“In baseball parlance they speak of a pitch ‘getting away’ from the pitcher. As I came through the delivery of my curve, I failed to snap my wrist sufficiently and my hook got away from me in majestic style—sailing far over both [batter Frank] Robinson and [catcher Elston] Howard's heads to the wire screen behind home plate. If it had hit a foot or so higher, the ball would have caught the netting of the foul screen and run up it to the press boxes. It was such an extraordinarily wild pitch that I felt I had to make some comment; what I'd done was too undignified to pass unnoticed, and so once again I hurried off the mound calling out, ‘Sorry! Sorry!’ Howard and Robinson gazed out at me, both startled, I think, perhaps even awed by the strange trajectory of my pitch, which was wild enough to suggest that I had suddenly decided to throw the ball to someone in the stands. The embarrassment was intense.”— American “participatory journalist,” literary editor, actor and occasional amateur sportsman George Plimpton (1927-2003), Out of My League: The Classic Account of an Amateur's Ordeal in Professional Baseball (1961)
Even if a sweep occurs during the upcoming World
Series, the Fall Classic is scheduled to end in the first week of November.
Over 60 years ago, when players were not as wealthy as today’s millionaires,
they might engage in barnstorming tours abroad—or play closer to home in an
exhibition game.
It was in one such example of the latter—a post-Series
game at Yankee Stadium of all-stars fronted by Mickey Mantle (for the American
League) and Willie Mays (for the National League)—that George Plimpton
latched onto one of the great sports journalism stints. While the team with the
most total bases would split $1,000 (chump-change now, but not in those
pre-free-agent days), Plimpton would pitch a first “unofficial” inning to
baseball’s luminaries.
As a tween, I watched Plimpton! Shoot-Out at Rio Lobo, a TV one-hour documentary demonstrating his brand of “participatory journalism”—in this case, playing a gunman in the 1970 John
Wayne western Rio Lobo.
The Duke’s repeated on-air insult of the amateur
actor—“Pimpleton”—was still probably nowhere near as mortifying as what the
author-editor encountered when he took the mound at The House That Ruth Built.
Out of such acute embarrassment came Out of My League, as hilarious as
it was insightful.
Out of a simple set of rules for his inning—no umpire,
no walks—Plimpton’s agony was constructed. Amazingly, he retired two batters
before the others learned to wait him out and find a pitch they could whack.
As he watched his pitches fly in every direction past
catcher Elston Howard (“flung with abandon and propelled by a violent mixture
of panic and pent-up anxiety let loose”) when they weren’t sent screaming into
the outfield by hitters, the 31-year-old Plimpton undoubtedly felt this was
more audacious and foolish than editing The Paris Review.
After what he endured at the hands of the NL
All-Stars, Plimpton didn’t have the strength to continue against their AL
counterparts. At his typewriter, however, he was more philosophical: “I
suffered a steady stream of humiliations … what happened to me is bound to
happen when an amateur is thrown into the company of professional athletes. It
is inevitable.”
That didn't stop Plimpton from trying his hand at other wild stunts as he pursued "participating journalism": playing quarterback for the Detroit Lions and goalie for the Boston Bruins, boxing against light-heavyweight champion Archie Moore, performing with the New York Philharmonic, and photographing Playboy models.
Even while chuckling at Plimpton’s mound
misadventures, though, I couldn’t help but think that he had conveyed something
that the fan in the stands or at home can barely appreciate: how hard it is to
make a baseball do your bidding.
In certain weather conditions, even seasoned
professionals find it difficult just to get an adequate grip on the ball. In a
Sports Illustrated interview last year, Mets slugger Pete Alonso was
even willing to give pitchers a pass on sticky substances for that reason: “I
don't want 99 mph slipping out of someone's hand because they didn't have
enough feel for it."
Pitchers who experience a loss of control may suffer
the loss of their roster spot, their career—or, in its way, a Plimpton-style
humiliation on the pitcher’s rubber, this time listening to thousands of booing
fans.
Since last year, for instance, Aroldis Chapman has
gone from closer for the Bronx Bombers to bullpen odd-man out to being left off
the postseason roster—largely because, for whatever reason, he could not pitch
a baseball with his onetime feared velocity, nor compensate with pinpoint
location.
In the late 1990s, I got to see Plimpton at a lecture
and book-signing event for his oral biography of Truman Capote, at Fairleigh
Dickinson University in New Jersey. I was glad to see that he was as wry in his
remarks about the literary life as he was 3½ decades before about facing
baseball’s greatest hitters.
(The photo of George Plimpton accompanying this post
was taken on Dec. 12, 1977 by Bernard Gotfryd.)
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