Showing posts with label soccer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soccer. Show all posts

9.19.2008

Memories of "The Lot"


Every young boy dreams of being famous-- usually a professional ball player of some kind or maybe an astronaut, or performer. They are going to conquer the world, discover new things, have millions of fans, break world records or be declared a hero. When I was a young boy, I did most of my dreaming where a lot of children do, on "the lot".

"The lot" can mean different things to different people. It can be an empty field, common ground, or even a parking lot. In our case, "the lot" incorporated all of these as it was the Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Church Campus, occupying most of the inside of the suburban block that many of us lived on or near. 

It was a fairly small parish of, probably, 400 families. The campus was comprised the church building and a school with five classrooms and a multipurpose room. If you don't count the metal, shed-like concession stand, that was all of the structures so there was a ton of open space. There was a quad area between the two buildings that was kept up nicely but rarely used and a very large area that we just called "the hill" but it was really just a slightly sloped piece of land, running from the school down to the street that was supposed to be used for a gymnasium that was never built. The athletic field and the large parking lot took up most of the rest of the space. I always thought the parking lot was extremely large for a parish our size as I don't think I ever saw it more than 3/4 full-- even for Easter Vigil. All that space made for a huge amount of room to play. 

Kids today don't play like we used to. They need a coach and a referee and a permission slip to play. They need warm up exercises and family members in the stands and they need a cool, healthy but tasty treat after they formally line up and parade past each other slapping hands and chanting a monotone, "good game, good game, good game...".

I can think of maybe nine days that I wasn't up on the lot, after school when it was in session and, basically, all day in the summer, from the time I was able to leave the front yard and cross the street on my own until I was able to drive. We would all congregate, choose up teams and play until the fight broke out or it got dark, at which point we would drag all of our stuff home until the next day when we would do it all over again.

There was no schedule-- no set time to start. Everyone would just show up and as soon as we had enough to play it was go time. If you showed up late, you sat out until another came to make the teams even or were designated, "all-time-hiker" (or catcher, or goalie). 

Captains were usually the two oldest, biggest or the best athletes and the last person picked was probably the youngest, smallest and most uncoordinated. This practice may seem cruel, by today's standards, but I prefer it to giving every kid a trophy just for showing up. It was honest and let you know where your strengths and weaknesses were and made you determined to improve. 

Everyone was playing for themselves. There were no parents to make proud or girls to impress except the ones that were playing with us and we were an equal opportunity organization-- the girls were treated like boys. This, generally, made it all fair and fun.

Disagreements on the field were kept on the field. We called our own fouls and made our own penalties and if we had a problem working something out, as a last resort we had a "do-over". More often than not a escalating disagreement, bordering on a fight, would end the game for the day but because there was no clock we needed something to mark the end of the day. After all, we still had to make the trek home before the streetlights came on and, back then, we didn't have cel phones that we could use to call Mom and have someone pick us up.

There were no set seasons for particular sports on the lot either, although we were more likely to be playing Indian Ball than Roller Hockey in the dead of summer and we would usually stick to one pastime for a week or two before we got bored. We tended to mix it up pretty much but, living in Soccertown, USA, we naturally mix in a little more of that the the others.

"The field" was in pretty poor condition through most of the year. The infields had no grass and it was sparse and clumpy in the outfields. It was set up differently for baseball and soccer through parts of the year but we could do either at any time. We would usually play soccer on the quad though because it made it tough to run the whole field with less than eight or so guys per team. 

Hockey was played at the far end of the parking lot where it was not unusual to see just as many skated players as those in street shoes playing together. This is also where the basketball hoops were located. Although it was set up so you could play full court, we rarely played anything more than HORSE or "around the world".

"The hill" was where would normally play football. A quick poll of the available players would determine whether the game would be tackle or touch and with a real ball or the Nerf. We would also fly our kites and, when it snowed, sled on that hill, not that I would consider them sports, but it was cool because every kid in the neighborhood knew that was the place to be.

I wouldn't really consider Fenceball a sport either, but we played it more than any of the other stuff. I have no idea where Fenceball came from. For all I know, it was played only at OLM by only the kids on that lot. I'm not completely sure that my friends and I didn't invent the game. All I know for sure is that I kicked that ball up against that fence more times than I can begin to count. I kicked it with friends, strangers and by myself. I kicked off the bomb (a bad thing) and I kicked it off the post (a good thing). 

It is a very simple game with almost no rules-- you get one-touch to make the ball hit the front of the backstop fence (without using your hands). If you miss you are out and last one in... wins! There were variations over the years that, for the sake of time, I won't get into here and now... maybe on a future post. 

Still, to this day, some 25-30 years later, however, I can still visualize every inch of that dusty field-- especially the screen and the infield where we played Fenceball. I still dream, literally, of playing on "the lot" and conquering the world, discovering new things, having millions of fans, breaking world records and being declared a hero. 

I wonder if the others that played like that have as fond of memories as I do? In the case of our lot, they can be bittersweet memories because the lot doesn't belong to OLM anymore. Reorganization of the Catholic parishes in the area left it vacant and it was eventually sold to the public school district. I still drive by every once in a while and even stopped a time or two. They have left it, pretty much, unchanged-- yet it is very, very different.

Several years ago, I started writing my life list-- things I wanted to make a point of doing in my lifetime, but I put it aside, unfinished, a short time later. When I had the stroke, I guess because it was a reminder short a lifetime is, I dug it back out. The first entry on the page is "Go up to the lot and play Fenceball with my son."

I think he is old enough now to kick and still young enough to be impressed when I tell him that I hold the world record for kicking a soccer ball up against this fence...

...he may even declare me a hero.

9.03.2008

Soccertown, USA?


I have a question for anyone that lives or has lived outside the St. Louis Metropolitan area. Has anyone ever heard anything about any other city being the soccer capital of the U.S.? I have understood, from an early age, that the title of Soccertown, USA belonged to the Gateway City. Now, as I am older and more well-travelled, I find this disturbing to believe this is all a lie, made up by some civic group and spread underground to make St. Louisians feel good about their city.

They were very smart about it, though. Similar to the way they claim to be the birthplace of toasted ravioli (nobody outside the St. Louis area has ever heard of toasted ravioli, therefore who cares where it comes from), they didn't dare pick something really popular to be the capital of– like baseball, football or even hockey. We'll keep it low key with soccer because most people in this country only discuss the sport for a brief moment, every four years, when the US Team gets booted from the World Cup.

This tactic would, probably, also work for similar small to medium sized cities because in the rare instance that someone leaves a place like St. Louis for a long enough time to realize the media hype is not true they, usually, don't come back to warn the other brainwashed citizens. It is very sad if my theory is correct as growing up believing the myth has left me many fond memories of the sport.

Some of my earliest memories is going along to my Dad's soccer games when I was a small boy. I can remember specific times and places while watching him play goal– going to Steak 'n Shake after a game in the rain, blowing my first bubble through a chain link fence (I know– weird memory) and watching the US hockey team beating the Russians in the Olympics on a small TV set up on the sidelines during an indoor game at Twillman's Just for Kicks.

I remember going to see Pele, the greatest player of all time, play at Busch Stadium with the New York Cosmos. I also saw Pat Lahey, a kicker for the New York Jets and local high school soccer star, put a hole in the boards behind the goal in an indoor game with a rocket shot that was high and wide.

I have seen four professional teams play in this town. The Stars played outdoors. Then, when indoor soccer became popular, we had the Steamers, Ambush, and the Storm... and then the Steamers again. I could name off a ton of players that I remember, but you probably aren't interested (and I have trouble spelling all those European names).

For several years, my friends and I ate, drank, and slept soccer. We wore our Sambas wherever we went and at least one of had to have a beat-up old ball. We must have seen Victory at the drive-in five times during it's two-week showing.

I have a lot of fond memories of playing too. I can still remember most of my goals (there were that few) in the big games when I was older. I remember breaking my ankle and wearing the cast and when Matt dislocated his knee. I remember the Strikers TDK– we were just a rag-tag bunch of kids but we gave some darn good, organized teams with sponsors a hell of a fight. I also remember a lot of good times coaching. I had a team of Junior High boys for a few years that were a ton of fun and a couple of girls teams over the years. 

The memories are good but I am anxiously looking forward to when I can get involved with my son playing in the next couple of years. I hope that he can have his own good memories of his dad and soccer– or whatever he decides to do. He can even believe the hype if he wants.

Note: Soccer has been a huge part of my life over the years and I hope I find the time to write more about it in the future. What is important in my life right now, however, is MLW (and the baby in her tummy) and selling T-shirts to support her sugar cravings. Check out the cool new "Future Soccer Mom" T-shirt as well as the rest of the maternity collection at: http://www.cafepress.com/skeetzteez/5711936