Faithful Reader, if you did a double-take when you
read that headline, you can imagine my surprise
this morning. Picking up fruits in the supermarket in my hometown in Northern
New Jersey, the quickest I could so I could beat the usual interminable weekend
lines and get home at a human hour, I heard the manager’s voice booming over
the address system, the first two words annoying me the way it always did, but
the third word making me forget every single thing I was doing:
“Attention, Shoppers! Bucky Dent of the 1978 New York Yankees will be signing pictures by the
Produce Department!”
For fans of a certain age like me, no explanation
after “Bucky Dent” was necessary; for others not lucky enough to watch TV on that
early October afternoon in 1978 when the team’s shortstop slugged his way into
Yankee lore, no other explanation was possible.
Jim Bouton had cut across my path years ago. But at
the time, I was attending a library convention where the knuckleballer and Ball Four author was promoting a new
book. And I had unexpectedly met Roy White at a great friend’s home in eastern
Pennsylvania some years ago. But that likewise was not beyond the realm of
possibility: after all, my friend was (and remains) an autograph dealer whose
work has put him in contact with many baseball players, past and present.
But Russell (Bucky) Dent in a ShopRite? And not just any
ShopRite but the one just down the street from where I live in Englewood,
NJ? And there for a single hour, and in the few minutes when I just happened to be in the store?
No, I’m sorry, it was a lot more likely that Elvis
Presley had left some Piggly-Wiggly or Winn-Dixie in the Memphis area, as
diehard acolytes of the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll have claimed over the years.
Even Mike
Torrez couldn’t have been so surprised when this shortstop known more for his
steady fielding than his batting prowess lifted a home run over the Green
Monster in Fenway Park to cap the epic season-long slugfest between the Bronx
Bombers and the rival Bosox.
Let me be blunt about this: You might catch sight of
Dent at an Old Timers’ Game, carrying luggage in an airport, or signing a
photo, bat or book at some cavernous, climate-controlled convention center. But
you don’t see him autographing photos at
your local supermarket, okay?
Uncomprehending, blinking, I moved toward the back,
not wanting to gawk. At a table set up for the purpose sat a fellow in
sunglasses, with both a white cap and striped shirt bearing the New York
Yankees logo. The cap was pulled down tight on his forehead, so I did not know
till later that the onetime heartthrob of New York baseball-loving teen girls
now had solidly gray hair.
But whenever he looked up to see a new fan, the
easy, genial smile he flashed let everyone know it was the same old,
unflappable middle infielder who had stayed calm in the Bronx Zoo of
Steinbrenner, Martin and Jackson.
I heard the store manager urge those milling about
to line up. As they started to do so, I surveyed the length of the line and
soberly assessed my chances of getting to the front in reasonable time. Slim to
none, I thought. Sighing, I walked away, picking up more groceries.
A few minutes later, I heard the manager again:
“Anyone who’d like to see Yankee star and manager Bucky Dent, the line is open
now.” I rushed back. Sure enough, there was no nobody there.
I cursed the fact that I had neither a pocket camera
nor smartphone to record my encounter with history. But sometimes, even a short
face-to-face is worth what you mentally carry away from it.
After being assured by a store employee that Dent
could simply sign one of the small piles of photos next to him and that it was
free, I asked the three-time Yankee All-Star to autograph the picture for a
close male relative (and big-time Yankee fan) of mine. Perhaps he had had a tough
time with some of the previous people on line, because he chuckled and said,
“Thank God it’s a short name!”
All the while, I felt like asking what had brought
him here. (It wasn’t till later that I found out that the renovation of the
Englewood Shop-Rite—which had seemed to last longer than
the Hundred Years War between England and France—had now been completed, that
the supermarket was in the mood to celebrate, and that the visit was made
possible by Kingsford Charcoal, the official charcoal of the New York Yankees.
I repeat: the official charcoal of the
New York Yankees. You can't make this stuff up!)
At the same time, all kinds of other questions came to
mind, like how he had managed to keep his head in the George-Bill-Reggie
psychodrama; what had gone through his mind just before he slammed Mike Torrez’s
fastball over the left-field wall for a three-run homer that put the Yankees
ahead of the Red Sox for good in their 1978 confrontation in Fenway Park; and
how, after this moment of triumph, he had reacted to getting fired by
Steinbrenner back in Fenway 13 years later.
I could sense his time was short (in fact, less than
15 minutes left), and I didn’t want to waste it with a bunch of open-ended
questions. But I wanted to express something more. So after he was done with
the autograph, I confined myself to one sentence as I shook his hand: “Thanks
for creating all those great memories.”
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