Family Time -- Steve Smith
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Some days as a parent are better than others. In truth, some days are
much better than others.
Our family does very well on the road, so I always enjoy the days we
spend away together, regardless of where we go. Kids in the car are a
captive audience, and the best always seems to come out of them when they
don’t have the temptations and distractions of home.
In particular, they don’t have the stress of homework. It seems as
though there is a lot more than I had when I was a kid 35 years ago. It
may be because we’ve learned so much in that time and we have to impart
it to our children, but the playtime-homework time is a struggle.
Other days I am fond of are their birthdays, Thanksgiving and almost
any Sunday.
There is one day, however, that I particularly enjoy. That day is
opening day of the Little League season, which for Costa Mesa kids
happens to be today. Baseball is a lot like chess, another game I enjoy,
and I use this analogy with the kids each season. But I’ve found that not
enough kids play chess to know what I’m talking about, so that tactic
doesn’t always work.
Chess ought to be taught in schools, even in place of something else.
This year, it is my privilege to be the manager of the Cardinals in
the Minor B division. This is the first time that kids pitch to each
other. Prior to Minor B, their parents pitched to them or they received
balls and strikes from a machine.
Each team is supposed to have a banner, roughly 2-by-3-foot that has
the team name, a logo and the names of the players. The banner is hung
outside the dugout at each game.
The banners use a lot of felt, which is not an easy fabric to work
with. It doesn’t cut cleanly with ordinary scissors and trying to draw on
it with almost anything is nearly impossible. Often, in order to make a
colorful scene, the felt has to be layered, which can get tricky. One
small spot on the new Cardinals banner has four layers of felt.
This season marks the sixth banner Cay and I have made, either for
soccer or baseball. I have worked with her on five of them and enjoy the
duty more and more each year.
That’s unusual because at the initial parents meeting where the team
meets to divvy up the duties, such as candy sale coordinator, baseball
card coordinator and Angel ticket sale coordinator, the responsibility
for the banner usually has everyone staring at their shoes or running to
make an urgent appointment they’ve suddenly recalled.
Over the years, I have seen players become attached to the banner. A
couple of weeks ago, when I forgot to bring my daughter’s team soccer
banner to a tournament game, several kids wanted to know where it was.
The banner takes a few hours to make. More than the attractiveness, a
good banner sends a clear signal to kids that we care about their
participation in sports and in whatever they do.
That participation is crucial. The best soccer and baseball teams I’ve
seen have the most involved parents. The term “best” doesn’t refer to the
team with the best record. “Best” is a way of indicating the most fun and
interesting, although most of the time, that team also happens to be the
winningest.
When the games are fun and interesting, kids become willing
participants. I have told the team’s parents for years that my goal each
season is not to win the most games but to make sure that every kid who
plays on the team signs up for Little League the next season. If that
happens, I’ll know I’ve done my job. Opening day is today at 11 a.m. at
TeWinkle Middle School.
There is a team parade during which the banners are seen publicly for
the first time, a few announcements by some league officials and perhaps
even a guest speaker.
There is also some baseball. Our first game is not until 3 p.m., so
there will be some anxious moments in between the ceremony and the first
pitch.
As much as I enjoy opening day, my guess is that the players may enjoy
the closing ceremonies a little more. That’s when the league managers are
required to sit in the “dunk tank” -- a large tub of water over which we
must sit while our players throw baseballs at a target that drops us into
the tank if they hit it.
It’s a tough situation. The better they get, the more chance I have of
getting soaked to the bone next June.
Play ball!
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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