The Underdogs (5 page)

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Authors: Mike Lupica

Tags: #Ages 10 & Up, #Retail

BOOK: The Underdogs
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Wondering why he cared what the annoying girl he'd just met thought of him.
He stood on the sidewalk in front of the high school when he got there, looking at the old brick buildings, almost feeling as if he were looking at a picture in some history book. The whole place looked as old and tired to Will as the rest of Forbes did.
Then, ball under his arm, Will walked around back to the football field, the one field in town that was still in decent shape. The wooden scoreboard stared down from one end zone. Wooden bleachers rested empty on both sides of the field. A huge sign stood at the opposite end of the field from the scoreboard. “Home of the Forbes Falcons,” the sign read.
Underneath, in fading paint, was a smaller sign, an advertisement that read, “Proudly sponsored by Forbes Flyers, the shoe for fleet feet.”
Except that one of the
F'
s was gone, and so it now read “Forbes lyers.”
“My dream house,” Will said aloud.
No matter how much he fantasized about where his speed, his talent for football, might take him, he knew the path would go through this field.
At this school, in this town, on this side of the river.
He took one last look around, one last good look at his football future, and then began the long walk home.
Cheeseburger tonight.
Cheeseburger and fries and corn on the cob. “A well-balanced meal for a growing boy,” his dad said in the note on the fridge. The note also told him there was apple pie for dessert, purchased this afternoon at the Country Cupboard.
Will heated up the food and ate in front of the television set in the living room, watching the end of the six o'clock SportsCenter. He cleaned up when he was done, had two pieces of pie with vanilla ice cream, went upstairs and fired up his laptop so he could check his e-mails again.
There was some junk mail that had gotten through and messages from Tim asking Will to call him later about their upcoming fantasy draft.
That was it.
Not what he was looking for, no miracles tonight.
So he sat there for a while online, checking out some of the NFL stat pages, getting ready for the upcoming fantasy draft. The kids his age in the West River league had decided they might as well have a fantasy league, too, and Will had won it easily the year before. This year he had decided to partner up with Tim, mostly because Tim had begged him.
“You do the work, I'll share the glory,” Tim had said.
“But what's in it for
me
?”
“That's a very selfish attitude, if you ask me.”
“I didn't,” Will had said.
Last year fantasy football had just been pure fun. It seemed more important now, though, if only because this year it might be the only way Will would get to compete with the other kids in the West River league.
Fantasy football was just one more version of a game that had always come naturally to Will. He knew the stats he needed, for selecting a quarterback or running back or wide receiver, were already inside his own head, that he didn't need to look them up online. He knew them by heart.
Like football
was
his heart.
Which was why, for the first time ever, despite how his dad and the rest of Forbes had been struggling for years, Will understood what it was like to be poor. He knew a lot of people were a lot worse off than he was, and Will had never been one to feel sorry for himself. He and his dad had it much better than some people—
most
people—who'd lost their jobs when the sneaker factory closed, people who even now were still looking for steady work. Will had lost his mom, and then a first home, which he barely remembered, but he'd always had football. As though the game was the one constant in his life.
Maybe that was why the idea of losing the upcoming season made
him
feel so lost.
 
He thought about going back downstairs, seeing if there was anything good on television tonight. He didn't really feel like calling Tim, not wanting to talk to anybody in the mood he was in. So he decided to watch one of his favorite movies,
The Express,
the one about an old Syracuse University football player named Ernie Davis.
As much as Will knew about football history, he didn't know much about Ernie Davis at first, just that he was one of the names on the long list of guys who'd won the Heisman Trophy and that he'd been the first African American to win the award. He came from Elmira, New York, just over the Pennsylvania border, and he'd grown up poor. So when Will watched the movie and learned that Ernie Davis died in the end, died before playing a professional game, it had just about killed
him.
He'd rewatched
The Express
many times since, but he'd always shut it off after Syracuse beat Texas and won the Cotton Bowl and the national championship. Will liked his own ending to the movie better. The happy ending. He wished life could work out that way, too.
He watched the movie tonight and got to the Cotton Bowl part, the part with all the dirty play from the other team, the nasty comments made because Ernie Davis was black, the attempts by the Texas players to hurt him every chance they got. But he kept getting back up until his team won the game and finished off its undefeated season.
The end,
Will thought,
the happy end,
as he shut off the movie, hearing his dad's car in the driveway at almost the exact same moment.
He heard the car door slam, went over to the window and looked down and saw his dad limping across their small front lawn to the front door, not looking up, not knowing he was being watched from the upstairs window. Will knew his dad always limped more when he thought nobody was watching.
His dad probably wanted a way different story for his own life. Maybe he wished there was a way to pause his own movie right before those two guys destroyed his knee.
Will stood there wondering if his dad even remembered what it was like to run down the field the way Will had today, as if nothing—and nobody—was ever going to stop him. Wondered if his dad even allowed himself to remember the good parts of his own career or if it hurt too much to remember, the way his knee did.
He went to the top of the stairs now to say hi to Joe Tyler.
“What's good?” his dad said when he looked up and saw Will there, smiling at him, moving to the foot of the stairs with no limp at all, opening his arms for Will to come down and give him a hug.
Will raced down the stairs and did just that.

You're
good,” Will said, hugging him hard.
CHAPTER 07
S
ix days later Will's dad delivered the mail, including a letter addressed to Will. Will's breath seemed to get caught in his chest when he saw the return address.
It was from New Balance. Will had written a letter to the CEO of the company after doing some research. It was this, his Hail Mary pass with the clock running out and a whole season
really
on the line, that had kept him secretly hoping for days, the topsecret plan he'd only shared with Tim.
It was a crazy plan, he knew, one that would hopefully end with him and his teammates decked out in New Balance football shoes and jerseys and helmets that they'd provide for the team. A plan that ended with New Balance being their proud sponsor this season the way Forbes Flyers had once been the sponsor of the high school team.
Oh, Will knew it was crazy, all right. But he knew it would have been crazier
not
to try, to just sit there and feel sorry for himself and do nothing.
He picked New Balance just because he'd always worn their football shoes. He found some e-mail addresses on the Internet, thinking they might be a little sketchy but going with them anyway. Taking no chances, he also got the address of New Balance's corporate offices in Boston and sent an actual letter to Mr. Rob DeMartini, the company's CEO:
Dear Mr. DeMartini,
My name is Will Tyler and I am twelve years old and live in a place called Forbes, Pennsylvania, near Ohio. I live there with my dad because my mom died when I was two.
I am going into the seventh grade and love football more than anything. Except my dad. Last year I scored sixteen rushing touchdowns and my team went to the championship game of our league, the Super Bowl of the West River Football League. We lost to Castle Rock, where they make the bottled water, because I fumbled on our last play of the game.
From the time we lost, I have been thinking about getting a rematch with Castle Rock. That brings me to the purpose of my letter, which is that we're probably not going to get a chance at a rematch or a chance to even compete for one because there's not enough money in our town's budget. Our season is ending before it even starts.
Since you make New Balance shoes, you might know that we used to make Forbes Flyers here (not “we” like in my family, even though my grandfather and father worked there) before the company went out of business and the factory closed. Little by little, all of Forbes seems to be closing, too. Now it looks as if my teammates and I might be out of business because Forbes can't afford football anymore for guys our age.
So I was wondering:
Do you think you might possibly sponsor my team this season?
I don't know how we could repay the money it would cost—ten thousand dollars—except by trying to do New Balance proud in the way we would play.
Nobody knows I am writing this letter to you, not even my dad. He's a proud man and doesn't like taking charity. He works hard every day. But I don't think of this as asking for charity. I think of it as asking for a chance. A chance to work hard at the game I love.
Mr. DeMartini, my teammates and I feel like we got hit from the blind side. But my dad once told me it takes no talent to get knocked down, especially in a game like football. He said that it's how you get back up that counts. I am asking for your help, to give me and my teammates a chance to get back up. If you do, I will make you a promise in return:
We will be a team that will make you stand up and cheer.
Maybe we can even get our town to do the same thing.
They could use it here.
Thank you very much for taking the time to read this letter. My dad has always told me to speak from the heart and that is what I tried to do.
Very respectfully yours,
Will Tyler
Now he was staring at the return address on the letter he held now in hands that didn't shake this way when a game was on the line:
New Balance Headquarters
20 Guest Street
Brighton, Mass. 02135-2088
Will was careful opening the envelope, even though his first impulse was to rip it open like it was a Christmas present. He knew that if somehow there was good news inside, he was going to want to keep everything intact.
The letter was typed, with Mr. DeMartini's signature at the bottom:
Dear Will,
As you can probably guess, we get a lot of letters at New Balance asking us for money, from people all over the world. But I'm not sure I've ever received one that touched me quite like yours did, like it came straight from your heart to mine.
And like me, you've probably seen the credit card commercials on TV where they give the dollar value on a few items and then have something at the end that they call “priceless.”
Well, I'm pretty sure that when I was your age, I would have considered my own football season priceless.
That's why I consider having to pay only ten thousand dollars for yours a bargain.
Jim Davis, our chairman, is an old Middlebury College football player, and we've both always shared a dream of owning a National Football League team. That may be a little out of our reach. But when I showed him your letter, he said maybe it was about time New Balance owned a football team, even if it was one in Forbes, Pa.
Somebody from my office will contact your dad in the next few days and he can give us the proper contacts to start working out all the details of sponsoring a team in your league.
For now?
Go tell your friends and your coach and the whole town if you want to that there's going to be a season after all.
I can't tell you how much I look forward to meeting you one of these days. Maybe at the championship game.
I look forward to watching you carry the ball.
Your new friend in football,
Rob DeMartini
Will was by himself. When his dad had delivered the mail, he had just rung the doorbell like he always did, turned and waved when he saw Will waving at him from his bedroom window. Then he took a right at the end of the walk and headed up Valley to continue his route.

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