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When I was a kid, so
many summers ago, and played my one long professional season of minor league
ball for the Saraperos de Saltillo in the Mexican Baseball League, I was the
only one from El Norte on the club.
Hector Quesadilla, my
manager and mentor, had taken my right name and quickly made it more palatable
to the fans south of the border. George became Jorge, and Tannenbaum (Christmas
tree in German) became Arbol de Navidad, then shortened to Navidad. In roughly
the time it takes to swing and miss, I became Jorge Navidad.
After I had settled into
the routine of the club, after I had made friends and started speaking Spanish
with passing skill (I’ve since forgotten it all) a guy showed up at Estadio de BĂ©isbol Francisco I. Madero, our home field. He found Hector
and asked for a try-out.
This was not entirely unusual back then in the Mexican
League. Almost weekly there was a kid with long arms and a broad back who could
throw a lambchop past a wolf or tear the cover off the ball. Most of these boys
were looking to escape something at home. The brutal poverty of their
villages. A father who hit them not with an open hand. Or they just needed to
say goodbye and try something they hadn’t tried before.
Sometimes saying goodbye is the best thing you can say. If
only because it gives you the chance to go somewhere else. It hardly matters if
that someplace else is better. Sometimes it only needs to be different.
The Saraperos were out
on our field, limbering up, loosening our arms, lightly jogging and playing pepper
when this guy shows up. I was standing at third, and Hector was alongside me. I
was fielding grounders and making long looping parabolas to Batista, who was
manning first base.
“Andre Nadeau,” the guy
said. Nadeau was pronounced Nadoo. To reinforced that Andre said, “Just
remember, ‘What’s it to you, Andre Nadoo.”
Andre had long dark
hair, almost to his shoulders and wore a green army fatigue jacket unbuttoned
over a t-shirt. On the sleeve of his jacket, you could see where his sergeant’s
stripes were ripped off.
He was about 6’4”, he
towered over Hector, and had the build of a long-distance runner.
“Yeah,” he said to
Hector. “I can pitch.”
Hector gave Andre a ball
and someone, maybe Abreu our back-up middle-infielder, tossed him a glove.
Andre didn’t even take off his old army jacket. He walked up to the hill and
started throwing—throwing from a full-wind-up with an old Juan Marichal
kick-step. His first pitch cracked into Buentello’s fat mitt.
“Caliente,” the catcher
muttered.
“No warm-up,” Hector
asked Andre in English.
“That was warm-up,”
Andre said.
The right-hander
continued throwing aspirins to Buentello. Issy shook his glove hand in pain.
“Es maximo rapido,” the
catcher said.
“You have a bender?”
Hector asked him.
“A curve, a slider and a
change.”
Andre demonstrated with
15 more pitches. By the time he was finished with his try-out, Lizcano, the
assistant General Manager handed him a contract to sign. It was that simple.
The game wasn’t as regulated and orderly as the game north of the border.
All of us, it was getting
close onto game time, headed back to the clubhouse to put on our game uniforms
and settle a bit before we faced the Tabasco Olmecas at eight. Andre took the
locker to my right and we dressed for the evening. In a minute, Hector came
over.
“You can tonight pitch?”
Andre didn’t look up
from tying his spikes.
“I suppose I can go a
few innings. I haven’t pitched a full-game since I got back.”
“Ok, you go tonight.
Buentello will tell you the signs. He knows the Olmecas and will tell you how
to pitch them, especially Cardinale.” The Olmec’s centerfielder was the league’s
best hitter. Early into the season he had already hit 24 home runs.
“Since you got back from
where?” I asked.
Andre still didn’t look
up from his shoes. He spit “Vietnam. I got back in ’73.”
The war was that close.
I was still using my older brother’s draft card as a fake I.D. He gave it to me
for that purpose when Nixon lied the war into closure.
Nadeau finished getting dressed and together we trotted out to the field and tossed the ball around loosening our wings. Even casually throwing his arm had zip and the ball cracked into my glove.
Nadeau finished getting dressed and together we trotted out to the field and tossed the ball around loosening our wings. Even casually throwing his arm had zip and the ball cracked into my glove.
It cracked into
Buentello’s too. And zipped past the Olmecas. Nadeau set them down one-two-three
in the first, while we scratched a quick run when Adame singled and Garibay
doubled him in.
Nadeau continued on his
skein, holding the Olmecas and Cardinale hitless through six.Then, with the
Saraperos up four zip, Nadeau faltered in the seventh. Cardinale finally
connected on a curve that didn’t but that was all the damage done to Nadeau. We
won running away five-one.
There was beer and
handshakes and horsing around in the clubhouse, but Nadeau was out—gone—before I
was dry from my shower. Though a bunch of the boys were off to Tino’s for
dinner and more were off to a place with no name but the neon cerveza in the window.
A dirty ugly place where that cerveza and a girl cost pretty much the same.
Nadeau didn’t show up
the next day either, or the next. But on Friday, we were getting ready to play
the Piratas de Campeche when Andre showed up in his beaten army jacket and told
Hector he was ready to throw. Angry as he was Hector couldn’t pass up a pitcher
who could throw a one-hitter. And he gave the ball to Nadeau.
Here ends Part I.
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