My South | Mother’s passion for Braves baseball

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Baseball season get underway this month, and I hope the Atlanta Braves have a better year than they had last year.

My mom loved the Braves and spent every waking hour watching them on TV. She hated West Coast games because they started after her self-imposed 8:30 bedtime, but otherwise if they were on TV, she was watching.  

Anyone who visited her during game time might as well pull up a seat, munch some popcorn, and watch the TV which was normally louder than rap music blaring from a teenager’s jumbo car stereo speakers.

I never called or visited while the Braves were on unless I had my game face on. Whenever I called after game time to check on her, I’d ask how the Braves did. “Aw, I don’t want to talk about it,” meant they’d lost, so I quickly changed the subject.

But her love of baseball went back much further, to when I was a kid playing Little League. She never missed one of my games. Her cheers were the loudest when we won, and when we lost, her face was the longest. 

Once when we played in Hull in a Saturday afternoon game, an opposing pitcher hit me with a late-hooking curveball. While grimacing from the shooting pain, I noticed her out of the corner of my eye. She was about the “stripe the legs” of every opposing player with a keen hickory. She took baseball and the health of her son seriously.

I struggled with math in school but when I reflect back, I realize I understood a great deal more about geometry, trigonometry, angle, trajectory, telemetry and velocity than my school test scores indicated. 

On the occasions when the coach put me in the infield at shortstop, I demonstrated an amazing grasp of those concepts in real time. In less than a millisecond after the crack of a white-ash, bat my eye and brain calculated all the factors to make an instantaneous decision on where to place my glove to catch a ball traveling at what seemed like the speed light.

Early spring was like heaven, with greening trees and warm sun on the back of my freshly starched uniform. The things etched into my mind are the chalk lines and red-clay infields that were as dry as snuff. I can also remember the smell of my cowhide glove with lanolin oil rubbed into the palm to keep it soft as a cotton diaper. By the end of the season, my arms and neck would be tan as teakwood.  

Someone once said that baseball is 20 minutes of action packed into three hours. I thought that was funny, but there’s a lot of truth to it. When I played I remember spending a lot of time standing around scratching and spitting. It’s a good thing cellphones with video cameras hadn’t been invented then, because there would probably be some unfortunate footage of me floating around on YouTube.

The Braves are on TV tonight, so in honor of my mom, I plan to pop some popcorn, eat a hot dog and watch some baseball.

Rick Watson is a columnist and author. You can email him at rick@homefolkmedia.com.

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