Thursday, December 18, 2008

For my friends

As I searched files upon files of stories and college assignments for clips to submit when applying for jobs, I came across a feature story for a college class. I remember the assignment vividly. I had walked into JRN 430 Magazine and Feature Writing during the summer session to find out we had an assignment on the first day of class! I was bummed. Gone was my day's plan of working out and since I had already planned to be sweaty, I was going to lay in the tanning bed. I was standing up in a wedding later that month, and I didn't want to be whiter than the bride's dress!

Our professor, a long winded man with a love for Paul McCartney and the Pittsburg Pirates, set us off on a mission to go out into the world and write about something.... a noun, any noun.

I chose the noun softball. This is the story (with a few edits for privacy) I wrote:


It is Sunday evening, the bright lights at King Boring Field are shining down on the dusty brown diamond, the mosquitoes are biting, the 5-9 score glows from across the field, the bases are loaded and then the foul ball clangs against the fence. The small crowd of players and dedicated fans laugh it off, knowing there’s always next week and of course next summer.
After all this is not the major leagues; this is summer recreational softball.
Summer softball leagues have long been a tradition in Dearborn. Every night of the week the parks are filled with people of all ages playing the sport dubbed America’s favorite pastime.
Playing Little League baseball is a right of passage while growing up, but why do people keep playing once they have grown up?
Recent graduates of Dearborn High School gather at the local baseball diamonds each Sunday night for double header slow-pitch softball games to keep in touch with the friends they grew up with.
“The softball season is something we look forward to each year,” Chris* said. “It’s like a tradition.”
Chris and his friends are currently playing their fourth season together in the Dearborn Recreational Softball League. The team started in summer 2004 with twelve high school buddies, plain white t-shirts that the team decorated themselves and very little softball experience.
“A few of us played Little League growing up, and all of us played sports in elementary, middle and high school, but none of us played baseball in high school,” team member Dan* said.
They spent their first season together figuring out which player was best at each position, and it took four or five weeks before the team won a game.
“When we won our first game at King Boring, we felt like we won the World Series and threw our gloves up in the air,” Chris said. “Then we got smoked in our second game (that night), but it was memorable.”
The team has evolved over the years as guys move away and new and younger players take over their positions, but the core of the team are the players that started this group of friends’ summer tradition. Finally three years after the team’s creation, the team is winning as many games as it has lost. Then again, it’s still early in the season.
“Last year we beat the toughest team in our league, and it gave us motivation for this year,” Dan said. “Now we know we can compete with any team out there.”
About half of the current team is composed of the original players, and a few of those original players carpool to Dearborn each weekend from Michigan State University, sometimes coming in just on Sunday for their game.
“Playing softball together is a fun way to hang out with friends I don’t see during the school year,” Chris said.
Chris and his teammates often meet up on Saturday nights to hang out together at the Varsity Club Bar, which sponsors the team. The whole team usually meets up at the bar again win or lose after their games on Sundays.
Dan and Chris agree that sponsorship has not only helped the team financially, but it has also provided the team with a place to meet up for some brewskis and games of darts or Golden Tee.
The bond shared during the softball season does not end with the end of summer and the return to the players’ respective universities and jobs, but instead the memories of playoff wins during the third season and a duo of brothers’ tags after leaving first base earlier this season will be the talk of the coming years.
As Chris said, “Softball gives us something to talk about. We even talk about it in the winter.”

* Last names were removed to respect the privacy of my friends. (However, if you are friends with us, I'm sure you can figure out who Dan, Chris and the duo of brothers are.)

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