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- <text id=89TT0800>
- <title>
- Mar. 20, 1989: Dreaming The Big Dreams
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 20, 1989 Solving The Mysteries Of Heredity
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 78
- Dreaming the Big Dreams
- </hdr><body>
- <p>One-handed Jim Abbott shines at spring training
- </p>
- <p>By Tom Callahan
- </p>
- <p> Not since Yankee pitchers Mike Kekich and Fritz Peterson
- swapped lives, wives, kids, dogs and bungalows in 1973 has
- baseball forecast such a sexy spring. Wade Boggs, the Boston
- Lothario, and the retired Padre Steve Garvey are proving that
- the movie Bull Durham, which featured only one Baseball Annie,
- was a little light on realism. In a stunning show of
- sportsmanship, Garvey's new bride has offered to adopt any
- children he has pending from two other relationships. Sensing
- that New York might be lagging in perdition, outfielder Rickey
- Henderson declared that the Yankees "were too drunk" last year
- to win the pennant.
- </p>
- <p> Jimmie Reese sighs forbearingly at all this, camped on a
- folding chair behind a batting cage near an orange grove,
- counting pitches. "Spring and baseball," muses the California
- Angels' most seasoned coach, "don't change very much." Reese
- knows something about both. Seventy-two springs ago, he was the
- Pacific Coast League Angels' eleven-year-old batboy for
- "Peerless" Frank Chance. Playing with the Yankees in 1930, Reese
- and Lefty Gomez split a $2-a-day suite at the new Edison Hotel.
- On the road, Jimmie stayed with Babe Ruth. "I roomed with the
- Babe's luggage, mostly," he says in a tone of
- wake-me-when-a-better-carouser-comes-along. "He was up all day
- and at 'em all night. When it was Ruth in the peephole, the
- speakeasy doors couldn't open fast enough."
- </p>
- <p> All around Reese, the musical clatter and chatter of
- baseball training have revived Mesa, Ariz. In the distance a
- tall rookie without a right hand, No. 60, is sprinting. "This
- may be the age of the $3 million pitcher," says the old coach,
- "but the kids just showing up still have the same stars in their
- eyes. They keep looking down at the front of their shirts. Any
- day in a major league uniform is great." When No. 60 crosses
- into view, Reese whispers, "You know, he has as good a stuff as
- anybody in camp."
- </p>
- <p> Jim Abbott was born with just a rudimentary finger on his
- right hand 21 years ago to teenage parents. His father packed
- meat and sold cars. His mother educated herself, first to teach,
- then to go to law school. They raised a remarkable boy by never
- treating him too remarkably. "I had a hook," he says. "I hated
- it. They let me discard it." They let him dream of anything.
- "Growing up, I always pictured myself as a baseball player, but
- I can't remember how many hands I had in my dreams. I never
- thought to myself, `Wow, I only have one hand. Can I eat with
- a certain fork?' I just did things."
- </p>
- <p> Like playing quarterback for his high school football team
- in Flint, Mich., pitching for the University of Michigan,
- earning the 1987 Sullivan Award as America's best amateur
- athlete, winning the gold-medal baseball game in the Seoul
- Olympics and being drafted No. 1 by the Angels. Though he is
- expected to open the season in the AA or AAA minors, for now
- Abbott's shirt says ANGELS. "Just looking around at everything
- here," he says, "it hits you. A big-league camp."
- </p>
- <p> The first hitter he faced in batting practice was Lance
- Parrish, a former Detroit catcher he had been partial to in
- Flint. ("I definitely didn't want to bean him.") The ball came
- flying back with a wonderful new timbre. "He was the first guy
- I ever faced with a wooden bat," says Abbott, too young to see
- the sadness in how far a player has to come these days to escape
- aluminum. After hitting against the rookie, Parrish moved behind
- the plate: "He probably has as strong an arm as any lefthander
- I've ever caught. His motion is so fluid, the ball just kind of
- explodes."
- </p>
- <p> Abbott's way of juggling his glove amounts to legerdemain.
- He throws the ball and puts it on, catches the ball and takes
- it off. "The transfers aren't that difficult," he insists.
- "There's no dramatic story that goes with it. Just a matter of
- learning to do things a little differently. I never told myself,
- `I want to be the next Pete Gray (a one-armed outfielder who
- played the 1945 season with the St. Louis Browns).' I said, `I
- want to be the next Nolan Ryan.'"
- </p>
- <p> For a roommate this spring, Abbott drew Rick Turner, the
- bullpen catcher, who partnered Angels outfielder Devon White
- through the Pioneer League but never made it past A ball
- himself. "As a kid, I used to hang out at the stadium," Turner
- says. "Now I'm a fan who gets to put on a uniform. It's not that
- I have visions of a comeback. I guess I dream of being a coach."
- Into the night, he and Abbott explore the minor leagues and the
- various levels of dreaming.
- </p>
- <p> So far, Abbott has pitched five innings, allowing three
- hits and one run, striking out six (including A's terror Jose
- Canseco). One double-play ball got bollixed in his mitt, but he
- is under way. "You do wonder," he says, "if you're going to be
- the guy who was billed to make it, who never did, or if you're
- going to look back someday and say, `This is where it all
- began.' But I've always dreamed, `What if this happens,' and it
- always has. I've been lucky."
- </p>
- <p> Incidentally, Pete Gray lasted just the solitary year
- because he hit but .218 one-handed. As a pitcher, Abbott is
- excused from batting chores by the American League's
- designated-hitter rule, though it may be the other pitchers who
- should celebrate. At Michigan he came to bat a total of three
- times. After grounding out to third, he singled in the infield
- and then cracked a clean hit to right. Two for three. That's
- .667 lifetime.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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