Charlotte Magazine – July 2019

(John Hannent) #1

104 CHARLOTTEMAGAZINE.COM // JUNE 2019


I


“IN!” THE SHORTSTOP YELLED.
“In!” the le elder followed.
“Yes,” I wanted to say, “I know!”
I did know. But as the only journalist on a soball
team of construction workers, I must’ve given oˆ the
stench of someone who needed assistance. I’d devoted
a good portion of my rst 21 years to organized
baseball, but hey, I get it: A few years ago, a farmer
asked me of my chosen profession, “So you just sit
around and type all day?” When that precedes you,
good luck getting anyone in the concrete business to
give you the benet of the doubt on a ”y ball.
It’d been a heavy few months leading up to that
moment. My father’s death was the big one, but I
also followed concerns in Charlotte that ranged from
the rising murder rate to election fraud to immigrant
neighbors being deported to a police shooting. One
thing I love about this town is that it oˆers plenty of
ways to get involved and get serious. I’ve spent the
past six years forming relationships with everyone
from chefs to activists, journalists to politicians. Some
work with kids who’ve been convicted of crimes,
others with adults who need a home. Add in regular
drops of social media, and the daily conversations that
surround me are mostly meaningful.
We can’t be that way all the time. So when my
brother, Kenny, invited me to ll out the roster on his
company soball team this spring, I spent the $30 at
SportsLink and signed up for at least one break a week.
Kenny’s a project manager who leads crews that
pour the framework for many of the tall buildings you
see around town. His co-workers understand things
I’ll never grasp, and their jobs are stressful in ways
I’ll never understand. They’re not on social media
or wondering what to wear for the next restaurant
opening. When you work from sunup to sundown in
a city that’s sprouting new buildings every week, you
don’t have a lot of time to be concerned with hashtags.
Apparently, they don’t have time to worry about
soball, either. Our team, Just Pour It, started the
year with exactly one bat. We bought a second in
week three.

ALONG THE WAY


I wish I could say the same for
our opponents, who showed up in
uniforms and carried full bags of gear.
Just Pour It lost by double digits on
opening night, and it stayed like that
throughout the season. We took a
beating every Wednesday, sometimes
twice a night, and turned teams
sponsored by Thomas Street Tavern
and Smokey Joe’s Café into the
Yankees and Red Sox.
“You should write a story about us,” our pitcher, Tom, told me
during a break between a doubleheader in which we lost by a
combined 26 runs. That’s another thing people say to journalists a lot,
usually as a joke—only this time the joke’s on Tom, who now has his
name in a magazine as the pitcher who gave up all those runs.
The last time I participated in a rec league was 2008, when I lived
in Winston-Salem. Before that, my newspaper’s team in Fayetteville.
Leagues in those cities weren’t nearly as competitive as this one. I saw
a diˆerent side of Charlotte’s evening meetup culture this spring, one
away from the breweries, networking, and community conversations.
It’s a soball culture, and some folks take it as seriously as Foundation
For the Carolinas does raising money.
Our team had decent players, a few of whom played in college, but
we rarely kept a game closer than 10 runs. Just Pour It nished the year
with a record of 0-8, with a run diˆerential of minus-88.
Damn, it was fun.
What was good for our opponents’ win-loss records, and good for
Kenny’s company’s team-building, was good for this writer’s mental
balance.
I’ll turn 40 this winter, and all around us are reminders that seasons
pass in a blink. It’s hard to believe that the DNC was seven years ago,
or that the mayor’s arrest was ve years ago, or that HB2 was three
years ago. Each spring, I’d think about joining a soball team like I
had in those other cities, but I never thought I had the time, and time
rolled on anyway.
As I stood in le-center eld watching the ball pop up into the night
sky at a park on Beatties Ford Road that evening in March, it hardly
seemed possible that a decade had passed since I last chased down a
”y ball, back when this game seemed like a priority.
It was too deep for the shortstop but well within my range. “Can
of corn,” my father would’ve said. I still don’t understand how that
means, “Easy catch.”
The shortstop was more urgent with his “In!” The le-elder, too.
Their voices caused me to go from a glide to a sprint, and I hit a
small dip in the grass, or at least I hope it was a dip, because I lost my
balance. Ten years ago, I’d have kept running. But that night, carrying
a few extra pounds and years, I stumbled and fell. The ball plopped in
the grass a few feet in front of me.
My rst reaction was anger, thinking I’d let our team down. But aer
I tossed the ball back in, all I heard was the sound of my Just Pour It
teammates laughing at me.
I’d missed that.

The Lovable


Losers of


Just Pour It


The best of times with the worst
softball team in Charlotte

BY MICHAEL GRAFF

LOGAN CYRUS
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