True--The Four Seasons of Jackie Robinson by Kostya Kennedy
Author:Kostya Kennedy
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
* * *
Even with the wind blowing out toward right fieldâthe flag beyond the scoreboard stiffened at times toward that wayâthe Yankees played Robinson to pull the ball. He came to bat in the bottom of the first inning. No score, two outs, Duke Snider on first base. Game Six of the 1956 World Series was six batters old. The Yankees had gone down easily in the top of the inning, and now Sniderâs single had produced the Dodgersâ first base runner in two days. Robinson stood deep in the batterâs box, and a rustle ran through the crowd. In center field, Mickey Mantle took a couple of strides leftward. At third base, Andy Carey, even with the bag, moved closer to the line.
OâMalley watched from his customary box along the first base line. It was his birthday, and the Dodgers Sym-Phony had struck up a tune in acknowledgment. He had been born not twenty miles to the north, in the Bronx, on a FridayâOctober 9, 1903âmarked by record rainfall that not only swamped the city but also caused the rainout, in Boston, of Game Seven of the first World Series ever played. There were any number of things that OâMalleyâaware now, at every game he attended, of being a broad man in a narrow old ballpark seatâmight have wanted for his fifty-third birthday, although nothing more earnestly than a new stadium, a new place to perch.
Heâd been agitating for years, appealing to New York Cityâs parks commissioner (and gatekeeper, kingmaker, puppeteer), Robert Moses, for approval on a new place in Brooklyn. A no go so far. OâMalley was also in more promising ongoing discussions with the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, especially the principal contact, Kenneth Hahn. It was no secret that Los Angeles wanted a major league team. (Any teamâtheyâd even courted the lowly Senators.) Three days after Game Six, with the Dodgers on a stopover en route to a series of exhibition games in Japan, OâMalley and Hahn would meet over breakfast in Los Angeles. For now, OâMalley said, all he wanted for his birthday was a Dodgers win in Game Six.
Bob Turley had a serious fastball. Mid-90s, at least, and when he got it to the right spot, up in the zone, forget it. Plus he threw a curveball that could put rope in your knees. In 1954, as an Oriole, Turley had led the American League in strikeoutsâand also in walks. Bullet Bob was one of Turleyâs nicknames. Wild Bob was another. His new half-windup sliced a mile or two off the speed in exchange, he hoped, for greater command. Robinson took the first pitch, a curveball on the outside corner, for strike one.
Robinson had batted cleanup throughout the World Series, and before running into Larsen in Game 5, heâd been hitting .357. An old-time peak Robinson number. Turleyâs second pitch, a fastball, ran too far inside. Then Robinson fouled the third pitch straight back into the high seats. One and two. Turley came
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Down the Drain by Julia Fox(867)
The Light We Carry by Michelle Obama(812)
Cher by Cher(638)
Simple Passion by Annie Ernaux(547)
Love, Pamela by Pamela Anderson(534)
Zen Under Fire by Marianne Elliott(508)
You're That Bitch by Bretman Rock(490)
The Foxfire Book of Appalachian Women by Kami Ahrens(458)
Kamala Harris by Chidanand Rajghatta(439)
Novelist as a Vocation by Haruki Murakami(432)
The Nazis Knew My Name by Magda Hellinger & Maya Lee(381)
Drinking Games by Sarah Levy(357)
Alone Together: Sailing Solo to Hawaii and Beyond by Christian Williams(357)
Gambling Man by Lionel Barber(351)
Limitless by Mallory Weggemann(350)
Memoirs of an Indian Woman by Shudha Mazumdar Geraldine Hancock Forbes(343)
The Barn by Wright Thompson(328)
A Renaissance of Our Own by Rachel E. Cargle(327)
Oh My Mother! by Connie Wang(312)
