I don't care
if I never get back
My hometown of Hackensack
is roughly ten miles from the pitcher’s mound at Yankee Stadium. That’s a
relatively easy commute if you work there and during the 1960s, before baseball
players became richer than God, several Yankees rented summer residences in the
area.
Elston Howard settled
year-round in Teaneck, one town over. Mickey Mantle was said to be in nearby
River Edge. Tom Tresh and Andy Kosco lived in my neighborhood. Tresh a couple
of blocks over; Kosco, in his only season with New York, rented a place maybe
fifteen houses up from mine.
The more famous
Tresh was American League Rookie of the Year in 1962 and one of the heroes of
the 1962 World Series. He played nine seasons in the infield and outfield, and played
in two All-Star Games.
I can’t say
that we ever saw either ballplayer out mowing the grass or holding a garden
hose to the lawn. Their days were likely spent sleeping or watching television
before heading out to work. We nodded in acknowledgement as we rode our bikes past
their homes, although we never went knocking on their front doors looking for
autographs. Possibly we saw them for what they were: ordinary guys roughly our
parents’ age (maybe a little younger) who worked weird hours at a strange job.
What we didn’t
realize was that the best time to catch Tresh or Kosco was likely late at
night, when much of the neighborhood was dark except for the occasional living
room cast in the light from a television screen. Home from the game, sitting on
a front step or in the backyard maybe with a beer and a cigarette. Out from the
heat of the day, and from under the unblinking glare of the stadium’s high-intensity
lights. Listening to the same crickets and far-off police sirens I heard while
lying in my bed.
Times change and
summer nights pass quickly, along with childhood and the freedoms that came
with it. What we’re left with are summer evenings that will never feel quite
the same again.
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