How a monkey made my dream come true
If there is anyone left within the reach of this newspaper who
doesn’t believe in the power of the Rally Monkey, I would urge that
he or she watch a video of the seventh and eighth innings at Edison
Field on the night of Oct. 26.
The score with one out in the seventh was 5-0 in favor of the
Giants, there was no one on base, the Giant pitcher had given up just
two hits, and his team was eight outs away from victory in the World
Series.
My wife and I were there, Section 226, seats 18 and 19, courtesy
of the generosity of her father who bought a pair of tickets through
the post-season and then passed them out among his family. Had she
been able to hear me above the cacophony of 40,000 thunder sticks, I
was going to say to her at the beginning of the seventh inning that
the Angels had a great season, they gave us a terrific ride and we
should honor them for coming so close. In other words, for a brief
moment, I no longer believed in the Rally Monkey.
Then the hits started to fall in, along with some strokes of what
appeared to be luck. But I know now it was the doing of the Monkey.
A dinky fly ball hit down the right field line dropped two rows
into the stands for a three-run homer. A pop fly that Barry Bonds
couldn’t get to dropped in for a double when the Giants left fielder
kicked it around. Then Troy Glaus hit a real double off the wall in
center field, and the Angels were ahead 6-5. They would never again
be behind in the 2002 World Series.
And after all those agonizing years of disappointment, we almost
missed it.
Last July, we made a date for an October weekend with dear friends
in Portland, Ore. that included a visit to the Shakespeare Festival
in Ashland. Even someone as blindly committed as I am to the Angels
could hardly have anticipated that these plans would conflict with a
World Series in Anaheim. So we went knowing that even getting to a TV
set for the first three games might be impossible. But generous hosts
and luck in scheduling a matinee production of “Julius Caesar” on
Sunday eased our pain considerably. We missed only the first game.
We were invited to a dinner party in Ashland on Sunday, and our
hosts -- far beyond the call of duty or even congeniality -- indulged
these strange visitors form Lotus Land by turning on the TV and
muting the sound during an extended cocktail hour. So we saw that
remarkable 11-10 game in which the Giants suffered the same fate we
had just witnessed befall the Roman senators who murdered Caesar.
On Tuesday, back in Portland, our friends simply accepted the
inevitable and served dinner in front of the TV set. To our comfort
and their great credit, they showed more than token enthusiasm over
the outcome of the game. When I asked if they would watch succeeding
games after we went home, they insisted stoutly that they would.
At home, we had a crisis of conscience. The Angels had to lose one
of the next two games or there would be no sixth game for us to
attend. When they lost both of them, I carried an extreme burden of
guilt for harboring that thought. And so we went to Edison Field on
Saturday night with some trepidation -- and the Angels assuaged my
guilt and renewed my faith in the Monkey with that incredible 6-5
win.
The final game was almost anti-climatic. I knew the Monkey was in
charge. I was as cool as that 20-year-old pitcher the Angels found in
Salt Lake City the last month of the season who kept striking out old
pros. The Monkey didn’t even have to show himself in the clincher.
It’s disorienting when the impossible happens. Winning the lottery
must produce the same feeling. You shake your head and turn to
ordinary matters to get re-focused. And thoughts come. What kept
occurring to me is the youth of this team. A powerful nucleus of the
Angels is so very young--in their low to mid 20s. This says a lot of
the credit should go to the scouts who found and signed these young
men and the minor league staffs who trained them. And it conjured up
thoughts of a dynasty.
And then there were the recollections of Gene Autry. I was
privileged to have gotten to know him a little in the process of
doing several profiles on him for the Los Angeles Times. He was as
down home, as unpretentious and as proud of his team as the players
who finally realized his dream. Not a Barry Bonds among them -- but a
lot of Darin Erstads. A lot of North Dakota.
And finally there was the statement I had made so many times in
the years of disappointment and despair that I was determined not to
depart this life before the Angels won a World Series.
Such a pronouncement from a young person would be frivolous, but
not from someone my age. Given the Angels’ track record, it seemed to
me like a claim to immortality. But just to cover myself, I threw in
completion of the novel I’ve been working on since the ninth grade.
Now I’m concerned. The Angels crossed me up and won, and I’ve
actually been working on my novel at a dangerous pace. So it’s clear
I need another set of goals so impossible that my longevity would no
longer be threatened. I’m working on such a list now.
Meanwhile, my grateful thanks to the Rally Monkey and the Anaheim
Angels. As with so many other men of my generation, baseball is a
connective that helps hold the pieces of a life together. For the
past week, I’ve had a good many phone calls and e-mails from friends
and family who have long shared my joy and despair with the Angels.
One call came from Denmark, from the husband of a foreign student who
lived in our home for a year more than three decades ago.
For this Depression youth, baseball was a vacant lot game that
didn’t require great skill and offered a host of heroes at the
professional level. And since then, through war and peace and social
change, it has provided a reference point of stability in which the
bases were always the same distance apart wherever they were put down
and the game was never over until the last man was out. Those rules
haven’t changed. In baseball and -- for many of us -- in life as
well.
I have a brick -- a gift from my daughters -- near the main gate
at Edison Field with my name on it. It was moved a few years ago, and
I haven’t yet found its new space, but I may use the off-season to
track it down.
My brick says “Ever Hopeful,” and I see no reason to change that.
As I was trying to say to my wife at Edison Field last Saturday, the
Angels gave us a tremendous year, certainly the most entertaining and
unselfish and ultimately exciting baseball team I’ve ever known.
And they up and won, too.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights.
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