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Best Seat in the House
Topic Started: Oct 7 2015, 11:45 PM (6 Views)
goulesz12
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Best Seat in the House

1: My Father's Daughter

"Two tickets to a Cleveland Indians game," the announcer was saying on the Saturday morning radio show on WSPD in Toledo, Ohio, "for the person who knows the answer to this trivia question."

All six of us were at the kitchen table on a typically chaotic, noisy Saturday morning in late May of 1969. I had my head buried in the newspaper, poring over the baseball standings. I don't think my parents or my siblings heard the question, but I did.

"Who were the two pitchers involved in the only double no hitter in baseball history?" the man on the radio asked.

"I know the answer to that," I said, as much to myself as to anyone else. "Fred Toney and James Vaughn."

It was in one of the baseball books I was reading. Having just turned eleven, I already was smitten with baseball, with our minor league Mud Hens and with all the major league teams surrounding us: the Cubs and White Sox in Chicago, the Tigers in Detroit, the Indians in Cleveland, the Reds in Cincinnati. Unlike so many children in other parts of the country, I didn't have to pick one team to cheer for. I had a half dozen in my big Midwestern backyard. But those weren't the only teams I followed. When I tried to fall asleep at night, I didn't count sheep. I recited World Series teams, going backward from 1968, until I didn't know them anymore.

My father turned to look at me.

"You want to call in?" Dad asked.

I shook my head no. I pictured a sports fan, a man, already at his phone somewhere else in Toledo, dialing in, answering correctly, winning the tickets.

We listened for a few moments.

"We still don't have any callers," the radio announcer said.

Dad looked at me and smiled. I pushed my chair away from the table and walked to the phone. I still thought I would be too late. I picked up the phone and looked at my father, then my mother. They nodded approvingly without saying a word. I dialed the number.

A man answered at the radio station. I recognized his voice. It was the announcer. Everyone in the kitchen Coach Purses outlet fell silent. Mom reached for the kitchen radio and twisted the knob to turn down the sound so I wouldn't get distracted, then ran to their bedroom to listen.

"So," the announcer asked, "you know the answer?"

"Yes," I said in the firmest eleven year old voice I could muster. "Fred Authentic nfl jerseys Toney and James Vaughn."

"Oh, we've got a young fan here," the announcer chuckled. "And what teams did they play for?"

He was adding another question, right then, on the air. It wasn't a problem. I knew the answer.

"The Cincinnati Reds and the Chicago Cubs," I replied.

"You're right! You win the tickets! What's your name?"

"Christine Brennan," I said."Oh," the announcer said. "You're a girl."

My first press box was in our family room, ten feet from the television. He was very thorough for a seven year old, giving me all the information I asked for. We wrote about the starting pitchers, about who was hitting well, about what to expect in the game. My stories had a circulation of six five not counting me: my father, a former high school tackle and shot putter who once had a tryout with the Chicago Bears; my mother; and my siblings. There were four Brennan children; I was born in May of 1958, my sister Kate in November of 1959, Jim in June of 1962, and my sister Amy in August of 1967.

Those little stories flew off my fingertips. I had read hundreds of articles about baseball in the Blade, the Toledo Times, and the Detroit Free Press. I also had some previous writing experience. My parents gave me a diary for Christmas of 1968. It had a blue and green floral print on the cover and a lock that I never used. My first entry, on January 1, 1969, was typical of what I believed my diary should be: "Woke up late after staying up last night to wait for the New Year. After lunch, went to the Sports Arena to ice skate. After that, watched the Rose Bowl and Orange Bowl. In the Rose Bowl, Ohio State won over USC, 27 16. In the Orange Bowl, Penn State won over Kansas, 15 14."

I sounded like a stringer for the Associated Press.

Barely a day went by when I Cheap authentic jerseys did not report in my diary the score of a University of Toledo Rockets basketball game, or an NFL play off game, or, when spring came, the score of a Toledo Mud Hens or a Detroit Tigers game or the Saturday "Game of the Week." My entries also covered the daily activities of a girl turning eleven: memorizing spelling words, going to classes at the Toledo Museum of Art, skating on someone's frozen backyard.

My entry for February 28 was particularly memorable: "Today I begged my Dad to try to get tickets for the Rockets' game tomorrow against Miami (O.). It is Steve Mix's last game. Daddy will try to get tickets."

Steve Mix was the first big sports superstar I idolized. He was the University of Toledo basketball team's six seven, 220 pound center. With his broad shoulders and tree trunk arms, Mix lumbered through the key and under the basket like a giant, and we loved him for it.

"The Mixmaster!" Dad would yell, his deep voice booming above the crowd, as Mix grabbed a rebound and threw his elbows side to side, churning like a blender to protect the ball. I would look up and smile at my father, a big block of a man at six feet and two hundred pounds, with a quarter inch crew cut and black rimmed glasses.
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