JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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Charlie Brown called the other day trying to scare up recruits for his
over-55 softball team called the Newport Peers. At 81, Charlie is the
world’s oldest third baseman with two artificial knees. I can’t prove
that, but it must be true.
Charlie made his living -- and still does -- as a Newport Beach Realtor,
largely I suspect, to support his baseball habit.
I thanked him for recognizing my obvious athleticism and seeking me out
for his team. A long pause followed, after which Charlie said: “I don’t
think you understand. We weren’t recruiting you. We just thought maybe
you would mention it in your column.”
Well, I could have told him that I don’t shill for just anybody -- unless
they let me play, of course -- but since baseball decidedly measures up
to my definition of a vital social resource, I said I would go along.
Besides, on reflection, I was sure Charlie knew that some leg trouble I’m
having makes it difficult for me to field a ground ball unless it bounces
up to my chest.
So I met with Charlie and his friend and co-Peer, Bo Bett (a longtime
former coach, retired from the Garden Grove school district), to discuss
the team’s needs. Bo summed them up pretty well when he said: “We’re
looking for bodies -- anyone over 55 who can walk and will show up for
the games.”
If you fit these qualifications, Bo would be overjoyed to hear from you.
Just call him at (949) 644-1523.
The game is slow-pitch softball, played every Sunday throughout the year,
mostly at Murdy Park in Huntington Beach. Games are seven innings with a
limit of five runs per inning until the last inning, when the sky’s the
limit.
There is no sliding and no tag plays at home plate. The runner follows a
line outside the base path and must beat the throw home.
Teams play in four over-55 leagues, rated by skill within specified age
brackets. Some of the players are pretty skilled. Former Angel outfielder
Jim Edmonds’ grandfather, at 71, for example, plays on one of the teams.
Bo says of him: “He’s a better fielder than Jim. He doesn’t have to dive
for balls. He gets them on the run.”
The leagues’ biggest problems are conflicts with church for the morning
games and family demands that divert the players.
“We play on Father’s Day,” said Bo by way of explanation, “but not on
Mother’s Day.”
A few years ago, the league had a team called the Kardiac Kids, made up
exclusively of players who had experienced heart surgery. No known crisis
occurred within this group, but Bo and Charlie remembered one heart
attack that took place on the field. Fortunately, two of the opposing
players were doctors, and they got the victim off safely to a hospital
before the game was resumed.
Charlie, who is a prodigious hitter and a respectable fielder with a
strong arm, has only one real problem: getting to first base. Outfielders
keep trying to throw him out there on hits to the outfield. Once he’s
safely at first, the Peers can use a pinch runner.
But that was not always the case with Charlie, who once played a year of
minor league professional baseball and might have had a shot at the bigs
under different circumstances.
Charlie was 26 and just out of the Army when he had a tryout with the
Pittsburgh Pirates in 1945. Charlie had been wounded as an infantry
platoon leader in Germany during World War II, and by the time he arrived
in Pittsburgh he had a wife and baby to support.
But American men weaned on baseball -- as our generation was -- don’t
walk away from big league tryouts. And Charlie didn’t.
He performed well enough that the Pirates signed him and sent him off the
next day to a farm team.
But after a year of minor league ball at starvation-level wages, Charlie
knew he was getting into the game too late and had to move on.
One vivid memory of that experience has stuck in his mind, however,
through the more than five decades since. Only on the day of his tryout
did he meet up with any of the major league players. And only one member
of the team took the time or made the effort to say hello to the rookie
just returned from the war. His name was Pete Coscarart, and he spent
eight years as a second baseman for the Pirates and the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Charlie never forgot, so he was excited to see Coscarart’s name in the
newsletter of the Pacific Coast League Historical Society several years
ago. He wrote a letter to Coscarart in Escondido to thank him for that
long ago, small act of kindness.
It took Coscarart almost five years to reply, but a month ago he called
Charlie to say the letter had been lost and then found and to apologize
and profusely thank Charlie for his note.
A few weeks later, the two men met. And Charlie reports that Coscarart is
still “mighty trim at 87.”
Coscarart is also one of the several hundred major leaguers who gave
their whole working lives to baseball but have been denied the pensions
they richly deserve by the zillionaires who now play the game.
Some of these old-timers can now be found in over-55 leagues, alongside
the lawyers and doctors and teachers and blue collar workers like Charlie
and Bo, who once aspired to be big leaguers too.
So you see, you can at least touch the fringes of this world and have one
helluva good time by calling Bo and volunteering for his warm-body
brigade. I just wish my leg was up to it.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column appears
Thursdays.
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