Welcome to Berkeley Softball
Monday, March 31st, 2008Well I did it. I played my first game of Berkeley City League Softball. I caught and batted 9th for The Three Outers down at the small field, San Pablo Park.
There was me with my stiff new glove and black jeans, flashy new Puma cleats purchased off ebay for $9. There was Rich in his Guatemalan fabric shorts and marijuana shirt, Gary in a shady looking hat and tyedye. Corduroy, Mets jerseys, forty something libertarian hippies and me, a clumsy 33.
I was nervous. My stomach was boiling; I hadn’t played any form of baseball since the 3rd grade. My last real baseball memory came from a game I was out in left. A ball was hit my way and dropped in for a single. I fielded it and threw to third for some reason, instead of second, and hit the third baseman in the head; he had no idea a throw was coming.
I remember playing teeball when my family moved to Tasmania, which was a bummer because in San Marcos we’d already progressed to coaches pitching. So I stopped playing and forgot about baseball.
But then out of nowhere came late 20’s baseball fever, 2001 when the A’s faced the Yankees in the playoffs. My passion was ignited and I haven’t stopped watching since. But playing? Isn’t baseball an entertainment, to be roused by from a comfortable position on the couch, then analzyed later on internet forums? Playing?
Me and my 3rd grade baseball skills would have to hit the ground running. The first inning we batted around and I came up with the bases loaded. I swung at the first pitch and drove it to center. It fell in! We scored ten runs in a wild first. I batted again and hit it the same place, only a little bloopier. It fell in! We were bleesting!
I was so excited I nearly fell down in the basepaths running second to third. I tried to run too fast and started stumbling forward; I pulled up at third waving my arms wildly, trying not to face plant. I tried to run too fast and started peeling out like a muscle car without traction. Then I decided I needed to calm down, stop trying to run faster than was really possible. My last time up I trotted in to first after singling and nearly got thrown out; you’ve got to run through the bag Scott! Run through the bag!
Our competition were a group from the pool hall/bar Thalassa in Berkeley. They were younger than us, bartenders with neck tattoos and matching tshirts displaying their team name: The Seamen. They had obviously played some ball in their time, but they were pressing really hard and trying to hit the ball to the moon, which lead to towering outfield fly after fly. I watched a guy with a square jaw and a beautiful swing club one over the TOP of the left field foul pole, but the umpire called it foul. Then he scorched a grounder right at our second baseman, who contemplated fielding it then conveniently dodged, which made the umpire chuckle.
But we prevailed! The Three Outers trumped The Seamen, 17-5 as I went 3 for 4 with three cheap singles and forgot to field a pop fly just in front of the plate. I guess that “catching” a Berkeley City Softball game is a little too much like passively absorbing a game from the couch. But I threw him out! Sucker didn’t run to first.
