday. And the turnout suffered. In the end, we had seven players: myself, Ambrose, Lex, Hans, Evan, Adam and Danny. Adam was depressed because his beloved Red Sox haven't played a game in like weeks but he brought me the news that the Os came back in the 9th to sweep the lowly Royals. Julian showed up for about 15 minutes but left when it became clear there would be no game. I myself went through a not insignificant amount of trouble to rearrange my sked and show up which makes me either a) a statistical outlier or b) an asshole depending on whether you are into science or not.


What emerged was an extendo batting practice with lots of beer drinking. Thanks again to Hans who brought a six-pack. I generally bring one beer in hopes of just catching a tiny little beer high. But of course I rarely say no to a second if there's another around. I would add that this behavior from Hans is not limited to beer; Hans is one of the world's truly generous people.

During the BP session Danny perfected his behind-the-back catching technique.

There was a hot rumor on the diamond that actress Julia Stiles was in the little park area behind center field. I believe it was confirmed at some point to be accurate. I had to really stress to Ms. Stiles a few years back that she should no longer call my cell phone late at night so I kind of stayed away from that little sideplay.

After an embarrassingly long BP session we hastily arranged a game of 'every man for himself' with six guys in the field, a pitcher throwing overhand, and no catcher. The batter received ghost runners for hits and they advanced as far as he did on subsequent hits. We staggered through two rounds of this and everybody seemed to be enjoying the outright idiocy of it all to a fair extent. The overhand pitching added a tiny element of danger and mystique to what surely would have been a failed attempt to get something lively going at all. It was hard to score runs off the overhand pitching and there was no incentive to take pitches because, with no catcher, the batter had to retrieve the ball. Also, there was a brisk wind pouring in from the power alley in left, which would have made 'called shots' during a regular game a real challenge. This was no July night where the ball jumps off the bat. Ambrose hit the only ball out while batting leftamundo. There were more trick catches and stuff like that; Hans was seen working on his 'glove on head, catch fly ball with bare hand' trick.

At least one bladder was relieved in right field.

After the 'game' we proclaimed ourselves winners and headed into the dark night a little shook by the bad turnout but confident that a moral victory of sorts was achieved in that we hung out and did something, anything long enough to hamper the French speaking soccer players from running wild on the field of play.