Advertisement

Singing in the Rain, For Once

Roadkill

It was raining, even pouring, but we went to the stadium anyway. It really made no sense, and we knew it, so thick were the forecast bands of precipitation. But with the scarier storm of a players' strike on the horizon, to neglect the tickets in our possession seemed suicidal.

Three seats, upper deck but right behind home plate (and sheltered from the rain), for me, my little brother, and my friend Matt. Matt was late getting to our rendezvous point at the train station, but no matter--we arrived two minutes after the 12:35 matinee was scheduled to begin, only to find the tarpaulin covering the field and security guards patrolling the dugout for lack of players.

I laughed, and said: "Good. That means they'll put up another game on the big screen for us." Two summers ago, fully half of the 14 games I attended were either wiped clean or rain-delayed, including one between these very same Braves and Expos, so I pretty much knew the DiamondVision routine.

And thankfully, the Reds and Astros were playing a barnburner in Cincinnati. Even shivering as I always am in such situations (the song and dance is always the same: "No, thanks, I'll be fine in shorts and a T-shirt"), I had to enjoy it as our little scab game went into extra innings, tied 1-1. Bagwell had a round-tripper, and when the Astros wriggled out of a bases-loaded jam in the 10th, I was settling in for an historic marathon.

Of course, the stadium seemed almost fully vacant by 3 p.m., (No chance of me leaving, hmmph.) But when the rains let up, the grounds crew danced, and baseball would be played. Alas, not on my beloved screen--into the 11th it went, but major league regulations forced it off as our own game-start neared.

Advertisement

But I could still follow an amazing procession of numbers on the scoreboard in left-center: 2-1, 3-1, 6-1, the wave cresting at 7-1, Astros. Had Bagwell hit another dinger, I wondered.

"Skip!" I called out from my balcony.

Oddly, it was Don Sutton that turned around, not Mr. Caray, but I figured he could answer my question just the same. "Do you know how Houston scored their six runs?"

"Sorry, we weren't watching the wire."

"Oh, OK. Thanks anyway!"

When you have meaningful dialogue with your TBS national announcing crew, you figure its going to be a good day, I guess.

Matt had class that evening at Georgia State, an unskippable chem lab at 6:30, but that didn't keep him from chilling with us during its preliminary two-hour lecture. He, my brother and I were among the maybe 10 or 12,000 still hanging around, but after the rain that actually adds to the atmosphere: You know that everyone left loves the game, and besides, there's plenty of elbow room.

Which means, of course, more foul ball territory per capita.

Marquis Grissom led the game off at 4:04 p.m., lining Kent Mercker's first pitch into the right-centerfield alley for a double. The Expos had taken the first two in this three-game series, and such a beginning boded fatally for whatever pennant prospects remained for the Braves.

But Mercker is made of sterner stuff these days, and he pitched out of both that jam and a bases-loaded nightmare in the third, both sides matching zeroes into the fourth.

Advertisement