"Alfie was an organizer. He would telephone the other kids a week before that first practice session (which he euphemistically called spring training), and he would knock on their doors the morning of, and they would look out the windows and say, "Hey, it's snowing," and he would say, "It's not snowing all that hard. See you in a half-hour." So we would gather our tired, cold bodies together, throw on our baseball clothes—old shirts, old pants, sneakers, old baseball gloves—and grab a couple of bats and scuffed-up balls, and we would pile onto the subway and ride to Van Cortland Park. We would run to make sure we'd be first to claim a ball field. Of course we were first. Nobody else was that crazy. My brother would direct practice for a couple of hours, batting practice, catching fungoes, fielding, practicing our curves and drops on the sidelines, fingers aching from contact with batted or thrown baseballs. We threw ourselves across that hard bone of a field so we would be ready when the spring suns finally thawed the ground at our feet. If the still-awake dreams of hunting lions in Africa were the peak moments of my night life, those frozen ball fields of February were the highlights of my days."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Academics from the United StatesColumnists from the United StatesEditors from the United StatesBiographers from the United StatesNovelists from New York City
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Recalling his late brother, from "Life with Alfie," in Orange Coast Magazine (November 1990), pp. 233–234
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Arnold_Hano
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Arnold Hano
Arnold Philip Hano ((March 2, 1922 – October 24, 2021) was an American editor, novelist, biographer and journalist, best known for his non-fiction work, A Day in the Bleachers, a critically acclaimed e
38 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Arnold Hano →
Related Quotes
"Finally Jones came in with a blinding fastball, the way Sad Sam used to throw ’em, and Clemente unloaded. The wind wa…"
"In that one moment, during an era in which sluggers threatened to take over the sport, Carl Hubbell had restored to p…"
"When he quit, he grew cotton down South, tinkered in real estate, owned an auto dealership, and made enough money so …"
"The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could …"
"He had made one of the greatest catches in Polo Grounds history; he had played third base as no Giant before or since…"
"When he died, he held fourteen baseball records, a little man with a bashful smile, a silken swing, baseball's legend…"
"McGraw was an improviser, a teacher. He brought much to the game that keeps baseball fresh and suspenseful today—the …"
"He wanted to win so badly it killed him. But before it killed him, it elevated the game of baseball, at the Polo Grou…"
"On the last Sunday in September in smoggy Los Angeles, announcer Vin Scully riffed through some notes as Willie McCov…"
"Now it was Liddle, jerking into motion as Wertz poised at the plate, and then the motion smoothed out and the ball ca…"