Perfect memory of Braden’s gem lingers
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=AvnQebTSdrS.jFmF5NAiWnsRvLYF?slug=ti-braden051410
ANAHEIM, Calif. – Frank Wanner, retired from the local school system, awoke
from a nap mid-afternoon last Sunday. From habit, he turned on the
television, hoping to catch the last few innings of a ballgame. It was the
Oakland Athletics, like he hoped. As his fog cleared, Wanner was somewhat
disappointed to see Dallas Braden(notes) on the mound. He’d forgotten it was
Braden’s day to pitch and now he’d slept through most of it.
Slowly, Wanner began to understand what was happening up the road in Oakland.
His mind fell nine years back, to the cold and blustery day at the high
school ballpark when Jodie Atwood last saw her son, Dallas, pitch. She’d
been in a wheelchair by then, and under a pile of blankets that wouldn’t
keep the chill away.
Wanner, for so long the coach at Stagg High School in Stockton, Calif., didn’
t recall Dallas ever throwing a baseball harder than he did that afternoon. A
scout from the Atlanta Braves was there, and Wanner was sure that was the day
Dallas became a genuine prospect. He pitched his heart out, maybe hoping to
leave his mom with something great to remember him by.
As well as he pitched, Dallas lost that afternoon. He sat in the dugout
afterward, staring at those new cleats Wanner had promised him if he’d
gotten his grades together so he could play that one varsity season. On the
wall behind him, painted in Stagg’s brown-and-yellow colors, the words
Wanner had brought back with him from Vietnam: ”Deeds not words.”
Around him, Dallas’ teammates cried for his disappointment, for his mom, the
whole thing.
When Jodie Atwood died from cancer, Wanner had driven over to the motel on
March Lane, up against I-5. It’s where Dallas lived. He was out on the front
curb, holding to his grandmother, refusing to let go, like he could keep her
there if he just held her hard enough.
On the television, Tampa Bay Rays hitters kept making outs. Dallas kept
trotting to the mound, getting the ball, working fast, getting more outs.
Wanner was sure he was more nervous than Dallas was.
He’d retired after the baseball season in 2001, Dallas’ senior year. He was
coming up on 60 years old, had a bright young assistant ready to take over
the program, and figured he’d been a baseball coach for long enough. They’d
missed the playoffs narrowly, losing the last game, the one he’d held out
Dallas to use him as the closer. They’d lost by plenty, and Dallas never
pitched that day.
Wanner had seen Dallas pitch lots of times since, most of them on television,
like this. He’d chuckled over the Alex Rodriguez(notes) dust-up, having seen
that side of Dallas enough before he’d straightened himself out for his
senior year.
”Really,” Wanner said, ”I couldn’t get through to him before that time.
He had some real anger issues. But the quality he had, when he got on that
rubber, it was on. I read where someone said that when Dallas is out there he
has no fear. That’s true.”
Along about the time Wanner could count the Rays batters remaining on one
hand, goose bumps raised on his forearms. It was going to happen. He sensed
it. The imperfect kid from the imperfect life and the imperfect town was
going to be perfect, if just for a few hours.
In fact, that whole imperfect town was starting to sense it.
Camron and Mitchell Ratto, brothers first and teammates on the Red Sox in
Stockton’s Hoover Tyler Little League second, spent that Sunday afternoon
watching Dallas on television, too. Camron, 10, knew a no-hitter when he saw
one; he’d pitched one as a 9-year-old, about the time he’d met Dallas. But
then, they already thought of Dallas as perfect.
He’d paid their way into Little League, had bought them cleats and gloves
and bats, then had them up to Oakland to meet the rest of the A’s. So they
squirmed in the playroom, where the TV is, while Dallas pitched into the
ninth inning.
”He sponsored us,” Camron said, ”and taught us how to keep our balance in
pitching. And to always keep working and hoping and to never give up.”
Five nights later, the television had Dallas on again, against the Los
Angeles Angels on Friday night at Angels Stadium. This time, after five
scoreless innings, he’d give up a run, then three more, but what Mitchell
thought of was the afternoon last summer in the A’s clubhouse with Dallas,
how cool that was, and how happy it made his mom.
”It was good and great,” Mitchell said. ”Awesome.”
Tami Ratto is 43. The boys’ father had passed away, and now there was more
work than time, and sometimes more bills than money. Dallas, the boy from
area code 209, who’d had those numbers tattooed across his belly, who’d
once clung so hard to baseball, had offered the same to her boys – a glove
and a bat and a dream. He had made it work. They could, too.
”God has blessed us, truly,” Tami said. ”The TV came alive. And a hero
walked into our lives.
”I’d raised my boys with an attitude, you work toward it and you can have
it. The sky’s the limit. And then he showed them that. I told them and
Dallas Braden showed them.”
The last out came, and Dallas thrust his fist in the air, and Frank Wanner
shouted with him.
”I love him,” Wanner said. ”I appreciate what he did, and certainly who he
is.”
… and Tami and Camron and Mitchell cheered with him.
”I wish the best for him,” Camron said, ”and to continue to pitch perfect
games and sponsor kids like me. Hopefully, I can get to where he is right now.
”
… because everybody had a little piece of that day. Dallas had paid it
forward, played it forward even.
Five days later, he gave up some hits, gave up some runs, and the A’s lost.
He hated that. But, what a five days they were. What a life it’s been.
”Where I come from, it takes a village to raise a child,” Dallas said. ”My
village did a pretty good job. That goes from Frank Wanner to my junior
college coach to those little boys, Camron and Mitchell, to my grandmother
and my mom.”
He smiled a little sideways smile. He looked tired, but not beaten.
”It’s been a ride,” he said, ”that’s for sure.”
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