from Boston Baseball, May 2013
In Vermont we have mudrooms because in the spring, which is
just now arriving, you need a place to take your boots off, and to put them
back on, before tracking the remnants of winter inside the house. So the
mudroom also becomes a place where other outdoor things get left behind – hockey
sticks and bike helmets, dog leashes and birdseed, carburetor cleaner and ski
poles.
High on a shelf, in a basket filled with assorted camping
gear and swim shoes, sits my baseball glove. It has taunted me every day of
this long winter, and even much of last fall.
It’s now been ten years since I last played regularly , and another five
since I coached, and the kids across the road have quit playing, and my
daughter is seventeen and doesn’t care.
The dog still likes to play, at least the retrieving part, most of the
time, but doesn’t have an arm worth a damn. So the only games of catch I have
anymore go one direction, out and not very far, either, not since I hurt my
elbow putting on the snowplow, and never back.
It’s a nice glove, too, the best I ever had, black, a
Rawlings I bought thru the mail probably 15 or 16 years ago, when she was still
a baby and I still had the arm and energy to play in two leagues, one in Boston
and the other in Worcester County. I paid about $150 dollars, money I probably
did not have. Now the model number is worn away and the inside palm, cracked
and hard, shows islands of leather pulled apart by sweat. It’s a “fastback,”
with the finger slot in back to protect the hand, and the place my finger sat
is worn smooth and brown.
It still has that smell, though. Worn grass and Gloveoleum, baseball
diamond dirt and tobacco, muscle rub and grass, and it still fits. That’s the
things about a glove – you may change but it never does. Once you reach high
school, that’s it. Your hair gets thinner and shorter, your shoes wider, and
your waist expands, but your glove still fits, the last remembrances of summers
past.
When I put my hand inside it’s tight and cold at first –
there was frost last night – but the longer I
wear it my hand starts to warm and leather loosens and turns supple
again. If I look real close at the rectangular red label on the back I can
still see the letters of my last name, carefully inked, and now faded from the
sun. I was always cautious, even as a kid, to make the letters careful and
square.
Old habits die hard and there’s still a ball inside. When I last put it up on the shelf – last
June? July? - I still stuck a ball in
there to protect the pocket. It has its own smell, too, and a feel, the seams
raised and the leather too tight, a ball that once got left out in the rain. Yet
they both still fit the hand like nothing else ever has, or ever will, one
shape that says “throw it,” the other that
asks to catch.
Inside my glove there might have been a player’s signature
inside once, embossed in gold ink, but it’s gone now, worn off by grinding the
ball in the pocket with too many men on base, and I can’t remember who it was. Funny.
But I remember the names that have been there before, in other gloves, starting
when I was a kid, names that track me from the backyard through t-ball, Little
League, Pony League, high school and beyond; Don Mossi (a Nokona, all stubby fingered and short), Ed Kranepool (a gift on my
sixth birthday that I wore during my great-grandmother’s funeral later that
day), Norm Cash (an “E-Z Catch” Spalding first baseman’s glove), a Johnny Bench
catcher’s mitt, a Bobby Murcer (another Spalding), a Reggie Jackson (the one I
tied back together with my girlfriends’ green hair ribbon when the leather
between the fingers broke), a Don Sutton (one I bought for my sister then stole
back for my daughter, then stole back from her), a Ken Griffey leatherette
piece of crap I threw away and this one, no name now at all but mine.
Now the sun is coming through the window and the frost has
melted into dew, and if the forecast is right it might hit 70 degrees today. I
should put the glove away – the mudroom isn’t the best place for leather – rub
it with some oil, work the ball back into the pocket and tie it with a
shoelace, but I won’t.
Deeper in the basket on that shelf is another glove, that
Don Sutton model, and I place my glove back on top. I might need them one day. Who knows, later this summer, perhaps some
Saturday afternoon after the grass has been cut and before the game comes on,
maybe someone will ask to play game of catch.
Glenn Stout is the
author of Fenway 1912, series editor for The Best American Sports Writing and a Contributing Editor for SBNation.com/longform.
Follow Glenn on Twitter @GlennStout