Still Pitching (15 page)

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Authors: Michael Steinberg

Tags: #Still Pitching: A Memoir

BOOK: Still Pitching
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I got my first clue that something was up when Sullivan stopped me after our Hygiene final and told me to meet him on Saturday morning ten minutes before tryouts. What could he possibly want with me?

Sullivan's office, if you could call it that, was a steam-heated compartment above the St. Francis de Sales gym. Amidst the banging and hissing of the old pipes, he told me in no uncertain terms that if I wanted to make this team I'd have to convince him that a Belle Harbor sugar baby had what it took to play ball for him. I'd anticipated he'd be testing me sooner or later, I just hadn't expected it to happen so soon.

Tryouts were held
on the St. Francis de Sales field, right behind the church. I was out in the bullpen when I heard Sullivan yell out my name. The bastard didn't even give me a chance to warm up. Just as I was running in to the mound, I heard Sullivan ordering Burt Levy to get loose and Mike Rubin to grab a bat. Then he gave me ten warm-up tosses and told Rubin to get in the batter's box.

So there I was on the mound of the church field staring down at Mike, who stood sixty feet, six inches away nervously taking his practice cuts. So many thoughts were racing through my mind. I'd been preparing for this moment for the last nine months. I didn't want to blow my only shot. Last year's team almost made it to the state finals at Cooperstown. They got eliminated in Westchester County—one game away from the regionals. With the talent Sullivan had assembled, there was no telling how far this year's team could go. Then there was Coach Kerchman. Sooner or later, he'd be scouting this team, looking for next year's rookies.

But what about Rubin? We'd played on every team from sixth grade to PAL. This would be his last chance to make the VFW team. Next year we'd all have to try out for American Legion ball, a tougher, more competitive league.

Goddamn it. Why did it always have to come down to bullshit like this? Why can't it just be about your ability to play?

But I knew I couldn't let it get to me, like it did last season with Lee. I had to get the Rubin dilemma out of my mind. I needed to calm down and start thinking about what I was doing. And fast.

Over the years, Rubin had seen my entire repertoire of pitches. And, of course, he knew exactly how I thought. But I was aware of every one of his weaknesses. And I had the ball. Within seconds, I knew just how I'd work him.

Rubin had an open stance and he always stood deep in the box, a few inches off the plate. Hughie Whalen, the catcher, went into his crouch and signaled for a high inside fastball. That's how much he knew. Up and in was right in Rubin's kitchen. High inside fastballs were just what I didn't want to throw. If I threw him low-breaking balls away, my stock-in-trade, he was finished. Kaput. But if I deliberately pitched him too fat, Big Tom would know it. Then I'd be history too.

While I was trying to figure out what to do, Sullivan called timeout and ordered Frankie Ortiz to be the runner at third. This was not a good sign. Ortiz was one of Sullivan's football goons. He was a bruiser from the Arverne projects, and he could hurt you. That's when Sullivan shouted out. “Game situation, ladies,” and he called for a suicide squeeze. It's a risky play, and it's meant to work like this: as soon as I go into my windup, Ortiz will break for home and Rubin will square around to bunt. My job is to make certain Rubin doesn't bunt the ball in fair territory.

Instead of tossing me the ball, Sullivan swaggered out to the mound. As he slapped the grass stained baseball into my glove, he deliberately sprayed black, bitter tobacco juice across the bridge of my nose. Then he motioned Whalen, his other football thug, to the mound.

Sullivan and I were inches apart. I could feel his breath on my right cheek. His nose was red and swollen, and slanted to the right, broken three times in his college football days. Just as Whalen arrived, Coach rasped, “Steinberg, when Ortiz breaks from third, throw it at his head.”

He meant the batter, Rubin. Why would I want to throw a baseball at my friend's head? It wasn't the right strategy. It was another one of Big Tom's stupid tests of courage.

“At his head, coach?” I said, stalling for time.

Sullivan gave me his that's-the-way-it's-done-around-here look.

It wasn't like I didn't know what he was doing. Everyone knew that if you wanted to play ball for Big Tom you did what you were told and you kept your mouth shut. So why was I being such a smartass? It wasn't like me. Why was I so willing to risk it all, right here, right now?

I tried to calm myself down, remind myself what the costs were. Just cool it. Try and think it through, I said under my breath. Pretend to go along with Big Tom's program. The whole time, though, I could feel the knot in my stomach twist and tighten.

Sullivan glared at the third base bleachers where the final ten guys fidgeted nervously, waiting for their chance to bat. Then he looked back at me. With his cap pulled low, the coach's steel blue pig eyes seemed all the more penetrating. He smiled. The lower part of his jaw was distorted from taking too many football hits without a facemask. So the smile came off looking like a mocking leer, which rattled me even more. I could feel my palms getting clammy; my armpits were already drenched with perspiration.

He looked at the guys waiting in the bleachers and said loud enough for everyone to hear, “Steinberg, let's show this wet nosed bunch of rookies how the game is played.”

Then he grabbed his crotch with his left hand. It was the old comrade routine. He was giving me a chance to look like a leader by pretending we were buddies. We weren't. Big Tom and I didn't operate in the same universe. He was a bull-yock Irishman from Hell's Kitchen, a high school juvi who learned to fight in the streets. His platoon had fought in the Pacific, and the pride still showed in his eyes. To him, guys like Rubin and me were too privileged, and he resented us for it.

I turned to glance at Rubin. He looked like a Thanksgiving turkey on the block. I was embarrassed for him. Maybe the wind was just blowing at his sweatpants, the stiff ocean breeze we get on the Long Island south shore. Then again, maybe his knees really were shaking.

“Let's get the goddamned show on the road,” Sullivan muttered. I thought about quitting. But what if Kerchman found out? The two coaches were like an Australian tag team. “Bad cop, bad cop,” I once heard an ex-player say. But everyone here would have sold his own mother into slavery if it meant that Sullivan would put in a good word with Kerchman. That's why those two bastards could jerk us around like this.

Whalen trotted back behind the plate and Sullivan turned to leave. To him this kind of stuff was routine. I wanted to refuse, but I kept reminding myself that this is my only chance to make the team, to maybe pitch at Cooperstown. In my mind's eye, I could see my dad, brother, and Kerchman sitting in the stands at Doubleday Field.

I tried to buy some time, thinking maybe I could reason with Sullivan. Convince him there was another way to do this. I was red-in-the-face pissed, hoping it looked like windburn.

“You want me to stop the bunt, right?” I said. It came out sounding too timid.

He turned. What the hell was I saying? Nobody second-guesses the coach. Sullivan walked back to the mound and spat another wad of chew on the ground, making sure to splatter some on my new spikes. He looked at Whalen, then at Ortiz. Then he turned to me and shook his head from side to side.

“Thaaat's right, Steinberg,” he said, stretching out the words. “You stop the bunt. Now, let's please execute the fucking play, shall we?” He muttered to himself through clenched teeth as he ambled back toward the bleachers.

It was out of my mouth before I knew it. More assertive this time. “Suppose I hit him in the head?”

Sullivan's own head swung around like a tetherball, making that last tight twist at the top of the pole.

“Don't worry, it's not a vital organ. Pitch.”

I think Big Tom knew that he was undermining his credibility by arguing with a piss-ant kid. So he turned and silenced everyone's murmurs with a long glare. As if rehearsed, the seven guys behind me started to grumble, distancing themselves from me and Sullivan's wrath. Whalen stood behind the plate, looking at the ground, his mask pushed back on top of his head.

“Pitch the fuckin' ball,” Whalen yelled.

“Do what coach tell you man,” spat Ortiz from third.

To those guys, especially, the coach was George God. If he told them to take a dump at home plate, they'd get diarrhea. But me? I'm like Gary Cooper in
High Noon
. Everyone's watching, no one's volunteering to help.

Then I noticed Mike, still frozen in his batter's crouch. He looked like a mannequin with bulging eyes. Before I could think, the words slipped out.

“It's the wrong play, Coach.”

It was my voice, all right, but it couldn't have been me who said it. I'd never have the guts to say anything like that. Not to Sullivan's face, anyway.

Dead silence. You could hear the breeze whistling through the wire mesh of the backstop. At first, Sullivan was too surprised to even curse me out. But after a long moment, he turned and strode up to Rubin, who was still frozen in the batter's box.

Like all of us, Rubin was jackrabbit scared of the coach. And just like a rabbit about to be prey, he was riveted to the ground.

“Goddamn it,” Sullivan ripped off his cap, exposing his jetblack crew cut and sunburned forehead. He spoke like rolling thunder, enunciating every word.

“WHAT DID HE SAY, RUBIN?”

It was a calculated ploy. I'd seen it before, in the streets. Coach was going to punish me by humiliating my friend.

Rubin managed weakly; “Uh, wrong—wrong play. Coach?”

Louder then, like a Marine D.I. “NOBODY IN THE STANDS CAN HEAR YOU, RUBIN.”

“WRONG PLAY, COACH.”

My stomach turned over watching Sullivan humiliate Mike just for the amusement of the guys in the bleachers. And Big Tom knew it. Knew it oh so well.

Still advancing, Sullivan took it to the grandstand.

“ALL YOU LADIES, SAY IT!”

The accusing chorus rained down.

“WRONG PLAY, COACH.”

“AGAIN.”

“WRONG PLAY, COACH.”

Then he ran out to the mound yelling, “YOU, TOO, STEINBERG, YOU SAY IT.”

He was hopping up and down like someone had pranked him with a hotfoot. Adrenaline overcame me then, and before Sullivan could order another round I let the words tumble out in a single breath.

“If I throw a pitchout chest high in the lefthand batter's box, Whalen takes two steps to his right and he has a clear shot at Ortiz.”

By this time, I was so shook up I had no idea if it was the right play or not. I was just trying to call Sullivan's bluff by parroting what Coach Bleutrich had taught me last summer.

Sullivan squared himself and casually put his cap back on. He was trying to regain his composure. He'd let a snot nosed junior high school kid get to him, and now he had to regain control.

My stomach was in knots, Rubin's eyes looked like marbles, and the whole team was hungry to see what would happen next.

Softly now: “That's enough, Steinberg.”

Then to Rubin: “Get back in the box. Let's do the play.”

And to be sure there was no misunderstanding, he took it right back to me:
“My play
,” he said deliberately.
“My play, my way
.”

He was giving me a second chance. Why didn't I just fake it? I had good control. I'd brushed off plenty of hitters before. Maybe deep down I believed that Sullivan was right about me. Maybe I didn't have the balls it took to play for him.

I wanted to give in, get it over with. So I said, “I can't do it.”

Sullivan slammed his cap to the ground, and in one honest, reckless moment, it all came out: “You fucking Belle Harbor Jews are all alike. No goddamn guts,” he yelled. “You're a disgrace to your own people.”

Nobody moved. The wind whipped a funnel of dust through the hard clay infield.

So that's what this was all about. It was no secret that Big Tom was a bigot. But it still came as a shock. He was a coach, a teacher. Some of the guys, I'm sure, had thought the same thing, but we were teammates and they'd never say it to my face. Even in my worst moments I believed that this stuff was for the anti-Semites from the sticks, the ones who say “Jew York.”

There was no chance Sullivan would apologize. He'd used tactics like this before—to get us mad, to fire us up. If I wanted be a real putz, I could report him to the league's advisory board. My father knew some of the officers. But I knew I wouldn't do it, because if I turned him in, it would confirm what he already thought of me, and I didn't want to give him the satisfaction. Besides, I still needed him. And in some odd way I must have sensed that he needed me. If I said or did the right thing, I could still bail him out. For that moment, then, we were yoked to each other, like Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis in that movie
The Defiant Ones
.

I think Sullivan believed that somehow I had made him say what he said. He was angry at
me
for making
him
look bad. So to cover his own ass, he had to make it seem like it was my fault.

“Get out of my sight, Steinberg,” he snapped. “You make me wanna puke.”

He motioned toward the bullpen. “Levy, get your butt in here and pitch.”

To my mind, Burt was more timid than either Mike or me. But, it was all part of Big Tom's design.

Sullivan grunted; the cords of his muscular neck wound tight. Just as he reached to take the ball, something snapped inside of me. I pulled my hand back. Then an eerie calm began to wash over me. My stomach stopped churning, my chest didn't feel as if it was about to burst, and my neck wasn't burning. I could tell that Sullivan sensed something was going on, but he wasn't sure what it was. Neither was I. Not yet, anyway.

“I'm not leaving, Coach,” I said.

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