"Baseball is 90 per cent mental. The other half is physical." -Yogi Berra
"Being with a woman all night never hurt no professional baseball player. It's staying up all night looking for a woman that does him in." -Casey Stengel
"They gave each other a smile with a future in it." -Ring Lardner
"All acts of sex in the following fantasy are performed by and on persons over the age of 18 who should have known better." -Hunter S. Thompson
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The Yips
Part 1
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Bryan Monnic had the biggest problem of his career. No, make that the biggest problem of his life. Which was the same thing, he guessed, as his career pretty much was his life.
His wife had run off with another man.
That wasn't the problem.
The problem was that he had the yips.
He suspected the yips were somehow related to his wife's betrayal of their wedding vows, but then again, nobody knew how the yips started, why they kept on plaguing you, or how or even if they could be exorcised.
Yes. Exorcised. The yips were a demonic possession. They took over your body and made it do -- at the most inconvenient moments, moments that defined your career and thus in his case his life -- the equivalent of rotating your head 360 degrees and puking up a stream of neon green stinking vomit. In front of 35,000 paying customers and several millions more watching on television. He didn't want to even think about the YouTube videos that would live until the sun consumed the earth.
Bryan Monnic was a baseball player. A pretty damn good baseball player. If you met him in his street clothes, you might shake his hand and think him a regular guy. Mechanic, maybe, or a plumber. He occupied the middle of the physiological bell curve at 5 foot 10 and 185 pounds. He had a steely grip and a lean body, but so did several million other 25-year-old males. But few of those millions had the eye-hand coordination and muscle memory necessary to spear a rocketing baseball in midair or scoop up one wildly bouncing at 80 miles per hour, pivot, and make an accurate and hard throw to the first baseman's glove.
And even if that one in a million had such skill, they still would have to then pick up a slender piece of cylindrical hardwood, stand calmly while a 5-ounce round projectile screamed almost invisibly close to their head and not only not fling themselves screaming out of the way but swing that wood and hit the damned thing.
And not only hit it, but hit it in such a way that it passed by or above eight other guys who also had the skills mentioned before necessary to catch it and deliver it to first base before the runner could get their ass down the line.
And do that again and again, day and night, home and away, indoors and out, 300 times out of a 1000 while fighting travel fatigue, media attention, stalkers, fanatical fans, dealing with requests to attend charity events, to visit sick children, to speak out about abuse, poverty, injustice.
And after that your damn wife goes off and starts fucking some idiot football player?
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Bryan never had the illusion that his life was his by some unknown right. He realized that he had lucked out at birth. No defects - genetic or skeletal or muscular, the eyesight of a predator, upper-middle class parents in a loving, harmonious home who supported their children's outdoor activities with their money and their encouragement. Growing up in Hondo, Texas, in a climate in which those outdoor activities could be partaken of all year round. Bryan spent his youth out on whatever cleared patch of land was available with a glove on one hand or a bat in two, playing the game with whoever showed up. They played nine aside, they played work up, they played home run derby. He played with his peers, he played with younger kids, he played against older guys. He hit, he caught, he threw. Every day.
These are the breeding grounds of many American professional baseball players. Bryan suspected he had a chance to become one of those rare entities when, after a stellar high school career, he was awarded a scholarship to the University of Texas at Austin, one of the reliable incubators of future major league players. He knew the dream could be his the day he got the call from his future coach. Up until that time he had only dreamed.
In college the level of competition was so far above that of high school or even any of the elite traveling teams he joined by invitation over his formative playing years that it seemed like a different sport. The speed, the nuances, the mental aspect. He had to relearn it all practically from scratch. He was fortunate that the coaching staff was professional and that they were on his side from the beginning. He was fortunate that they convinced him to switch positions from shortstop, the cornerstone infield position that everyone desired, to second base, which almost no kid growing up wanted to play unless there was not another way to get into the game. He was fortunate, he was fortunate, he was fortunate. Good things piled upon good things.
One of those good things, he had thought, was Lauren Esposito.
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"Eileen tells me you were reading to the preschooler group yesterday," Mrs. Lowell said. The windows were open to catch the breeze; the salty mild airs of early June on the Cape.
Bryan nodded, cutting the side of his fork into the cod filet on his plate. "Yes, ma'am. After she told them I played for the Kettleers, they just kind of piled into my lap."
Mrs. Lowell beamed. Bryan noticed that every time he had called her ma'am in the four days he had been living with the Lowell family, she was overcome with a pleased look that he had started to think of as her Yankee Wasp manner orgasm. He had begun to accentuate his very slight Southern accent, at the same time altering it almost unconsciously from his usual distinctive cattle drive Texas twang until he could have passed for a gentleman from North Carolina.
The daughters, all young copies of their mother, appreciated it. He could tell. The Lowell twins, Clara and Sara, were seniors in the local high school, identical beauties with short blonde hair and blue eyes. The baby of the family, Brie, was a junior, long platinum hair and huge eyes with turquoise irises Bryan sometimes felt himself falling into.
"What did you read them?" Brie asked.
"Oh, the mouse with the cookie book, the dragons with the tacos book, stuff like that."
Brie giggled. "Those are my favorites. Would you read them to me? I still like bedtime stories."