It was June, 1962. I was in Grade 8. We were playing a game of softball at lunch recess (the version that’s now called fastball). The diamond was in a corner of the property, with the three-storey school at an angle, so that its left end was closer to us than the right. Beyond the outfield grass was a wide cement strip that butted up against the building.
And so the stage was set for Roger Mount. He scared me – all musclely, loud and aggressive. I was a timid little kid, of the striking out variety. Thankfully, Roger and I were on the same team, so I was standing near him when the moment cracked open my reality. Roger was at the plate, waiting. The pitcher was ready. He zoomed a fastball over the plate, and Roger met the pitch with the sweet spot. The ball took off, climbing and climbing towards left field. My mouth dropped open. The ball kept going up, impossibly high and far. Left field was but a memory, as was the cement. As was the three storeys of elementary education. Finally the sphere started falling, and then it …
disappeared.
Onto the roof. Roger had done something that most likely had never been accomplished in the history of Bedford Park Public School. On the field there was silence as he rounded the bases. We were in the presence of God. Fifty-two years later, I’m still there. Roger is right now. Eternally.
***
Sometime in the 70s, I went to watch Jack Nicklaus play a practice round at a golf course near Toronto. One of the best golfers in the history of the game. And I got to be within ten feet of him, in the first row of spectators behind the tee of a par four hole. A creek crossed the fairway left to right about 200 yards off the tee. There was a wide stretch of fairway beyond, but then it turned sharp right and paralleled the creek till it reached the green, far to the right as we viewed it from the tee. The kicker was that there was a row of tall deciduous trees on the far bank of the creek, starting from the open fairway straight ahead of us and continuing all the way to the green, protecting the hole against any insane golfer who wanted to try a short cut.
Nicklaus took one look at the situation and said to his caddie, “Why not?” He teed up a ball and pointed his body towards the green. I gasped (very quietly – golf is a polite game). My fellow spectators froze as well. Jack waggled his driver, stared down the trees, tilted his head to the ball that was about to go for a wild ride, and swung. The thwack of a real wooden club crushing a dimpled white sphere. A climb through space as if seeking the Godhead. Up and up and up and up and …
over the trees.
Jack’s ball came to rest on the fringe of the green. He turned around, smiled at us, and said, “Don’t think I’ll try that again.” His words were the only sound on the tee. Maybe two hundred of us had witnessed the power of a deity.
***
I love the flight
I love the reaching up to God
I love the going up and the coming down