
At the pimply age of 13, however, I did not have the means to collect the autographs of my sports heroes. But I did have a dad who was willing to forgo his instinct and upbringing and come home from a charity function with a program signed by nearly every member of the 1979 NY Giants. I spent hours gazing at those signatures and uniform numbers of my Sunday afternoon heroes during a time when the swamps of Jersey weren't the only things stinking up the Meadowlands: #64 John Mendenhall. #13 Dave Jennings. #53 Harry Carson. #44 Doug Kotar. #18 Joe Danelo. #55 Brian Kelley. Even the Giants terrible QB twosome of #12 Jerry Goldstein and [gasp!] #9 Joe Pisarcik.
The largest signature was the one my eyes stopped at most, and not only because of its abundance of blue-ink swirls. #10 Brad Van Pelt was a 5-time Pro Bowl linebacker with the rugged good looks of a British Columbian lumberjack. Like Don Mattingly of the Yankees, Van Pelt was beloved by Giants fans for being a standout player on a sad parade of pathetic teams. If I close my eyes I can see his signature floating apart from the others, just as his skills and class separated him from the crappy teams he played on. It was the first thing I thought of when news of his death at the much-too-young age of 57 hit the papers this week.
Who knows what became of that autographed program. I don't regret losing it because of its potential dollar value -- I miss gazing at it like I did as a kid, letting my eyes linger over the signatures of so many long-retired Giants and feeling as I did over 30 years ago: Lucky to have #10 Brad Van Pelt's autograph and luckier still to have Pat Wall as my dad.
1 comment:
I love this entry. Very sweet and a nice tribute to both a sports hero and a real hero - your dad. I too have a memory of my father using his contacts to get us in to meet Mickey Mantle, and on another occasion getting Lou Pinella's autograph. And I remember both of those very distinctly and each tells a story that I will never forget.
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