|
A Field for Dreams
I will never catch a foul ball at a baseball game. It is one of the
certainties of my life. I suppose
never is a strong word. Let’s just say the mathematical probability is
consistent with the chances of my being selected to go shopping for
navel adornment with Christina Aquilara.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Hunter Wright Stadium....
My most recent chance at the former happened last Saturday night when I
went to my first
K-Mets game with my buddy, Kris. The team was incredible. There is
something invigorating and reassuring about young people striving for
excellence.
Nobody prepared me for the natural beauty of Hunter Wright Stadium.
Itís been carved out of
the hemlock next to the Holston River with a breathtaking view of the
north side of Bays Mountain.The thick woods line the perimeter of the
field no less dramatically than Kevin Costner’s Iowa corn in “Field of
Dreams”. Barring the apparition of “Shoeless” Joe Jackson emerging from
the conifers, I couldnít have been more impressed.
Please pay particular attention if you are seated along the foul
lines...watch those foul balls!
We don’t want anyone hurt.
As thrilling as was the K-Mets 16-5 drubbing of that night’s hapless
Elizabethton Twins, the
crowd stole the show for me. A light breeze blew across the treetops and
in through the pressbox windows where Kris and I enjoyed a bird’s eye
view of the proceedings.
Between pitches, I watched fans. After half a century of people
watching, I flatter myself that I
can tell what they are up to from a discreet distance. The crow’s nest
atop Hunter Wright Stadium offers just such an observatory. A night at
the ballpark means many things to many people.
...on the mound for your K-Mets...Rafael Lopez!
For fifteen kids dancing along the high concourse behind the stands on
each pitch, the game
represented an opportunity to retrieve one of my much coveted foul
balls. To the pretty blonde three rows behind home plate, it offered
the chance to catch up on local gossip with her girlfriend and flash
come-hither smiles to what I assume were the "cutest" players on each
team. (It also offered the opportunity to light a presumably forbidden
cigarette whenever the woman I took to be her mother left for the
concession stand.)
Now batting for Elizabethton...
For the two elderly gentlemen who conversed with the ease of old
friends, it meant a couple of
hours in comfortable company. (Including a few playful moments when one
of them snatched the ball cap off the other’s head and a mock wrestling
match ensued. This obviously wasn’t the first time the two had
“rassled”.) Where but at a ball game could these venerable gentlemen
return to the age of fourteen?
The young man in the left field bleachers was afforded time to sit
behind his sleepy wife, arms
around her shoulders as she leaned back against him and cuddled their
toddler on her lap. They could have assumed the same position on a
bobsled. He laughed and whispered in her ear and re-arranged the stray
ringlet on her forehead. The baby giggled a lot and cooed when the crowd
cheered. I envied all three of them.
...for the K-Mets...two runs on three hits...no errors, one man left
on base.
Not at the ballpark Saturday night were some people who should have
been. Some who had bad
days and needed to breathe the sweet, clean air...some who were home
setting in front of their computers or TV’s, complaining there was
“nothing to do”.
Not only did they miss a good ball game. They missed a chance to spend
time with one another.
Time to talk. Time to heal. And who knows? Some of them might have even
taken home a foul ball.
 
|
|