Category Archives: Chicago Cubs

The Pencil Today:

THE QUOTE

“I had a blast.” Kerry Wood

TIME FLEES

If you don’t care about big time pro sports, you’d better skip this entry.

Me, one of the passions of my life is baseball. And, coming from the north side of Chicago, my favorite team is the Cubs.

The team that defines losing. That hasn’t been in a World Series since Gen. Douglas MacArthur was the military provost of Japan. That hasn’t won a World Series since Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were still on the lam in Bolivia.

Butch & Sundance: Did They Know The Cubs Had Won The World Series?

Truth.

The Cubs have broken my heart more than all the women I’ve ever been in love with put together.

The team has kicked me in the gut in the years 1969, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1984, 2003, 2004, and 2008. Yep. Each of those years, they teased me, drew me in, caused me to dream and hope, seduced me into thinking that maybe, just maybe, this was the year they’d finally reward me for my saintly, super-human loyalty.

But each of those years — improbably, bafflingly, weirdly — they found startling ways to lose. And I’m not even mentioning all the times they lost when they were supposed to lose.

The jerks.

Rooting for the Cubs is like…, um…, it’s like…, uh…, well, it’s like nothing else on Earth.

Like Nothing On Earth

For chrissakes it’s just a baseball team. Still, I fret and hope and wring my hands over them as if their purpose in this crazy, mixed-up world is to create world peace or at the very least find a cure for cancer.

It’s inane; I admit it.

Anyway, the definitive Chicago Cub, one Kerry Lee Wood of Irving, Texas, perhaps the most celebrated pitcher ever to emerge from high school, retired yesterday afternoon.

He knew in advance he was going to do it. He knew he was finished. He knew he couldn’t get batters out anymore on a consistent basis. And he knew, more than anything, that his body couldn’t take the stress and strain of throwing a baseball faster than a Porsche speeding down the Tri-State Tollway.

Friday afternoon, Wood was put into the game to face one batter, a powerful lummox named Dayan Viciedo of the cross-town White Sox, in the eighth inning of a tight game. Viciedo is capable of launching a pitched baseball into orbit around the globe. He’s also likely to screw himself into the ground swinging and missing.

The White Sox were threatening with a runner on base. A long one off the bat of Viciedo could have put the game out of reach.

Kerry Wood threw three pitches to the young Cuban. Viciedo struck out.

That was that. The end. Wood left the game. His son, the Cubs batboy yesterday, leaped into his arms. Wrigley Field fans stood and applauded him for long, long minutes.

“Mentally and physically, we get to this point,” Wood said after the game. He will no longer be “Kid K.” Now, he’ll be living out the rest of his days.

He’s a greybeard in the closed world of sports. Of course, he’s really young in the real world. He turns 35 in less than a month. And he’s made a pile of dough in the game — a tad better than $70M over his 14-year major league career.

His leaving is no tragedy. I may be a baseball fan but I have a semblance of human perspective. The end of Kerry Wood’s career as a baseball player serves only to remind me how fast time passes.

Let’s go back to the rainy, chilly afternoon of May 6th, 1998. Just a little more than 14 years ago.

I’d been writing at my coffeehouse/back office du jour, Bic’s Hardware Cafe on Halsted Street in the East Pilsen neighborhood. The rain let up a bit at around 4:30pm. I figured it was a good time for me to jump on my bicycle and pedal home, some three miles north. Passing through a viaduct under the railroad tracks at 16th Street, I rode over some broken glass and got a flat. I checked my tire repair kit in my backpack and found I’d run out of patches.

So I flagged down a taxi. I convinced the driver to let me stash my bike in his trunk (fortunately he was driving one of those enormous Ford Crown Vics). I plopped into the seat and we sped off north.

The driver, speaking in an almost impenetrable Arab accent, looked in the rearview mirror and asked me, “Do you like baseball?”

I literally recoiled. “Uh, sure,” I said, after a sufficient puzzled pause.

“Did you hear about the Cubs?”

“I dunno. What happened?” I said.

He became excited. I think he bounced in his seat. He stared at me in the rearview mirror as we barreled north on Morgan Street.

“They set the record!” he gushed.

“Oh yeah? What record?”

“They set the record for strikeouts!”

Now, just try to imagine an Arab cabdriver with a thick accent gushing about this kind of baseball arcana. I figured it was the Cubs batters who’d set a strikeout record. Maybe they’d struck out 22 or 23 times. Hell, it’s the Cubs, I mused, they might have struck out 27 times.

A baseball team makes 27 outs in a nine-inning game. Knowing the Cubs as intimately as I do and did, it would have been perfectly logical for me to suppose they’d whiffed every time they came to bat that day.

“So how many strikeouts did they get?” I asked.

Again, the thick accent. “Twenty!” he said.

“That figures,” I said in a world-weary tone. “They can’t hit their way out of a wet paper bag.”

“No, no, no,” he said, a bit impatiently, as if frustrated by my ignorance of the great American game. “Kerry Wood! He struck out the other team 20 times.”

May 6, 1998 — Just A Kid

Now I was truly stunned into silence.

Finally I said, “No shit!”

He agreed. “No sheet.”

And for the rest of the ride, we talked baseball.

A true American story, no?

That game against the big-hitting Houston Astros is arguably the greatest single pitching performance in the history of baseball. Wood gave up one squibbly little hit, a grounder that the third baseman almost snagged. He walked no one. The mighty Astros were helpless against his offerings.

His fastball was in the high 90s. His slider fell off the table. His curveball bent like a boomerang. The Astros looked like little kids flailing against a grown man.

Years later, after You Tube came online, I watched the video of Wood toying with the Houston batters.

His pitches moved that day in a way I’ve never seen before. By the time he got to the fourth inning, I thought, Man, this is inhuman.

And you know what? It was.

It was not humanly possible for Wood or anyone else to put enough spin on a ball he was flinging with all his might to make it dance so much.

He did it for one game. The structure of the human shoulder and elbow would not allow him to do it again. Not that he didn’t try.

Physical Abuse

A very few major league pitchers can make the ball seemingly appear and disappear on the way to the plate as if by magic. They may try to throw one or two such pitches, just to show off. But guys who make their living hurling baseballs have learned long before reaching the big leagues that they cannot expect their arms to suffer the loads and stresses, the contortions, the abuse that truly unhittable pitches demand.

Successful pitchers learn to take care of their arms. Human beings can do a lot of amazing things. They can climb Mt. Everest or march across Antarctica. But they may suffer the bends or lose a finger or toe or two to frostbite. So they learn they can’t do amazing things all the time.

Nobody has that many fingers or toes.

Kerry Wood only had one right arm. He was successful for a day. By the end of the 1998 season, Kerry Wood’s arm was torn to shreds. He underwent reconstructive elbow surgery that off-season. He never was the same again.

It was the equivalent of an Olympic pole vaulter soaring 40 feet in the air, setting a record and stunning the world, but crashing down to the ground with enough force to break his spine.

He did it but he would never do it again.

And Kerry Wood did stun the world that day, at least a corner of the world that contained a native Chicago writer and an excited Arab cabdriver.

20

The Pencil Today:

THE QUOTE

“The secret of eternal youth is arrested development.” — Alice Roosevelt Longworth

LUCK OF THE DRAW

This Andrew Luck fellow, who became an instant multi-millionaire in last night’s NFL draft, just might be able to run for King of Indiana in a few years if he has any kind of success at all on the football field.

He’s well-spoken and self-effacing, he has a dazzling smile, and it seems as though he’s got his feet on the ground. Hopefully, he’ll retain his positive character traits once he signs his obligatory obscenely lucrative contract with the Indianapolis Colts. Last year’s number one pick in the NFL draft, quarterback Cam Newton, inked a four-year, $22M deal with the Carolina Panthers.

The number one pick in 2010, the St Louis Rams’ Sam Bradford, scored a six-year, $78M contract but, of course, he’s white, as is Luck.

Luck-y

Luck is 22 years old. Sure, he may seem mature beyond his years but scads of dough can tend to change any human being. I know that if I suddenly happened into tens of millions of dollars when I was 22, I probably would have become one of the world’s most unbearable people.

WILL●HE●IS

One of the Boys of Soma, pistol-packin’ Pat Murphy, reports that George Will‘s appearance last night at the Ivy Tech Bloomington’s O’Bannon Institute for Community Service was eye-opening.

“He’s a smart guy,” Murphy, a dyed in the wool Dem allowed about the Republican darling. “He had some really perceptive things to say last night.”

Will

Among other things, Will pointed out how difficult it will be for Mitt Romney to unseat Barack Obama in this fall’s presidential beauty contest. It’s a demographic thing, what with Romney expected to strike out big time with women, Latinos, and blacks.

Murphy added that Mayor Mark Kruzan asked Will if the Chicago Cubs will ever win the World Series. Will is a noted member of the Emil Verban Society, a boys club of Washington-insider Cubs fans (Ronald Reagan also was a member).

Will wouldn’t hazard a guess but did remind the crowd that the last time the Cubs won it all was two years before the death of Leo Tolstoy.

19th Century Man

THE FOX PIGSTY

How about that blonde, Barbie Doll manqué from Fox News who tweeted the insult yesterday about the right wing’s current fave whipping girl, Sandra Fluke?

Crowley: News? Analyst?

Fluke testified before a House Democrats caucus about the need for health insurers to cover contraception. Immediately, the anencephalics of this holy land jumped on her with both feet. Leading the bullying was Rush Limbaugh, who called her a “slut” and a “prostitute” on his nationally-broadcast radio upchuck fest.

Apparently, Fluke has announced she’s getting married. Fox News “analyst” Monica Crowley responded thusly in the Tweet-iverse:

Knowing what we know about Fox News and the pan-troglodytes who watch it, implying that Fluke was thought to be a lesbian has to be an insult.

Problem is, Monica baby, Fluke testified about her own need for contraception. Lesbian sex does not result in pregnancy. Are we clear on that now?

COLLINS WAS HUNGRY ONCE

Susan Jones, ex of the IU Enrollment Service operation, is working on a history of the Bloomington Playwrights Project.

Jones discovered recently that one of America’s hottest writers today wrote a couple of plays for the BPP back in the 1980s.

That’s right — Suzanne Collins, whose “Hunger Games” trilogy is de rigeur for literate teens (and even a lot of adults who sheepishly buy the books at the Book Corner), once was an aspiring scribe here. She earned a double major in Drama and Telecommunications from IU in 1985 and hung around town for a few years afterward.

Collins

Sounds like a good reason to take in some BPP productions this year. Who knows which future superstar’s work you’ll be seeing?

Electron Pencil event listings: Music, art, movies, lectures, parties, receptions, benefits, plays, meetings, fairs, conspiracies, rituals, etc.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Mathers Museum of World CulturesExhibits, “Blended Harmonies: Music and Religion in Nepal”; through July 1st — “Esse Quam Videri (To Be, Rather than To Be Seen): Muslim Self Portraits; through June 17th — “From the Big Bang to the World Wide Web: The Origins of Everything”; through July 1st, 9am-4:30pm

IU Grunwald (SOFA) GalleryMFA & BFA Thesis 3 exhibitions; through May 5th

Kinsey Institute GalleryArt exhibit, “Man as Object: Reversing the Gaze”; 1:30-5pm

IU HPERLecture, Jonathan Jarvis, director of the National Park Service; 3:30pm

Thrive Health & Well-Being CenterOpening reception, Donna Headrick Moore scanner and pinhole photo exhibit; 5-8pm

Madame Walker Theatre CenterJazz on the Avenue; 6pm

The Venue Fine Arts & GiftsReception for Dawn Adams exhibit, “The Art of Healing”; 6pm

IU Grunwald (SOFA) GalleryReception, MFA & BFA 3 participants; 6pm

IU Cinema“Water and Power” by Pat O’Neill; 6:30pm

Patricia’s Wellness Arts Cafe & Quilter’s Comfort TeasPoetry, “Readings for Our Earth” & open mic; 7-9pm

Rachael’s CafePark Jefferson, Marital Roles, The Greater Good; 7:30pm

Cafe DjangoSvetla Vladeva and the Eastern European Ensemble; 7:30-10pm

The Player’s PubDicky James and the Blue Flames; 8pm

IU AuditoriumMusical, “Young Frankenstein”; 8pm

IU Memorial Union, Whittenberger Auditorium — Film, “The Artist”; 8 & 11pm

Comedy AtticKumail Nanjiani; 8 & 10:30pm

The BishopDocumentary film, “Color Me Obsessed,” on the Replacements; 8pm

Max’s PlaceLouis; 8pm

The BluebirdAndy Holinden; 8pm

The Palace Theatre“Songs: The Musical”; 8pm

Bear’s PlaceZach Dubois; 9pm

Max’s PlaceSoul Kinks; 9pm

Uncle Elizabeth’sVicci Laine & the West End Girls; 10pm & Midnight

The BishopDave Walter Karaoke; 11pm

The Pencil Today:

AIM HIGHER

Dr. Timothy Leary said it: “Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition.”

Timothy Leary In 1992, Covered In Psychedelic Images, Natch

FOUND MONEY

This time of year Hoosiers reach into their hall closets for those coats they haven’t worn for nine months or so. They dig into the pockets and, lo and behold, find folded up five dollar bills.

Happens all the time.

Gov. Mitch Daniels did the same thing yesterday and was so pumped that he called a press conference.

Only it wasn’t a fin he found. It was $320 million.

That is, 64,000,000 five dollar bills.

“I’m Gonna Go Check Under the Sofa Cushions Now!”

The Indy Star reports the swag was found in some hidden-away bank account by a State Department auditor. The dough was revenue from corporate income taxes. It was all a happy accident, Daniels said, beaming.

Yeah, what a thrill. Especially for Indiana school districts which — mirabile dictu! — have suffered some $300 million in funding cuts over the last three years.

The whole charade stinks, no?

OLD NUMBER 33 IS 55

Happy birthday, Larry Bird.

ILLITERATES

So, Bloomington’s unofficial poet laureate Ross Gay comes into the Book Corner yesterday afternoon. We chat about our work habits. He tells me he likes to get up at 5:30 in the morning and write for three hours or so. Then he says he isn’t disciplined enough. I tell him he’s nuts.

Poet Ross Gay

Then he browses for a few minutes, comes back, and puts a couple of small books on the counter. One of them is by Marcel Proust.

Anybody who hopes to be considered intelligent must read Proust. Me? All I know of Proust is from that movie, “Little Miss Sunshine.”

You know, where the Steve Carell character has spent his life studying Proust? And finds himself pretty much in nowheresville?

I confess to the lanky rhymer: “I’ve never read a word of Proust.”

He exhales as though he’s relieved. “Neither have I!” he says.

Cool. Ross Gay and me.

JUNK SCIENCE

Let me get this straight. Investors the world over were thrilled that Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy agreed on a plan to put wayward European Union nations back on the right track.

Money Can Buy Me Love

Markets went up in the US, China, Japan, and Europe itself. Even those stuffed shirts in the UK started investing again. The party lasted a single day.

Standard & Poors issued a warning Monday night saying the honchos took too long to come to an agreement. So, S&P just might downgrade the credit ratings of 15 eurozone nations. And now the markets are going all to hell again.

What is it about this shell game that I don’t get?

Besides everything.

CATS AND MACHINES

Click the thumb below and see Episode 5 in Grover & Sloan’s tale of the cat and the air pump.

BASEBALL IN DECEMBER

I’m still giddy over the election of my favorite baseball player of all time to the Hall of Fame Monday. Ron Santo had an Italian daddy-o, was as emotional as an opera singer, loved pizza, and hit home runs for the Chicago Cubs in the 1960s and early 70s. When I was a little kid, I imagined he was a member of my own family.

So shoot me if I have the diamond game on my mind. Luckily, baseball junkie Eric Van Gucht reviews the book, “Satch, Dizzy, and Rapid Robert” on our Salon page. This kid is good and I hope he’ll do a lot more writing for us from here on out.

WE DO FACEBOOK SO YOU DON’T HAVE TO

◗ Only one link today: Facers were particularly unimaginative last night and this morning. This one, though, is well worth standing alone.

Krista Detor, our town’s sweetest canary, is putting on her annual holiday show Thursday, December 15, 7:30PM, at the Bloomington Convention Center. Whip out that wallet and splurge. You’ll thank me — and Krista.