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Thoughts on the Retirement of
a Favorite Player By Eric Enders It
was May of 1999. I was graduating from college, and I was depressed because a
redhead I was in love with had decided she wasn’t in love with me. I was mad
at the redhead, mad at myself, and most of all, I was mad at the world for the
way it entices us with happiness, then yanks it away like that football Charlie
Brown is always trying to kick. I was tired of kicking at trick footballs. So
with a wounded spirit, I drove to Cooperstown to see if I could find myself
again. Long story short, I ended up with a job as a researcher at the Baseball
Hall of Fame Library, a job I still hold today. More importantly, that was the
summer I ran into Ramón Martínez again. Ramón Martínez is my favorite
pitcher. In 1988, when I was eleven, my dad took me to opening day at Dudley
Field, the ancient, dilapidated, wonderful ballpark that the Double-A El Paso
Diablos played in. As with many such parks, the clubhouses were nothing more
than tiny, crumbling brick buildings behind the outfield bleachers. To get from
the clubhouse to the playing field, the visiting players had to walk right
through the stands. We got to the game an hour early and walked over to the
right field bleachers. Sitting on a rusted folding chair outside the visitors’
clubhouse, his eyes squinting in the late afternoon sun, was one of the
skinniest human beings I have ever seen. It was 20-year-old Ramón Martínez,
the scheduled starter that day.
I
have been to perhaps 75 big league games since then, many of them Dodger games,
but until 1999 I had never again seen Ramón Martínez pitch in person. Then, on
a whim, my pal Joey and I decided to drive 200 miles to Rhode Island for a
Pawtucket Red Sox game. Martínez had signed a minor league contract with the
Red Sox the previous winter, but he was coming off serious arm surgery and
wasn’t expected to pitch in 1999. Characteristically, Martínez had worked
diligently, but silently, to prove those expectations wrong. By August he was
making rehab starts in Class A. Joey
and I had to work later than expected, and we didn’t hit the road until about
3:00. Game time was three hours away, and it was a four and a half hour drive.
If we sped all the way we might get there by the third inning. To make matters
worse, as soon as we crossed into Massachusetts it began to rain. Hard.
Visibility was about 15 feet, and as game time neared we were still trudging
along on the Masspike. I turned on the radio to catch the beginning of the game.
I found the station, and my heart leapt when I heard the surprise starting
pitcher. It was Ramón Martínez, who had just joined the Pawsox and would be
making his first Triple-A rehab start tonight. As
calmly and quietly as possible, I told Joey that he must drive faster. After
all, rehab starts often don’t last more than two or three innings. We might
already be too late. Drive faster, I told Joey, rain be damned. Joey understood
my Martínez connection, and he wanted to get there too. But he also wanted to
live, and he was already driving pretty fast anyway, so there wasn’t much he
could do. For the last hour of the drive I sat impatiently as the rain pounded
harder and harder. I was worried not only about whether we’d get there on
time, but also about how Ramón would fare in his rehab test. I listened on the
car radio as Martínez worked his way in and out of trouble for the first two
innings, then got himself into another jam that he couldn’t quite work out of.
A Buffalo batter hit a home run. Then a walk, then another homer. And another.
The announcer said Martínez looked weak and maybe his best days were behind
him. By the end of the third he had given up three homers and six runs. I told
Joey to drive faster. We
finally got there. There were 7,000 people in the park, although it was cold and
raining. A radio station had distributed cardboard signs sporting a big red
“K” with the Dominican flag underneath. But Martínez wasn’t striking many
people out. The soaked K signs littered the stadium’s concrete floors and
aluminum benches, dripping and useless. The crowd, half of it huddling under the
grandstand roof, grew restless as Martínez began throwing his warmup pitches in
the top of the fourth. I sighed as I saw that familiar high leg kick in person
for the first time in eleven years. I immediately felt at home. Martínez
pitched another inning, and a good one, as it turned out. They took him out
after that, but I didn’t care. After more than a decade, I had finally seen
Ramón pitch again. My summer was complete. All
in all, that summer of baseball gave me the same kind of feeling rock critic Jon
Landau must have had in 1974 when, on a rainy night in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
he first heard an obscure young singer named Bruce Springsteen. Landau, 26 at
the time, later wrote of his discovery: “On a night when I needed to feel
young, he made me feel like I was hearing music for the very first time.”
I’ve been around baseball – or
rather, it’s been around me – all my life. But the things that
happened during the summer of 1999 made me feel like I was seeing baseball for
the very first time. And Ramón Martínez was at the center of it. That season
turned out with a happy ending for him – he went up to the Red Sox and got in
a couple of starts at the end of the season, and then pitched valiantly and well
in the playoffs. But ever since then, he’s struggled. He’s been a very bad
pitcher these last two seasons, painful as it is for me to say it. And now
he’s decided that he doesn’t have it anymore. When your favorite player retires, strange and sometimes unwelcome emotions run through you. I’ve gone through it once before, when Kirk Gibson retired in 1995. But Ramón is different. He’s the first player whose career I have followed closely in its entirety, from the very beginning to the very end. The 19-year-old Class-A stringbean evolved into a stubborn, respected veteran, struggling against a body that will no longer do the things he wants it to. It was a good career, better than most, not as good as some. He will not make the Hall of Fame, and few will think of him after he’s gone. But I’ll remember. Thanks, Ramón. Thanks for the smile.
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