magazine he was reading.
grateful tears. "Did you hear that? Almost
hyooooman
the subject of his back passed off, although that limp came and went all
I was pretty busy in myself. The cheerleader and I had broken it off, but I
could usually find someone to step out with on Saturday nights if I wasn't too
tired from the constant football practice.
Coach Puffer wasn't a wretch like Will Darnell, but he was no rose; like half
the smalltown high school coaches in America, he had patterned his coaching
techniques on those of the late Vince Lombardi, whose chief scripture was
that winning wasn't everything, it was the
only
thing. You'd be surprised how
many people who should know better believe that half-baked horseshit.
A summer of working for Carson Brothers had left me in rugged shape and I
think I could have cruised through the season—if it had been a winning
season. But by the time Arnie and I had the ugly confrontation near the
smoking area behind the shop with Buddy Repperton—and I think that was
during the third week of classes—it was pretty clear we weren't going to
have a Winning season. That made Coach Puffer extremely hard to live with,
because in his ten years at LHS, he had
never
had a losing season. That was
the year Coach Puffer had to learn a bitter humility. It was a hard lesson for
him and it wasn't so easy for us, either.
Our first game, away against the Luneburg Tigers, was September 9th. Now,
Luneburg is just that—a burg. It's a little piss-ant rural high school at the
extreme west end of our district, and over my years at Libertyville, the usual
battle cry after Luneburg's bumbling defense had allowed yet another
touchdown
was
TELL-US-HOW-IT-FEELSTO-HAVE-COWSHIT-ON-
YOUR-HEELS!
Followed by a big, sarcastic cheer:
RAAAAYYYYYY,
LUUUUNEBURG!
It had been over twenty years since Luneburg beat a Libertyville team, but
that year they rose up and smote us righteously. I was playing left end, and by
halftime I was morally sure that I was going to have cleat-mark scars all over
my back for the rest of my life. By then the score was 17-3. It ended up 30-
10. The Luneburg fans were delirious; they tore down the goalposts as if it
had been the Regional Championship game and carried their players off the
field on their shoulders.
Our fans, who had come up in buses specially laid on, sat huddled on the
visitors' bleachers in the blaring early September heat, looking blank. In the
dressing room, Coach Puffer, looking stunned and pallid, suggested we get
down on our knees and pray for guidance in the weeks to come. I knew then
that the hurting had not ended but was just beginning.
We got down on our knees, aching, bruised and battered, wanting nothing but
to get into the shower and start washing that loser smell off ourselves, and
listened as Coach Puffer explained the situation to God in a ten-minute
peroration that ended with a promise that we would do our part if He would
do His.
The next week, we practiced three hours a day (instead of the customary
ninety minutes to two hours) under the broiling sun. I tumbled into bed nights
and dreamed of his bellowing voice:
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: