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Friday, January 16, 2015
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Monday, October 6, 2014
Sunday Morning

staff writer at Fanstop.com
The first crisp Sunday morning of fall brings memories of long ago when the Notre Dame Fighting Irish rarely lost, and my cousin Tim and I relished in their victories. A simple time measured in the success of Notre Dame rather than our personal plight.
When times were hard but our family bonded tight.
Our Sunday mornings were filled the savory smells of frying
eggs, grandma’s gravy simmering over on the stove. The call of her homemade
biscuits baking would awake us from our sleep. Your stomach would begin to
growl as the aroma drifted through the house.
Our grandparents did their best to help their two struggling
daughters with seven children between them. My grandfather, who survived
marching across France
with Patton’s Third Army (a matter he rarely spoke of) would offer up thanks
for God’s blessings. It was rare that a morsel was left on the table. It was a
time of a lot of talk around the table, and no one needed to be encouraged to
eat.
Following the breakfast, my grandparents were off to church.
My grandfather was the pastor of a small country church. Dishes were done, and
my cousin Tim and I settled in for the replay of Saturday’s Notre Dame football
game. The telecasts would begin with Lindsey Nelson introducing himself “Hello,
I am Lindsey Nelson.” To us he seemed like an uncle that was about to retell us
of the game from the previous day. Unlike now, it was a time when we could only
get three channels, and on a good day we could get Channel Six out of Indianapolis .
We would rush outside no matter the weather and begin to let
our imaginations run wild with Notre Dame football. We had a well-worn football
that was almost too slick to handle with our small hands from years of usage. We
would toss the football all afternoon reliving the highlights of the game.
It was also the glorious time to follow the Notre Dame Fighting
Irish under Ara Parseghian known as the “era of Ara.” In our minds, they never
lost. On that rare occasion that Notre Dame would lose, we would run our plays
that saved the game for the old Notre Dame. Occasionally, we would allow our
brothers to participate, but not often. It was our imagination, our world. We
were fans despite a high school kid telling us we couldn’t root for Notre Dame
because we were not Catholic. It didn’t stop us.
Notre Dame Fighting Irish football on those Sunday mornings
was fuel for our imagination. No video games, computers or other gadgets kids enjoy
today; just two boys, a football, and a free Sunday in football season.
We have gone our different paths in life. I enlisted in the
Air Force, and my cousin Tim joined the Marines. I am quiet and reflective, and
Tim is boisterous and quick to opinion. We were and are more than cousins: We
are brothers. As I grow older, I fondly reflect on those simpler times and
pleasures more and more often.
Copyright 2014 Perry J. Glasgoqw
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
The Pick-Up Game
Visit my author page at: http://tinyurl.com/pvh9mds
Long before PlayStation, video games, and 400-cable
television stations occupied the time of a teenager, it was the time of
sweltering monotonous
It was the early 70’s; my parents were divorced. Mom had
just remarried, and we moved to town. We were pleased to find the neighborhood
was loaded with kids. It didn’t take long to realize there were guys who liked
to play baseball. The caps indicated their favorite teams. Taking a quick
census I noted four Reds, four Cardinals, and one lone Braves fan in the mix. When
they found out that my favorite team was the Cubs there was a collective sigh.
The kind of uncomfortable sigh you might get when someone finds out you
recently lost a loved one.
The call came early in the morning (9:30 is really early for
a 12 year-old). It started with a simple “you guys wanna play some ball?” My
brother told me to get my glove: We were invited to the pick-up game.
I donned my beat Cubs cap, and well worn-out Cubs t-shirt, while
my brother wore his Pittsburgh Pirates t-shirt. We wanted to show these town
boys that we were serious ballplayers. I grabbed the Mickey Mantle model my dad
had given us: We were sporting the “latest technology” as aluminum bats were
called.
On the way to Mr. Anderson’s field they informed us it was best to get in a couple of games before it was too hot to play. There were 12 or 14 of us with bats slung over our shoulders, and gloves on our hands. Mr. Anderson’s field was actually was a very large well-manicured lawn. He informed us with a kind but stern demeanor that we would have to alternate home plate as not to wear bare spots in his yard. We accepted his terms.
Big Mike still suffered from the near-miss in the spring. He
had launched a line drive down the right-field line, and straight through the
window of Widow Jones. They were certain he had killed her. Worse off he had to cut her lawn all summer
to pay for the damages.
The neighborhood rules were addressed. The most important
ground rule was the pitcher’s hand. You had to get to first before the pitcher
got the ball in his glove. Hitting into the stand of trees was considered a
home run. To this day I don’t think anyone got close. I would find out that it
was a ritual to address the ground rules before the games could start.
And then came the time to address the picking of teams. The
guys looked at me and my brother with suspicion as to whether we possessed any
ability. On that first day, we were picked second to last. A couple of brothers
without gloves or bats were picked after us.
We played until the sun became unbearable and called it
quits for another day. We would walk a couple of blocks to the neighborhood
grocery. While enjoying a cold soda or an ice cream, we discussed the prowess
of our game, made fun of each other, and swooned over the high school girls who
were regular sunbathers in our neighborhood. In a short time though the girls,
cars, and jobs would win over playing ball...
Monday, September 30, 2013
The Old Ballpark
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In the eternal green pastures of my youth there is an old
ballpark. Where all games were competitive, every day was Sunday, and there
were no rainouts.
It was the park where at ten years old I was jerked out of
the lineup for booting three balls in an inning. With my tear-stained face
humiliated by having been jerked out of the lineup, I spent the afternoon
glaring at the second baseman.
There was a backstop made of saplings and chicken wire about eight feet wide. It protected the ball from rolling into the dry creek bed that ran parallel to the field. The huge sycamore tree marked the leftfield foul pole. In the leftfield power alley a second dry creek bed marked the home run boundary. On the fly into the creek there was a home run (watch out for the snakes when retrieving the ball). Our ground rules were a little odd when it came to the centerfield to rightfield foul line. The boundary was marked by buried ceramic blocks. Outfielders were allowed to run beyond the boundary but anything that landed or dropped was considered home runs. Dad made bases out of feed sacks filled with dirt: The field was ready for the games to begin.
It wasn’t long before the field was noticed, and we started
playing both slow and fast pitch softball on Sundays. Family, friends, and
strangers now stopped to play the game.
When I pass the field today, I often think of those times. I
can hear the cheering, cussing, and the sound of the crack of the bat. Nature
has reclaimed her field: It is now overgrown with weeds, saplings; the bases
are occupied with field mice, rabbits, and snakes. The backstop is gone, no
signs of any games ever being played. Now my dad is gone as are most of the
older men who played those games.
The summer before my father’s passing we stood where the backstop once had its place, and looked over the field. Neither of us said a word. We just looked at each other and smiled.
###
copyright 2013 Perry J. Glasgow
copyright 2013 Perry J. Glasgow
Monday, August 19, 2013
A Game of Catch
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In
the mystic mists of my mind, baseball diamonds of summers past echo the sounds
of long ago. A place where the baseball splits the humid Hoosier air, and
voices of young men revel in the heat of summer. The pop of cowhide into
leather is an announcement that a game of catch is underway.
Boys
tend to remember a game of catch with their fathers, but for me it conjures
memories of countless hours tossing a ball back and forth with my brother. Despite
our sibling rivalry that exists to this day, I look upon those days with
fondness. We were once told that if one of us caught a cold the other would
catch it too.
I came to bat against him once with the bases loaded and nobody out. I dug into the batter’s box like the Mighty Casey, and awaited his first pitch. A high heater under my chin sent my backside into the dirt. As I dusted myself off I looked out at the mound – at my brother standing with a huge grin on his face.
A
couple of weeks later he was out of the hospital recovering at home. My leave
was almost up, and he stepped into the living room with both of our gloves, and
a ball. We could not toss it far because of his injuries, but I knew everything
was going to be fine.
It has been thirty years since our last game of catch. I sometimes close my eyes and hear our barbs at one another as we toss the baseball. As brothers we’re very competitive, but I wouldn’t trade those hours of tossing a baseball that built a bond lasting a lifetime.
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