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About the Author

Niteowl049
Baseball fan following baseball since 1955. Have been fortunate enough to have seen Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Johnny Bench, Roberto Clemente and Dale Murphy play baseball in Kansas City and Houston. Served in Army in Hawaii and Vietnam with 25th Infantry Division.

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Baseball Notebook: Little League Memories

by Niteowl049
created May 06, 2008, last edited February 10, 2009
14
Vote

  I played in the Little League for the first time in 1955. I went to the tryouts by myself, unlike today where the parents take kids everywhere. I remember a ball bouncing up and hitting me in the chin at the tryouts. At home, nobody played catch with me because nobody gave a flip about baseball. So I basically learned to catch by throwing the ball up in the air over and over and tyring to catch them.

When I went to the sporting goods store to look for a glove, I found a glove I liked, but this Nokona glove costed $6.50, and I only had $6. The store owner was very kind though, and he took the $6 and let me have the glove. I doubt Wal-Mart would allow that to happen today.

To go to practices and games, I would ride my bike. I never remember my parents taking me to a practice in the four years that I played Little League (and then later in the Pony League).

In my first game, the same day I finished the fifth grade, I remember a batter hit a sinking liner to right field and I caught it just above my shoetops. I think I was more surprised than anyone to have caught the ball.

One time, the coach had the brilliant idea of putting me in a game as starting pitcher. I lasted four batters before I was out of the game, giving up two hits and two walks. Needless to say, I never pitched again. I was an average player, at best, but since then, I spent very little time on the bench. However, I was happy.

My only highlight as a hitter was when I hit the ball over the center field fence for what I thought was a home run. It was just my luck the other team had a defensive whiz in center field and he just reached over the short fence and caught the ball turning my home run into a long out. In the four years I played, I never hit a ball that far again.

Another lasting impression was the time we were playing a game and one of the players hollered "That plane's going to crash" and we could see the plane plummeting to the ground. It was an Air Force plane from the local air base and it crashed a block off of Main Street into the National Cemetery. That is an event I will always associate with playing baseball since it happened during our game.

My parents were not that enthralled with baseball or any other sport, but they would make their annual pilgrimage to the ballpark to see me play once a year. They just had no interest in baseball, even if their son was playing in a game.

I can still remember the Bowman baseball cards with the photos of the players inside television sets being sold at the concession stand. Those cards would be worth a lot of money, but I think mothers across the USA have turned priceless baseball cards into dying embers not realizing their worth.

With my grandson playing baseball today, I took him to every practice and every game last year, but now with us 673 miles away in Tennessee, I have not seen any of his practices or games.

Kids today are fortunate to have a parent or both parents at their practices and games. Of course, there are the parents that take baseball too seriously. One teammate had a parent tell them that if they struck out they were going to catch it when they got home. So maybe I didn't have it that bad with so little support from my parents because they didn't care if I hit a home run every at bat or struck out every at bat or if I made an error every time the ball was hit to me.

Life leaves us with many nostalgic memories of the past and one of mine is those four summers when I was playing baseball with no tee ball leagues or pitching machine leagues but played live baseball just like the major leaguers.


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Oh No RomoDraft Pick
554 days ago
Score 2+-
Nah, Wal-Mart wouldn't do that
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
Wal-Mart would have kicked me out of the store and told me to come back when I had more money.
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
554 days ago
Score 1+-
I think anyone who has played an organized baseball game can read and appreciate this fine article. It really does conjure up some great memories. I remember playing wiffle ball with my friends at a young age and then playing a modified version of stick ball as a teenager. I only played a few years of little league ball, and have a fonder memory of playing stick ball with my friends.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 1+-
I can see where you are coming from SJ..some of the coaches today can take so much fun out of the games that you can have just as much fun playing stickball.
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
554 days ago
Score 1+-
In defense of coaches, I will say that I was an assistant coach for my son last year, and most (if not all) of the coaches I encountered (this was for 7-year-olds) were great with the kids. They really just wanted the kids to have fun with baseball. I can't speak for coaches of teenagers. I can only hope they have the same mentality. But I hear what you're saying...sometimes coaches can get a little nutty when it comes to kids and sports. Like us parents! :-)
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Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
I have only encountered one coach lately that has no business coaching and it is not that he is mean to the other players but only to his son. That kid probably would be in a heap of trouble if he quit baseball because his dad is having too much fun chewing him out for his mistakes. When his son is crying in the dugout after being chewed out it makes me sick. Like you wrote though most coaches don't act like that.
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Steel TownDraft Pick
554 days ago
Score 3+-
Wow this article brought up a lot of memories for me. My first Hit (Bunt) and one particular catch in the outfield. I too had a coach that let me pitch once. He let everyone who hadn't pitched before get one inning. It was awesome. I pitched a perfect one inning, then got yanked for the next kid to get his opportunity. Like you, I rode my bike to practice, but my parents did come to as many games as the could. Too bad I wasn't better or maybe I would have played longer. Those were some of my best memories. like when I brought home my first mit and oiled it up put a ball in it and wrapped my belt around it. I remember my first bat, it was a black and gold easton. I could keep going all day, thanks for the trip down memory lane.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
Sounds like you have enough to do an article on your own...you should do it...that was great you had a coach like that...most coaches would never have let me pitch but my coach owned a appliance store and didn't know diddly about baseball...he couldn't have to have me pitching.
Permalink | Reply
Jay100Soccer Kid
554 days ago
Score 4+-
Im a 19 year old from northern alberta and i always remember the stories my grandfather and uncle rudy told me about there sandlot leagues and how my uncle rudy got an offer to play for the detroit tigers farm club but his dad wouldnt buy him a train ticket. when i turned 14 i went out on a whim and started playing baseball and i realized that it was the greatest sport ive ever played. Ive walked into hockey arenas and other sporting venues but ive never once been struck the way i am when i walk onto a well kept baseball diamond. The smell of the leather of my gloves the feeling of getting a hit or fielding a ground ball it makes me smile just thinking about it. There are so many memories i have playing baseball like steel town said i remember my first mitt. my grandma sent me a hundred dollars for my fourteenth birthday and i walked into the store and found the first glove that appealled to me it was a small mizuno legace used for infielders and needless to say after the most coaches thought i had played before thanks to television and trying to copy the pros as best i could i faired ok in tryouts and made the team as the backup secondbaseman. I love this game more then anything and enjoy talking to people who love it just the same
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RomiezzoLegend
554 days ago
Score 2+-
This is a great article, Niteowl. I love reading articles like this. I started working on one combining how I was involved with baseball. As a player, I first started playing when I was 5. When they decreased the age limit to 16 (which coincidentally my last year) I started to assist my last coach... a 24 year old, hot tempered, but inspiring teacher named Mahdi. I have umpired for 2 years also, so I definitely have a lot of memories there. Like Jay100, when I first hit a ball (which was when I was in my backyard in Ohio when I was 2), my mom told me that I just lit up. I have the best mom ever, as she was the one who played catch with me. Actually, she still does (every other summer day). And she's 48!

My dad's a wuss. :P

I love the fact that you wrote this article. From one baseball fan who has played in the little league to another, I thank you.
Permalink | Reply
Jay100Soccer Kid
554 days ago
Score 3+-
This makes me realize the purity of the game even with steroids and all that crap theres nothing better then backyard or little league or wiffle baseball and yes even moms can throw you pitches! I bet all of you can agree to this but do you remember waking up and just knowing "its ball season" thats another feeling i cant get over even when i see spring training highlights thats what goes on in my mind.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 1+-
Jay...I am really impressed you would start playing at 14. There is something about a well kept baseball diamond and to me the sound of a bat hitting a ball is one of the best sounds in sports especially when a wood bat hits the ball. You were smart to get a good glove and Mizuno is a well known brand in the major leagues.
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Steel TownDraft Pick
554 days ago
Score 1+-
My first glove was a Rawlings, with a Dave Winfield signature in the palm.
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
554 days ago
Score 1+-
Mine was a Richie Zisk model!
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KelsdadAll-Star
554 days ago
Score 1+-
Best catch I've ever seen by a leftfielder was made by Richie Zisk.
Permalink
RomiezzoLegend
553 days ago
Score 1+-
Barry Larkin...
Permalink
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
I had written this article before but never could get it to print on ArmchairGM because I got some kind of error message but it was too important to give up on so waited a few days and tried today and it worked. That is great you have a mom who will play catch with you. I have a lot of respect for you umpiring games too because that is a thankless job.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
I always hate the last pitch of the World Series because that means no baseball till February and no games that count until April except this year was March.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
I can't remember who signed my first glove or if it even had a signature but I do remember having a Spalding glove signed by Roger Maris that I liked so much I bought another one like it when it wore out.
Permalink | Reply
Jay100Soccer Kid
554 days ago
Score 1+-
i wouldnt call it smart but lucky that i bought a glove as good and as durable as my mizuno lol. My first season of baseball changed my life in made alot of my hockey playing peers unhappy because i had a much brighter future playing the "Canadian Game" but i decided that the money my father spent on me to play hockey wich is a very expensive sport could help me become a better baseball player. I could talk about this subject for hours niteowl i enjoy everything about the game and its easy especially when im talkin to people who share the same passion
Permalink | Reply
Jay100Soccer Kid
554 days ago
Score 1+-
My grandfather used to tell me how every tiny little town around where ive grown up had a team now we are fortunate to get enough players to play competetive ball and travel 4 to 5 hours every other weekend
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
I could talk baseball forever especially about seeing Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris hit home runs in a doubleheader in Kansas City in 1962.
Permalink | Reply
Jay100Soccer Kid
554 days ago
Score 1+-
Where i come from we have 2 umpires for the entire program and they are 2 of the best umps ive ever encountered i can only imagine the things they have seen and heard in there time
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
554 days ago
Score 0+-
Most youth league umpires I have come acroos usually are very good umpires and very professional. Age makes no difference since I have seen some younger umpires be better at making calls and calling balls and strikes than the older umpires. To me calling balls and strikes has to be the most difficult thing to do for an ump especially when there is a 300 pitch game like the game between Braves and Reds last weekend.
Permalink | Reply
KelsdadAll-Star
554 days ago
Score 1+-
I was fortunate enough to grow up in a small town who's sports director was a former minor league player. When teaching young kids, it is far more important to teach them teamwork, team spirit, fundamentals, sportsmanship, and most importantly, the playing of the game is far more influential on your life than winning or losing.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
553 days ago
Score 0+-
Kelsdad...I agree that the things you mentioned are more important than winning games. So few of the players on any youth baseball team will make it to the majors that there are valuable life lessons to be learned just from playing the game.
Permalink | Reply
Anonymous Fanatic #1
553 days ago
Score 1+-
I had a somewhat similar experience to yours in practicing by myself, and I remember those tv-set cards very well. When my son was old enough to play, I got dragooned into coaching, and I'm glad I did. I wrote "Looking Back At a Rocky Little League Start" (onscreen-scientist.com/?p=18) for my blog about the experience. Hey, two hits and two walks is better than four walks, believe me.

Bob Estes

onscreen-scientist.com
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KelsdadAll-Star
553 days ago
Score 1+-
You wouldn't think so if your team was on offense.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
553 days ago
Score 0+-
I wish I still had some of those TV set cards. I see someone has someone is selling almost a complete set of those 1955 TV set cards and the bid is $500 and the buyer is not accepting that bid so the reserve price may be way up there.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
553 days ago
Score 0+-
Bob...went to your website and read your story about coaching in youth baseball. Before we moved to Tennessee last summer I got to see my son hit against pitching machines instead of against coaches...and now he is hitting against live pitching.
Permalink | Reply
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Niteowl049 | May 6, 2008 | May 2008 | Baseball Opinions

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