|
|
A call was made to Tim McCarver Wednesday, because things are
starting to jump in baseball, and when that happens you never can go
wrong with McCarver. He still makes more sense about baseball than
anybody, is still the best spokesman for the game that I know about. He
knows all the things that are wrong, but is not one of those who has
forgotten what is right. Maybe that is why McCarver spent so much time
talking about Don Mattingly.
It is not just Yankee Stadium that feels a certain way about
Mattingly. It is not just Buck Showalter, and Mattingly's teammates, and
Yankees fans.
"I'm so excited at what he's done the last week or so, I can't even
tell you," McCarver said. "I'm rooting for him from the bottom of my
soul."
McCarver admitted he doesn't know Mattingly very well, has spent very
little time around him. When he is not working for ABC on baseball, he
does Mets games on WWOR-TV. Half the time Mattingly is playing, McCarver
is watching the Mets. And it is quite rare for McCarver to see a Yankees
game in person. So I asked why he feels this way about someone he really
only knows as a player whose best days are supposed to be gone.
"Don Mattingly is important, that's why," McCarver said. "Not just to
the Yankees, but to baseball. That's just my opinion. He represents
goodness at a time when goodness certainly is not the common thread in
baseball. More than anything else, it's that goodness that's the first
thing that comes to mind when I think about Mattingly.
"And there's a lot more than that, of course. In the face of
adversity, in what can be such a difficult city for any athlete to excel,
I have never heard Don Mattingly make an excuse about anything. I have
never heard him making an excuse. He is totally and thoroughly genuine.
He doesn't need the media to explain him to the fans. They understand him
perfectly all by themselves. It's why he has the relationship with them
that he does."
Mattingly has begun to hit the ball again, and hit it hard, and all of
a sudden the baseball season feels alive here, the way it does in other
places on the baseball map. Mattingly is not the only reason the Yankees
have gotten up, gotten right back in the race in the American League
East. He is certainly not the only hot hitter on the team, because
everybody can see what Wade Boggs has been doing, and Paul O'Neill, and
Mike Stanley, and even Tony Fernandez.
Suddenly, though, in a loud and emotional and quite wonderful way,
this Yankees' season has organized around the Yankees' captain. He was
the most popular athlete in town even before he got his swing back. Even
before people were swinging at him. Now he feels bigger than ever.
The Yankees are winning, and that makes their fans feel good. But
there is more going on than that. If the Yankees end up catching the Red
Sox, we will remember the real excitement starting the week Mattingly
went deep a few times, at a time when people were wondering if he ever
would go deep again.
And we will remember the first real noise of the season for Mattingly
and the Yankees, the first loud roars from a ballpark that has been
half-empty almost all season. It was the roar that greeted Mattingly's
home run last Sunday afternoon, and then another one when he showed
himself on the dugout steps for a curtain call. Then the caps came out on
the field. It was Cap Day, and some of the people didn't think cheering
was enough for Mattingly, and so they threw their caps on the field.
There have been other times at Yankee Stadium when people threw things
on the field and made the place look very bad. Not this time. The caps
floated through the air like confetti. Baseball felt as good here, looked
as good in these moments, as it had in such a long time.
Even when the Yankees were running away with the American League East
last season, people didn't fully enjoy themselves, because the threat of
a strike was always around, spoiling even the best baseball occasions.
Then everything began to go wrong this season. Jimmy Key was hurt and
other pitchers began to go, and Mattingly couldn't see straight, or hit.
The Yankees were 12-12 on May 25 and didn't get back to .500, with a
record of 40-40, until Tuesday night. There were cheers for the Yankees.
None lasted. Until now. By the end of the homestand, the Stadium was not
just cheering Mattingly but everyone.
Mattingly lost nearly half a season, in one way or another, because of
injury and then a virus that attacked his eyes. He tried to compensate
for poor vision when he should have taken himself out of the lineup. But
this was the season when Mattingly finally was supposed to make the
playoffs, and everything had gone wrong for the Yankees, and so he
couldn't sit it out. Showalter waited for Mattingly's eyes to get better.
During the bad times, he had been reminded once again about Mattingly's
heart.
Now Mattingly is at .307.
"I don't defend Donnie ever," Showalter said, "because Donnie doesn't
need defending."
Before Wednesday night's game with the Royals, Mattingly -- who was
supposed to have become a once-great player to be pitied -- was hitting
.381 in July. That was 32-for-84 and third-best in the league. The 32
hits were also third-best. He had three home runs and 10 RBI for the
month, with a few games left to go. It is the best full month (he hit
.410 in just 39 at-bats in June, 1987) Mattingly has had since
September-October of 1986, when he hit .422, with six home runs and 23
RBI.
And in the seven games the Yankees won to get them to 40-40, the
winning streak that began after the grisly doubleheader loss to the White
Sox that had people burying the Yankees before they ever got to August,
Mattingly hit .500.
He was 11-for-22, scored 10 runs, knocked in eight, hit three home
runs. He got standing ovations again and again. None of this would have
seemed so important if the Yankees were losing these games. They weren't.
Suddenly the baseball season in New York wasn't just a waiting room for
football.
"No matter what happens, I will never forget these cheers," Mattingly
said to me the other day.
He won't forget. The fans don't forget. Mattingly's bat is alive and
so are the Yankees. It was not just caps in the air at Yankee Stadium
last weekend, it was hope as well. Maybe it is not just Mattingly's
summer beginning late. Maybe it is everyone's.
LUPICA, MIKE
Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times, 1995.