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From My Seat Sports

Crowded Comforts

The pandemic began, for me, on March 10, 2020, when Harvard University announced it was shutting down its spring semester due to the coronavirus outbreak. Those folks in the Ivy League are (1) smart and (2) don’t cancel classes for the average flu scare. When we learned that baseball and softball seasons were not to be, that graduation ceremonies would be “virtual”. … the novel coronavirus became quite real. Mankind would adjust to accommodate this new contagion or die trying.

Fast-forward to May 26, 2021 — around and past the longest collective slog of our lifetimes — and I found myself sitting among hundreds of other people(!) on the grounds of Wesleyan University for an actual graduation ceremony. My daughter Sofia is among 700 members of a group Wesleyan president Michael Roth aptly described as “the mighty Class of 2021.” Roth opened his remarks with the following: “It’s so nice to see you all here, in person. Together.” Such a simple expression, a sentiment as easily understood by a child in her kindergarten class as a young adult capped and gowned for one of life’s turning points. (Already emotional having marched in as professors and administrators stood and clapped, Sofia had to catch her breath after the remark.)

The week before the ceremony, Wesleyan announced that graduates could double their invited guests, from two people to four. And again with thoughts of that Harvard shutdown in mind, I felt like this was a dramatic step out of the pandemic ooze. Not only would this fine New England university allow a crowd to attend its commencement. … it would double that crowd. Both of Sofia’s grandmothers made the drive to Middletown, Connecticut, from central Vermont. If the return to “normal” has a symbolic image, it’s a hug between a grandparent and grandchild. I witnessed lots of those on May 26th.

The pandemic isn’t over, friends. Particularly in states (like Tennessee) where vaccination rates have plateaued too soon, cases of infection continue to emerge. People continue to die. If you want to boost your anxiety level a notch or two, read about the “Delta” variant of the virus. It seems our enemy in this battle didn’t exactly throw in the towel upon the mass distribution of a vaccine. But — and this is a significant but — as vaccination rates do increase, so do comfort levels in and around gatherings of a few hundred people, even a few thousand if you glance at the current state of things in NBA and NHL arenas or MLB stadiums.

On the subject of baseball stadiums, Wesleyan’s quad happens to be the university’s baseball field. (Yes, this is a perfect model.) I literally sat in centerfield as my favorite Wesleyan Cardinal marched to a platform in front of the school’s library to receive her bachelor’s degree. This obviously made me think of my home away from home here in Memphis: AutoZone Park. Upon returning from New England, my first outing was a Sunday matinee between the Redbirds and Toledo Mud Hens. The crowd at downtown’s diamond was around the same size — 3,000, give or take — as the one at Sofia’s graduation. Like at Wesleyan, people were maskless when outside, mankind’s current honor code firmly in place: no need to wear a mask anymore if you’ve been vaccinated. The atmosphere felt right, the cheering a boon for spirits rather than a threat to our health and well being. The Redbirds lost, but I left the ballpark knowing oxygen had reached deeper into my lungs than it had in several months.

Between Sofia’s graduation and the Redbirds game, I did some serious reuniting with family and friends in Vermont. So many hugs. Each one seemed a bit tighter than the previous, and some lasted longer than good-to-see-you-again hugs should. But those hugs now have curative powers, a reminder that “the human touch” is often better in actual form than virtual. I hugged Sofia tightly after her graduation ceremony, knowing that moment — and all those people that shared it with us — is for a lifetime. But I hugged her even tighter a few days later, before returning to Memphis. Because there is life, indeed, ahead for both of us. For all of us. Together again.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Sportswriter’s “Holiday”

We sportswriters toil in journalism’s toy department. We’re about the last category of professionals you should ache for during a pandemic (just above professional athletes). That said, we have seen our subject matter essentially erased by the novel coronavirus. It’s been a month now since there was a meaningful score to check, performance to measure, or matchup to forecast. The sports tree has indeed fallen in the woods where there’s no one to hear it. And the sound has been deafening silence.

We carry on, of course. You have methods for making a day distinctive during the pandemic, and I have mine. I’ll share a few ways I’ve brightened my days in sports “solitary.”

• Revisit Memphis sports history. Memphis magazine turns 44 this month, so I’ve been counting down the 44 greatest local athletes since 1976, one celebrated each day on my Twitter account. The list began with Albert Pujols (heard of him?), and has included Don Parsons (hockey in the Mid-South!), with the likes of Bo Jackson (#33), and new Hall of Famer Isaac Bruce (#20) in the mix. You can learn about number 16 in the countdown Monday and follow along the next two weeks if you want to join the debate over numero uno. (There will be a debate. It’s one hell of a list.)


• Pick up my reading game.
I’ve revisited some classic fiction (The Color Purple, Of Mice and Men) and enjoyed Mick Wall’s voluminous biography of Led Zeppelin (When Giants Walked the Earth). And I’ve turned to one of the few baseball legends I know nothing about: Oscar Charleston. By every measure a member of the Negro Leagues Rushmore (along with Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, and Cool Papa Bell), Charleston was called “the greatest player I’ve seen” by the late Buck O’Neil, a man who saw a lot of great baseball players, both before and after Jackie Robinson played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Aside from the smiling faces of my colleagues, I miss nothing like I miss baseball, and author Jeremy Beer has delivered a treasure to fill the hours between vintage games on the MLB Network.

• Watch my table tennis ranking plummet. I’ve spent the better part of 21 years as a father watching my daughters on soccer fields and softball diamonds. With both of them home more than they’ve been since elementary school, I’m now watching them close the gap between their ping-pong skills and my ping-pong experience. It’s funny what happens to people accustomed to venting competitive energy as a member of a team — or even by watching a team of choice compete on TV — when the outlet is denied. After one dispiriting rally — for me — my sweet Sofia smiled and said, “Nothing but net, Dad.” Yes indeed: ping-pong trash talk.


• Find other toys. Peaky Blinders is extraordinary television. Checks so many boxes on the sports-starved testosterone scale: rivalry, ambition, leadership, major upsets, huge victories, and whiskey . . . lots of Irish whiskey. Tommy Shelby is the Mike Trout of 1920s Birmingham, England.

And Led Zeppelin. Lots of the greatest band mankind has produced. I’ve come to consider “How Many More Times” the theme song of this long, painful battle (and recovery). It’s a long song, changes rhythm multiple times, calms down and heats up. But it takes you to the right place(s). Bursting with energy, with life, with a form of determination. I’m likely listening to it as you finish this column. Find your own lockdown tune, and crank it up, loud enough for the neighbors. And I recommend Zeppelin. Robert Plant can safely close six feet more powerfully than any other man to walk the planet.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: In Which Our Online Sports Columnist Reaches a Milestone

A weekly
columnist must be careful in measuring the life span of his or her work. The
math is precisely the opposite of the way we examine a car’s “life”: it’s the
age, not the mileage. This being my 300th column in this corner of cyberspace, it’s not so much the nice round number that matters, but all that’s happened to the sports world — and naturally, my world — since Week 1 back in February 2002.

Allow me
a few lines of self-indulgence (or bewildered attempts at perspective):

• “From
My Seat” has now been a part of my life longer than was high school or college.

• I’ve
got to be careful in calling this space “my baby,” as it happens to be older
than my actual daughter, Elena.

• While
I’ve spent most of my 30s wondering when I’d finally find inspiration for my
first book, I’ve now written — cumulatively — more than 180,000 words for a website that archives the copy. Not exactly a leather-bound bestseller, but let’s just say my keyboard is ready for the real deal.

Among the attractions that brought me to sports in the first place was the beauty of
numbers, and how they reflect — maybe even illuminate — the games we watch and
the athletes we cheer. St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony LaRussa reduces baseball
games down to the cold, hard numbers we all read each morning in the newspaper.
A win goes in the left column, a loss in the right. Add them up at season’s end,
and the best teams will reveal themselves.

Which
has me considering some Memphis sports numbers, less than or greater than 300,
but all of significance over the last five years.

• 0 —
Number of coaching changes by the University of Memphis football and men’s
basketball programs. The current seven-year stretch without a change atop the U
of M’s flagship teams is the longest since Zach Curlin coached BOTH programs
from 1924 to 1936. There’s much to like about stability, particularly in the
fickle world of big-time college sports.

• 66 —
Number of wins by the Tiger basketball team over the last two seasons.

• 61 —
Number of Tiger basketball wins over the FOUR seasons before John Calipari
arrived in 2000.

• 6,026
— Number of rushing yards by former Tiger All-America DeAngelo Williams from
2002 to 2005.

• 6,039
— Combined total of yards by the Tigers’ leading runners over the NINE seasons
before Williams arrived on campus.


633,129 — Number of tickets sold by the Memphis Redbirds in 2007, the lowest
total in eight years at AutoZone Park, and a figure that has the Redbird brass
scrambling for new promotional ideas for 2008.


397,339 — Highest baseball attendance in Memphis history before AutoZone Park
was opened in 2000. The Redbirds have been pitiful on the field for some time
now, but baseball in the Bluff City is alive and well. Wait till the Cardinals
finally fuel their farm system.

• 3 —
Number of former Sam’s Town 250 winners competing in this year’s NASCAR Nextel
Cup Chase for the Championship (Martin Truex Jr., Clint Bowyer, and Kevin
Harvick). The ST250 is the most underrated sporting event in the Mid-South, and
I’m not sure what’s second.

Numbers,
of course, only scratch the surface in the stories the sports world provides.
Watching Anthony Reyes shut down the Round Rock Express one night, then win Game
1 of the World Series merely a few weeks later provided a rather direct link
between AutoZone Park and the St. Louis Cardinals’ 10th world championship.

If you
saw Darius Washington miss those two free throws that cost his Tigers — his city
— the 2005 Conference USA tournament championship and an NCAA tournament berth,
there’s no number to represent the heartbreak . . . or the courage Washington
showed in leading his team to the Elite Eight a year later.

And how
about the taken-for-granted number search Memphis sports fans get to enjoy every
winter now: our place in the NBA standings. Right before our eyes, the Bluff
City went big league! This column space came into being as the Grizzlies wrapped
up their first season at The Pyramid. May it still be here when the first
championship parade turns from Beale to Front Street.