Picture credit score: © Stan Szeto-Imagn Photographs
I discovered a lot from watching Rickey Henderson. I discovered important truths about baseball, concerning the sang-froid that enables for informal greatness, about my very own father and his susceptibility to surface-level propaganda. I discovered to look at my pen. A author with no pen is sort of a hitter with no bat, and Rickey had taken mine.
My solely private interplay with Henderson—and it was barely that—got here one gray morning when the Yankees’ Previous Timers Day festivities had been delayed by rain. The baseball grampas had retired to the auxiliary clubhouse (actually the unique locker room, the pre-renovation den of Ruth and Gehrig) and had been simply killing time, typically in dialog with me. I wished to speak with Henderson—Rickey—not as a result of there was a selected subject I used to be pursuing, however as a result of I had by no means earlier than had the prospect to have interaction with the participant who had dominated the baseball of my New York-area youth, and I wasn’t going to go up the prospect. The issue was that Rickey wasn’t all that , so I stood subsequent to him with my recorder, pad, and pen on the prepared, and like Christopher Reeve enjoying Clark Kent, shuffled my ft and stuttered in his common route, ineffectually attempting to get his consideration.
What Rickey actually wished to do was play hearts. He knelt on the ground and (if I recall appropriately) Ken Griffey père and Jesse Barfield joined him as he shuffled playing cards. As Rickey started to deal, Griffey reminded him that they’d no option to preserve rating. The best leadoff man of all time regarded up, noticed me, noticed my pen and pad, and prolonged his hand. Reflexively—who was I to say no to a God of the Sport?—I handed over each. He tore a chunk of paper and handed again the pad. He stored the pen.
I watched as Rickey wrote out the names of the gamers on the web page. Did I politely wait out a sport of hearts, or hand over? Then a tremendous factor occurred: I witnessed the Rickeyness of Rickey. Somebody walked previous—I by no means noticed who—and shouted, “Hey, Rickey!” Whoever it was should have mattered to him, as a result of he smiled and answered in sort. One way or the other the momentary distraction utterly derailed his prepare of thought. It appeared to me that for a second he had no concept what he had been doing simply seconds earlier. He regarded on the pen in his hand as if he had no comprehension of the way it had gotten there. He regarded down on the piece of paper with a equally bemused expression. He regarded up at me, ready. He drew a logical conclusion: He autographed the web page and handed it to me.
I hesitated for an important second. Though I had seen different writers ask gamers to signal issues, I understood that this was thought-about a spectacularly unprofessional factor to do, an act that might get your press go revoked in the event you had been noticed. The web page hovered between us for an extended second, quivering within the air. My resolve to not take it weakened; I unclenched my hand and—however no, for in that second, Rickey remembered. Shaking his head like he was clearing an Etch-a-Sketch, he withdrew his hand, flipped the web page over to the clean facet, and rewrote the names of the gamers. I watched, bereft of each pen and Corridor of Fame signature, as the sport of hearts started. I by no means did get both of them again.
***
In case you adopted Rickey’s profession in actual time, then you definately’re most likely accustomed to the type of story I simply advised. Protection tended to be cut up between acknowledgements of his greatness and jokes about his eccentric, seemingly airheaded tendencies. What was hardly ever thought-about, if in any respect, was that one was predicated on the opposite. Rickey’s persona and his multifarious areas of excellence between the foul traces went hand in hand. You would no extra divorce his expertise from his persona and anticipate him to have been the identical participant than you might subtract Ty Cobb’s depth and retain the 12 batting titles, or extract Babe Ruth’s joie de vivre and preserve the 12 home-run crowns. This was a participant who participated in additional major-league ballgames than anybody in historical past apart from Pete Rose, Carl Yastrzemski, and Henry Aaron, and in contrast to Rose he didn’t have the privilege of placing himself within the lineup. He merely took himself from workforce to workforce, a brand new one virtually yearly from the mid-Nineties on, now not an All-Star or an MVP candidate however nonetheless retaining sufficient of his outdated expertise to be playable into his forties. Have bat, will journey—the stress might eat you alive in the event you let it. He didn’t, and if any of it ever received to him he didn’t let it present.
Rickey was not above self-aggrandizement—he wasn’t precisely humble on the day he broke Lou Brock’s profession stolen-base file, and he most likely shouldn’t have been—however in an age wherein some in public life are always reminding us of how nice they’re, the concept one might simply play the sport at a excessive stage with out indulging in any performative nonsense about how they had been slogging their manner by means of a grinding, joyless conflict is retroactively refreshing. In addition to, Rickey didn’t slog and he didn’t trudge. He burst. He virtually definitely wasn’t the quickest participant within the sport based mostly on uncooked operating pace, however nobody was ever quicker on their first step out of their lead. Even one of the best baserunners must financial institution up a head of steam earlier than reaching their most. Rickey received there immediately. That was the 1,406-stolen base distinction.
“Retroactively” is essential, as a result of on the time, notably within the Yankees years however often at different instances as properly, Rickey obtained a substantial amount of grief for not eager to play—as a result of his hamstrings had been sore, or he had a headache, or he wasn’t mentally ready. I don’t know (and don’t care) if Lou Piniella was a Corridor of Fame supervisor or not, but when his therapy of Henderson in 1987 is retaining him out of Cooperstown that might be a simply reward. In 1987 the new new baseball time period, courtesy of Piniella and George Steinbrenner, was “jaking it,” faking an harm.
“I need to play,” Henderson stated, “however my leg doesn’t let me play.” That ought to have been it—nobody ever questioned Don Mattingly’s again the way in which they questioned Henderson’s hamstrings—however the papers and the speak radio hosts turned towards him. The temptation is to see the distinction when it comes to complexion, a type of reflexive details of American life that some commentators had been most likely aware of and a few weren’t, nevertheless it acted upon their perceptions however.
The mid-Nineteen Eighties had been uncertain financial instances. My father, immigrant striver, well-compensated when he labored however struggling to remain afloat in an unstable discipline as center age and altering expertise put him on the sting of obsolescence, absorbed a few of that hostility. He didn’t observe the sport intently however he absorbed the anti-Rickey commentary as a result of it was unavoidable. He would stumble upon me watching that day’s Yankees sport, see Rickey plainly having fun with himself, and suppose he was getting away with one thing. He would ask me why this jerk who clearly didn’t care about his occupation was making $1.5 or $2 million a yr—roughly $1.5 or $2 million a yr greater than he was making—when he labored so exhausting.
I at all times tried to elucidate. I advised my father how good Rickey was. At different instances I pulled again the digicam and stated that ballplayers are like film stars, and if 50,000 individuals a day purchased tickets to look at my dad work then he can be compensated at the next stage too. He would appear to get it—after which Rickey would snicker within the dugout, stick out his tongue for no specific purpose, make a snatch-catch, or spend half an inning arguing with the followers within the left-field stands—after which my father would begin the argument yet again.
That was a quirk of my father’s persona; he tended to not lose arguments as a result of even when he appeared to lose a degree he would press some type of psychological reset button and make you argue it yet again. This spring, practically 40 years later, as my father was dying, I attempted to resolve this argument. Rickey meant loads to me as a baseball fan, however I don’t suppose he mattered to me a lot that I took the battle up once more as a result of I wanted my father to validate my opinion—I do know I used to be proper. It was, I feel, extra about the necessity to discover yet another patch of widespread floor earlier than we parted perpetually. I advised him the now-famous Mike Piazza story about Rickey’s generosity with postseason shares—“Full share! Fuck that! You’ll be able to change someone’s life!”—and ask him if that modified his opinion. He couldn’t say; his sickness had so degraded his reminiscence that he now not remembered who Rickey was, or—extra painfully for me—our many, many conversations about him.
***
Some moments of grace stay perpetually past us, however it’s pleasing to consider every part that Rickey did after 1987 as his revenge, his rejoinder to Piniella and the New York media. An overdue MVP award got here after that, a complete guide filled with data, Corridor of Fame enshrinement, and 1,899 extra video games—greater than Piniella performed in his whole profession. (Candy Lou lastly discovered to understand Rickey greater than a decade later, when he arrived at midseason to shore up an ALCS-bound 2000 Mariners membership. After Rickey left, Piniella found what a real head case regarded like, in new starter Al Martin.) Didn’t need to play? He wished to play so damned badly that he caught round till he was 44 after which went to the unbiased Newark Bears and the San Diego Surf Dawgs. His dedication wasn’t reluctant, it was chic.
I discovered a lot extra from Rickey, together with the contextual nature of the RBI (Don Mattingly in 1985 and 1986: Roughly the identical participant. Rickey had an off-year within the latter season and Donnie Baseball dropped 32 RBI; how can we account for this?) and a batting stance I futilely tried to mimic in neighborhood ballgames (it’s not simply crouching so that you’ve got a strike-zone, as Invoice James stated, the scale of a cigarette packet; you additionally need to have plenty of capability). I miss him as a participant so very badly, not within the ordinary manner, as a result of I additionally miss my youth, however as a result of there is no such thing as a one else like him. There have been different nice gamers, however given his distinctive qualities nobody has been nice in the identical manner.
I miss the duck below a excessive pitch that might have been on the letters for anybody else, the sudden explosion of the bat from a place seemingly too compactly coiled to provide a leadoff residence run, but so usually did. I miss my father. I miss my pen. This dropping and lacking is within the nature of issues till such time as it’s one’s flip to hitch the misplaced and the missed. Figuring out that doesn’t make it any simpler to bear. Have been the universe simply, time would by no means have caught Rickey stealing. It’s exhausting to think about that he would have acknowledged that it had any energy over him in any respect. That in the long run it did just isn’t a shock, however so stark a reminder of inevitable destiny is nearly an excessive amount of to bear.
Thanks for studying
This can be a free article. In case you loved it, take into account subscribing to Baseball Prospectus. Subscriptions assist ongoing public baseball analysis and evaluation in an more and more proprietary atmosphere.
Subscribe now