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Rounding Third
A Richard Dresser play, which focuses on the tenuous relationship between two Little League coaches
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Rounding Third
A Richard Dresser play, which focuses on the tenuous relationship between two Little League coaches
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*#* NOTICE *** amateur and stock acting rights to this work are controlled exclu by THE DRAMATIC PUBLISHING COMPANY without whose in writing no performance of it may be given. Royalty must presented for PANY, PO. Box 129, Woodstock IL 60098. COPYRIGHT LAW GIVES THE AUTHOR 0} d AGENT THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO MAKE vides authors with a fair return for their cre foreign language, tabloid, recitation, lec- reserved, fore, pbleaon and ean For performance of any songs play’ which are in copyright, the permission of the copyri | must be obtained or other songs and recordings in the public domain Substituted. OMMIV by RICHARD DRESSER Printed in the United States of America x All Rights Reserved . (ROUNDING THIRD) For inquiries concerning all other rights, contact: Joyce Ketay, The Joyce Ketay Agency, 630 Ninth Ave., Suite 706, New York NY 10036 ISBN: 1-58342-227-7 For Rebecea and Sam FoIMPORTANT BILLING AND CREDIT REQUIREMENTS I producers of the play must give credit to the author(s) of the play in blicizing or otherwise exploiting the play and/or a produc- tin. The fame of the authors) mast also appear en separate ne, on ‘which no other name appears, immediately following the title, appear in size of type not less than fifty Blographical information on the authors), i say be used in all programs. fn all programs Produced by special arrangement with = THE DRAMATIC PUBLISHING COMPANY of Woodstock, Illinois One day my son, Sam, came home from Little League prac- and announced that his ches had provided the team with new strategy for the up- coming playofis. When one of the slower kids on the team got on base, he’d receive a signal which meant that upon reaching the next base, he should slide and pretend to be injured. That way, the coaches could take him out of the game and replace him with a faster runner. When Sam said, “Coach, isn't that cheat- germinating in my head, I found myself thrust more into the fray, first as an assistant coach and then as th my son’s team, Philosophically, there was no question about where I stood. Little League should be fun and the kids should be encouraged to progress at their own speed, free of the overwhelming pres- sure that awaits them in practically every aspect of their lives, just around the comer, And yet, when I found myself actually coaching, I discovered that I wanted to win. I really wanted to win. That voice I heard bellowing across the diamond was, sadly, my own. Perhaps to rationalize the extent of these feelings, I concluded that since we 5' should teach them how to compete and how to win. ‘The two mismatched coaches in Rounding Third, the “win at costs” Don and the “can’t we just have fun?” Michael, reflect conflict. In my mind, they never agree and they are both And as they struggle to communicate their opposing phi- what it truly means to succeed. y, when I hear Don’s exhortations to the team—which are delivered directly to the audience—I hear the voices of the many coaches I’ve had, starting with my first year of Little League. And I hear my own voice, more impatiently than I'd like, instruct urging the team on to victory. ‘And when I hear Michael encouraging the team after a tough loss or fervently praying for his own hapless son to catch his first fly ball of the season, I hear the hopefulness and the inno- cence that seems both entirely appropriate and somewhat out of touch, ‘The horror I felt at hearing my son’s description of his coach’s “strategy” provided a powerful trigger to write a play. But writ- ing the play was an act of discovery, reflecting my own conflicts about how we live with some kind of dignity and raise our chil- dren in a culture so ruthlessly obsessed with material success. —RD Photo of Rick and Sam Dresser by Mike Disc ROUNDING THIRD A Play in Two Acts For 2 Men CHARACTERS DON, a man MICHAEL, a man TIME: Next season PLACE: A small town near a big city in the United States of America. The play is performed on a set featuring a ballfield with a bench, a bar, a van and a school gym.‘The Northlight Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, presented the pre- miere production of ROUNDING THIRD on October 15, 2002. ‘The production was directed by BJ Jones and included the fol- lowing artist - GEORGE WENDT -- MATHEW ARKIN PRODUCTION STAFF Set Design. . ‘TODD ROSENTHAL Lighting Design . . Sound Design. « LAURA D. GLENN Production Stage Manager ROUNDING THIRD opened off-Broadway at the John House- man Theater in New York City on October 7, 2003. It was pro- duced by Eric Krebs, Ted Tulchin, Robert G. Bartner and Chase Mishkin in association with M. Kilburg Reedy. The production ‘was directed by John Rando and featured the following artists: Don - ROBERT CLOHESSY Michael wee » MATHEW ARKIN: PRODUCTION STAFF St Design. 00... cece cee es eeeeeeeeeee DEREK MCLANE Lighting De: F. MITCHELL DANA Original Music - - ROBERT REALE Sound Design. .. JILL B.C. DUBOFF Production Stage Manager General Management - EKTM/JONATHAN SHULMAN ‘Casting Consultant . BARRY MOSS Press Representative . . . JEFFREY RICHARDS ASSOCIATES/IRENE GANDY Production Supervision. ......... PETER FEUCHTWANGER/PRE PRODUCTIONS JACK GIANINO ACTI (A BAR. DON is at a small table’ nursing a beer. Mi. CHAEL enters.) DON. Are you Mike? MICHAEL. Michael. Yes. You must be Donald, DON. Don. Never Donald. Don. MICHAEL. Great. Don. Well, hello. (Sits down at the ta- ble.) Vm not late, am 1? DON. No, no way. But let’s not make a habit of it, okay? MICHAEL. I got hung up at work. What a crazy day! I Was trying to leave and something came up and I never thought I'd finish. Then, well, long story short, 1 fin. ished, DON. Nice going. You want something to drink? MICHAEL. No, I'm fine. But thanks so much for asking, DON, You honestly didn’t know who I was when you showed up? MICHAEL. We've never met. Have we? DON. No. But I figured you'd know of me even if you did- n’t know me. MICHAEL. You're pretty well known? DON. Let's just say...yes. People who go out of their houses tend to know who I am. You're not a shut-in, are you, Mike?10 ROUNDING THIRD Act} MICHAEL. Michael. Ob, no. I get out a lot. Every single day. DON. Good for you. DON (cutting him of). That’s just the kind of place it is, And the people get more like that the longer you stay. Sure you don’t want a beer? it’s a disease, some of ay best friends, out of the bar, into the program, back to the wife, who are we to judge? But honestly, Mikey, just between you and me, they sure as hell aren't as much fun. MICHAEL. I just don’t want a beer, Don. DON. You said that. MICHAEL. I mean I don’t have a problem, if that’s what you're thinking. ; DON. I’m not thinking anything. It’s just interesting how you keep bringing it up. MICHAEL. I want to be clear. DON. Got it. But if you do have a problem, it’s not your fault. Because it’s a disease. You wouldn’t blame some- one for having cancer, would you, Mike? MICHAEL. Not me. DON. So I think we should be understanding rather than judgmental. I think that’s important. | ee Act] ROUNDING THIRD rT MICHAEL. I'm pretty sure we're on the same page. DON. Well, enough preliminary chit-chat, let’s get started. MICHAEL. Perfecto! DON. Incidentally, Mike, you and I will be spending a lot of time together. So if I choose to unwind with a beer, there’s no need for an intervention. I don’t have that par- ticular disease. Just so we understand each other. MICHAEL. This is not an issue with me. You do whatever you want to do. DON. Thanks. Nice to get permission from the new guy. Mike, if there’s one key to my own personal success it would be this: I draft well. MICHAEL. Nice going! (Beat,) What exactly does that mean? : DON. Getting new kids on the team. My son, Jimmy, he Watches the other kids play at school and he clues me in. Who the best prospects are, so we can be smart in the draft and not stupid. We're in sweet shape. Eight kids are coming back from last year. Which means we only draft four. MICHAEL. That’s good. A solid core of able-bodied re- tumees, DON. I guess you could put it like that. Jimmy also helped kids to a ims, right? is all about the kids. But the ones you'd like to avoid are the ones who'd rather be in Brigadoon, you know what I'm saying? MICHAEL. Just as long as everyone gets a chance. DON. Mike, you can relax. Your kid got a very good scouting report from my kid.IEEE Ta 12 ROUNDING THIRD Act I MICHAEL. Really? Wow. Don, that means a lot. I’m em- barrassed. DON. Why are you embarrassed? MICHAEL, Look at me. My eyes are misting up. This is very emotional. This is big. I’m sorry. Whew. DON (long look, then to clipboard). Hits to all fields, strong arm, needs work on ground balls. MICHAEL. How much work? DON. Hey, it’s Little League. All the kids have trouble with ground balls. . MICHAEL. Oh, good. Misery loves company. They'll miss the ball and strike out and run to the wrong base— DON. Whoa! Not that. MICHAEL. Not what? DON. No one on my team runs to the wrong base. I'll never yell at the kids for physical errors, but mental er- rors, they'll get an earful. They need to learn the mental side of the game or what are we doing, Mike? MICHAEL. Excuse me? DON. We're jerking off. MICHAEL. Oh. DON. In which case we don’t need to make schedules and practice— MICHAEL. Definitely don’t need to practice! DON. What’s that, Mike? MICHAEL. I'm just saying. ..we don’t need to practice... DON. I’m afraid I don’t understand. We don’t need to practice? MICHAEL. Jerking off. DON (long look, then turns to clipboard). Here’s the other list. Bailey, Douglas French, Arthur Camilli, Frank Nassiter-Wise...don’t you just love the hyphenated kids? Act I ROUNDING THIRD 13 Don? we do not want on our MICHAEL. What exactly is th DON. Bottom line, these are team. MICHAEL. | think we might have a little problem with er- Wise. sure we'd have many problems with Frank if he ended up on the team. Which, may I is your son? MICHAEL. Yes, he is. And I was told he'd be on this team. DON. You're Johnson, Mike Johnson. MICHAEL. Michael Johnson. DON. I thought Dan Johnson was yours. The kid that can hit to all fields. MICHAEL. I'm Johnson. My son is Nassiter-Wise. DON. How come? MICHAEL. How come? Because of my wife’s first mar- riage. DON. Boy oh boy. My mistake. Somebody get this god- damn egg off my face. MICHAEL. Don’t worry about it. DON. I just stepped in it up to my ass, Jesus Christ. Great start, huh? MICHAEL. Really, Don, it’s okay. DON. But I have to say, in my own defense, it’s pretty confusing. How come you didn’t get your own name up there on the marquee aiong with Nassiter and Wise? MICHAEL. J guess at a certain point the child starts to sound like a law firm. DON. Mikey, baby, what can I say? We all love our kids, I didn’t know he was your kid, I’m a big enough man to14 ROUNDING THIRD Act I cay I'm soy. Even though I feel totally blind-sided by this whole Nassiter-Wise b MICHAEL. Don’t beat yourself up, Don. What concem’ ne ig this policy of blackballing kids who, don’t have much experience. DON. Nobody's blackballing anybody. + obligation is to the kids. Every one of which ,,as long as they get there on time, But if I can field a better team, why shouldn’t I do that? Wouldn't you rather win than lose, given the choice? MICHAEL. Well DON. That's ‘ommon sense. So I talk to my son and you know kids, they shoot off their crazy little mo- ‘tor-mouths and act like experts— MICHAEL. What did he say about Frank? DON. Huh? MICHAEL. What did your son say about my son? DON. Said he's good. Good little player. Potential up the butt. MICHABL. Could I please see the clipboard? DON. Pim sorry, Mike. There’s stuff on this clipboard no other man will ever see. MICHAEL. What did he say? DON. You understand you are asking me to break @ sacred covenant with my son? ; ike to know what was said. apparently has areas where he DON. Like hitting, fielding, running, throwing, general un derstanding of the game. Okay? Fact, I don’t judges all the kids need improvement. And rest assured every ki SS Act ROUNDING THIRD 15 ‘on my team will leam and grow and sportsmanshi fan and how much goddamn baseball 7 eae qi ally played? eee MICHAEL. He's played some soccer. DON. Okay. Good. I wouldn’t say the skills are directly transferable...but, hey, silver lining, this makes the draft ‘easier. We're only looking for three kids. MICHAEL. There yougo. = * DON. Mike, full disclosure, I demand a lot from my assistant coach in terms of time and involvement. If this isn’t as reo a commitment,as the one you’d make to your job or your marriage, 1 would you bow out. respecflly sugges RlcH! . Thanks, but I want to make a contribution. penal T'm saying is: take a night to think about it. [AEL. I’ve already thought about it. That’s why I'm here. But I appreciate your concern. DON. You know what I’m saying. Kick it around in your mental mind. Go back and forth. Throw things up in the air and see where they land. Promise me that? MICHAEL. I’m sorry, Don. DON. You’re telling me "t i you won't even rethink MICHAEL. I could tell you I’m going to rethi be lying because I’ve already made my decision. I don’t want to start out by lying to you, Don. DON. ie that can come Jater, Then J have no choice but (0 grit my teeth and welcome you as i eon you as my assistant coach. MICHAEL. Thanks! Can’t wait to roll t up the old - rooneys and get started! DN DON. So. I gotta pick up Chinese, Jimmy’s at the orth~ codontist, wife's at group. You know, sometimes people16 ROUNDING THIRD Acti le you love and honest to God, you could out of them and plant them under the like a baby, you know what I mean? MICHAEL. Right. DON. You do understand what I-mean? MICHAEL. I think so. I mean...in theory. ; DON. Interesting. I can handle the draft solo, first practice is Saturday. MICHAEL. There’s still snow on the ground. DON. We'll be in the school gym. You can tell a lot about a boy by the way he handles ground balls rocketing up at him off the gym floor. . oath MICHAEL. It's really going to be a great season, 7 DON. God ling, and if we got the pitching. Thanks for helping. A good assistant coach is a treasure. 1 know from the last three years, Tony Barone, What a prize. Dedication, commitment, excellent teaching skills, deep knowledge of the game. And very punctual. MICHAEL. Sounds like there’s only one Tony Barone, but Pll do my best, Coach. ; DON. Good to hear. And Mike, please be on time. (MI- CHAEL leaves.) (A SCHOOL GYM. DON blows his whistle. Then he ad- dresses the team [the audience] at the first practice. Nearby, baseball equipment is scattered next to a dufjel bag.) inuis . "t have much DON (continuing). Unfortunately, we don’t i morning. The Pep Club has the gym at ten, so is brief. congratulations! You're the re on my team. I can promise Act I ROUNDING THIRD 17 you'll work hard, learn a lot, and have fun. How do we have fun playing baseball? One w Winning is fun. Losing stinks. I hope that isn’t new in. formation. I don’t have a lot of rules. The main one is this: T am in charge, and what I say goes, without any backtalk or eye-rolling or wise-guy questions. When I blow my whistle? (He blows the whistle) You run to me. If you dawdle, no problem, you just don’t play the next game. Get to the ballpark half an hour before game . enty-nine minutes good enough, Coach?” Sorry. “It’s my parents’ fault I’m late.” Tough. Have Your parents talk to me and I don’t think we'll have any problems, assuming you remain on the squad. If you ask to play a particular position—Coach, can I play short- stop?”—I guarantee you won’t play shortstop for five games. That’s it for rules. I keep them to a minimum and I take them seriously. (Checks out the team.) I'm glad to see most of you are wearing the equipment we on, Whoa, you can make that change later, Phil! (Beat,) Now, we Grop fly balls, miss grounders, baseball. Those are calle at you over physical errors. What led when we forget how many outs there are or throw to the Wrong base? Anyone? Those are mental errors, and yes, my friends, you will hear from me about mental errors. (MICHAEL enters with two take-out cups of coffee.)18 ROUNDING THIRD Act MICHAEL. Hi, Coach Don. Hello, team! Looking sharp! DON. Well, look who's here! Our brand new assistant coach, We'd about given up on you, Mike. MICHAEL. Sorry. I guess I’m just a few minutes late. DON. Eleven, but who’s counting? (To MICHAEL's son.) Just find a seat in the bleachers, Frank. Oops! You okay? MICHAEL. He couldn’t find his glasses. 1 got you a mo- cha latte, Don. Extra foam, didn’t know how you like it. (MICHAEL gives DON the coffee.) DON. Much appreciated, Mike! Since this isn’t the ladies’ sewing club I think I'll save it for later. (DON tosses the coffee into the trash.) MICHAEL. Don’t care for the mocha? Or was it the latte? DON. Cards on the table, Mike, I like plain old American coffee. But thanks anyway. (To the team.) Hey, anybody from last year remember how many times former assis- tant coach Tony was late? That's right. Once. (To MI- CHAEL.) Tony’s a policeman. One day, stopping a bur~ glary, he got himself shot in the groin ared. What a sick- ening, bloody mess, He was ten minutes late to practice that day. So as long as you have a good excuse, you won't hear a peep from me. What’s your excuse, Assis- tant Coach Mike? MICHAEL. It was really unbelievable traffic. DON. Fair enough, can’t be helped. Unless of course you allow enough time to get here. I'm just outlining bullet points of what the kids can expect. (MICHAEL's cell phone rings.) MICHAEL. ‘Uh-oh. I think I have to take this. (MICHAEL turns away and talks quietly on the phone, DON turns to the team.) oT Act I ROUNDING THIRD 19 DON. Assistant Coach Mike is helping us out by demon- strating things we shouldn't ever do. Like be late or take calls. I know some of you kids have your own cell phones—God knows what your parents are thinking —a lot of people should never have kids, they don’t take it seriously, they never say no, and gee, why is everyone on dope and pregnant and living off my tax dollars? My one rule is if I ever see you chatting on the phone, well, some of you from last year remember our little démon- stration which proved that a cell phone doesn’t have much of a chance against a Louisville Slugger. (MI. CHAEL finishes his call,) Everything copacetic, Assis- tant Coach Mike? . MICHAEL, Yes, thanks, My apologies. Had to put out a DON. Was ita real fire? MICHAEL. Never again, Don. (To the team.) I guess I should introduce myself and say a few words. My name is Michael Johnson— DON. You can call him Mike— MICHAEL. Actually, 1 prefer Michael, but...whatever. You know when I was your age, I played in a great number of curling matches — MICHAEL. Yes, I spent part of my chil i ¥y childhood in Canada— DON. Oh, I'm sorry to hear that MICHAEL. That’s where fan information—but = like to make, is— where you push this rock along the ice20 ROUNDING THIRD Act I MICHAEL. For the purposes of right now, yes, Don, the specific rules of curling aren’t important. What I would like to say, briefly— DON. “Briefly” is an excellent choice, Mike. Because the Pep Club is in the lobby tapping its feet and I'd like to whack a few ground balls at my kids— MICHAEL. It’s about competition. These curling matches ‘were the most important thing in my life when I was ten years old, But I honestly don’t remember who won. I re- member playing. So what I want to say to you, with the benefit of hindsight and, well, “wisdom” might be over- stating it, is this: the fn is in the playing, not the win- ning and the losing. That’s what I hope you will take away from this experience and what you will treasure when you get to be my age. And 1 guarantee you this, people, win or lose, you will have one heckuva lot of fun! DON. Thanks, Assistant Coach Mike, although I covered “fun” earlier, before you got here. Probably you were still stuck in that unbelievable traffic. MICHAEL (to the team). One other thing, this whole enter- prise is about you. So please, let us know, for example, what position you’d most enjoy playing— DON. Assistant Coach Mike! Great intro, interesting ideas, which I’d put in the “devil’s advocate” category, and dam it, the Pep Club's at the door! MICHAEL. That’s about it from my end, gang. Let's play ball! DON (to the back of the house). Hey, Pepsters! Can we have ten minutes? 1 know pep is important, but these children are the future, and yes, I know you have a per- mit! (To MICHAEL.) Mike, could you make yourself te Act I ROUNDING THIRD 2 useful and pack up our equipment, which, sadly, we did- n't get to use? (To the team.) Okay, guys, that’s it. Ev- erybody goes home except you and you. Not you, you! (MICHAEL starts packing the equipment—bats, balls, catcher’s equipment, batting helmets—into a duffel bag. He can't get it all in) : MICHARL Are you sure everything fits into this bag, on DON. Well, let’s see, it did last year and the year before and the year before that...but maybe this year is differ- ent. (Watches MICHAEL struggling with the equipment, . Mike, would you be available for a coaches’ meeting? MICHAEL. Sure, When? DON. Right now. MICHAEL. Okay. DON. Mike, you're not a baseball man, are you? MICHAEL. To tell you the truth, I’m a bit of a late- comer— DON. You got that right— MICHAEL. But I’ve started to really enjoy the game. DON. That's excellent. I have just one rule. You need to clear things through me before you go shouting them out willy-nilly to my team. MICHAEL. What do you mean? DON. I mean you can’t be standing there as my assistant coach saying that winning doesn’t matter. You just can’t do that. Because that is bullshit. MICHAEL. But that’s how 1 feel. Look at the big picture, Don. Do you honestly remember who won and lost the games you played as a kid? DON. When I was twelve I hit .456 with eighteen RBIs. We went 11 and 4 and we lost the championship game22 ROUNDING THIRD Act I 10 to 9 when Billy Nathan got picked off third base with two outs in the bottom of the last inning. I still think about that, Mike. I think about it a lot. I was coming up to bat and if Billy hadn’t wandered off the base in some kind of a goddamned dream state, 1 know for 2 fact I could have brought him home and we'd have gone on to win. I have replayed that scenario many times inside my head, I have orchestrated many. possible outcomes, all of them overwhelmingly positive. But I never got the chance because Billy took the bat out of my hands. And when Billy Nathan ran for school board last year, I could not find it in my heart to vote for him, even though I have every reason to believe he is a good and honest man who happened to make a thoughtless mistake when he was eleven years old. So yes, I do remember. MICHAEL. You have a very good memory. DON. A lot of men remember these things, Mike. ’Course it might be different in the world of curling. MICHAEL. I just want to make sure everyone has a good experience this year. Even the kids who wander off third base in a dream state. (DON watches MICHAEL struggle to get the equipment in the bag.) DON. Can I give you just a little advice? MICHAEL. Sure. I’m always looking for pointers. DON. Try putting that catcher’s mask in first. Then maybe everything will fit. Mike, your job isn’t going to keep getting in the way MICHAEL. No. This was a rough week. A lot of things coming at me, all at once. DON. What exactly do you do? MICHAEL. My company has a lot of government con- tracts. And those government fellows keep you dancing Act ROUNDING THIRD 23 pretty good sometimes. But I would have to say I’m out , at least for a while. I’m just a simple Joe who paints people’s houses, so I can’t say I understand what the hell you're talking about. But if you can steal a few minutes from “your company” we should find a little face-time to get you up to speed. MICHAEL. You just say the word. (He gets everything in the bag.) Hey, thanks, Don. It all fits. Wow. I really ap- preciate it. DON. Okay, let’s not get all emotional here, we're not women, MICHAEL (struggles with the bag as DON starts of. Oh, Don? Should I put this in your car? DON. Nah, you can hold onto it. That was the arrangement with Tony and it worked like a charm. Good meeting, Mike. (MICHAEL starts off with the duffel bag. DON stays.) MICHAEL. Don? Aren’t you coming? I thought we could walk to our cars together. DON. I’m gonna work with Jimmy and Eric. MICHAEL. Where? DON. Over here on the sidelines. They can spare a little pep-free zone so a couple of kids can pitch. MICHAEL. Should I stay and help? DON. Oh, no, Mike, practice is over. Your work is done (To Jimmy and Eric.) Full windup, don’t overthrow! Jimmy, save the arm! MICHAEL. Is this special attention or punishment? DON. What does it look like to you, Mike? (Yells to kids.) Jimmy, stop screwing around or you're dead meat! | MICHAEL. It’s hard to say. eCAct I ROUNDING THIRD 24 DON. Coaching your own kid is one of the hardest things a man can do. Too tough, people will talk, too nice, it’s playing favorites. Plus, the kid thinks every nugget of advice is a vicious personal attack. MICHAEL. Why is Eric here? DON. He’s been goofing off so I made him stay. MICHAEL. Sounds like punishment. DON. That’s baseball. MICHAEL. I should tell you, as assistant coach, I think these kids need to have fun. All this pressure and disci- pline is going to squelch their natural enthusiasm. We don’t want that, do we? DON. We certainly don’t, Mike. (Yells.) No curve balls, Eric! Or you'll find yourself in the spring musical! MICHAEL. Let's let them play on their own, Explore their imaginations, be the proud captains of their own little ships— DON. Mike, did you happen to notice Eric’s eye-twitch? MICHAEL. No, I didn’t, DON. His parents just had a nasty split and neither one will leave the house. Advice from thei day's trench warfare with Bric in the middle, looking for cover. . MICHAEL. Oh, boy. That’s rough. DON. His dad comes to all the games and yells about how disappointed he is. Gives everyone a when the eye-twitch is really bad, I make Eric stay after practice and we go out for pizza and he spends the night at our house. (Yells,) Eric! Put your damn shoes back on or you're outta here! I’m not playing! MICHAEL. That’s a nice thing you're doing, Don. Act I ROUNDING THIRD 25 DON. No, it’s my job. I'd like to drag his idiot parents out of the house and kick their asses. I mean, in every mar- riage you're hanging by a thread and half the time you Tegret the day you were born but that’s no reason to quit. I'll see you, Mike. MICHAEL. I'll. be on time, 1 promise! (MICHAEL drags the duffel bag off: His cell phone rings. On phone:) Roger? Hi... (Beat Is there some reason you need it Monday? Of course I can do it, but it will take ‘up the rest of my weekend, and I was planning to play ball— (Beat.) No, | understand completely. You’ Port on your desk, first thing in the morning... (THE BALLFIELD. DON blows the whistle and ad- dresses the team.) DON. You got butterflies? 1 know I do. Opening day is al- ways like that. It’s good to be nervous, it just means you ‘want to do well. The only no-hitter I ever pitched, 1 was twelve years old, opening day, you know what I did be. fore the game? Anyone from last year remember? That’s Tight. Vomited like crazy. Then I wiped off my mouth and went to the mound and pitched the greatest game of my life. Okay, our equipment’s probly caught in traffic, so let’s start with some stretching. (DON starts some stretching exercises.) Rusty, bend all the way over, how are you going to stop a ground ball like that? (Beat,) Then don’t eat pancakes before the game. Philip, push your hat back, I can’t even see your eyes! And tie those shoelaces! (MICHAEL enters with the duffel bag.)% Act MICHAEL. Hey, guys! The big day is finally here! DON. Here’s the man with the bag! Right on the button, if we were starting late! MICHAEL. I'm ten minutes carly! You said the game’s at noon! DON. I guess you missed my one rule. Thirty minutes be- fore game time, Mike. No sweat, my fault, should have re-mentioned it. Put down the bag and join us. You know how to do the Macarena? MICHAEL. No, sorry. DON. Do you live on this planet? Everyone knows the Macarena. It’s easy! MICHAEL. Are you, what, asking me to dance? DON. Last year, Tony and I, whenever the kids were a lit- tle tight, we'd dance the Macarena. It loosened them up, became a ritual. It was a big reason we won the champi- onship. (DON demonstrates the Macarena.) Go on, give ita shot, Mikey. MICHAEL. I’m going to pass on the Macarena. DON, Do it for the kids! Mike, don’t be such a slug. Would it kill you to shake your booty? MICHARL. I just don’t understand the point of shaking my booty at this juncture... (MICHAEL's cell phone rings.) DON. Do you really have to take it, Mike? MICHAEL. I'm afraid I do. Rough week at work. DON (to team). Assistant Coach Mike bas an important job running his own company. But | like to think what we're doing here is important, too! Grab a ball and start loos- ening up! Mike, would you give "em some fungoes? (MICHAEL’s attention is torn between DON and the phone call) MICHAEL. Fungoes? ROUNDING THIRD Act I ROUNDING THIRD 27 DON. Damn! I thought old T< i oN, Daa 1 ho ‘ony might drop by. He's the MICHAEL. If you show me where f e the fi , ere to give them out, mgoes are Pi be Fi i i ON, Fungoes ar fy balls, Mike, Do you think you can MICHAEL. No problem. (Finishes I'm on i DON. You'll probably need a bal ee a ball, too, for the full fungo MICHAEL (grabs a bal). Come on, kid. I's fango time! (MICHAEL goes off with a bat and ball, : DON (io team). Lots of life out there! Assistant Coach Mike will hit you fungoes. Jimmy, you're my open. ing-day pitcher, “= call and grabs a bat) i {found of breaking glass. MICHAEL retuns with the MICHAEL. I need another ball. Did hit? DON. Watched it i ON. Watched it all the way. Right through my -wind- MICHAEL. That was your van? 1’ 1 1? ¥ MICHAEL. That was your vat I'm sry. pay, MICHAEL. No, I caused the damag ity. DON. Drop it, Mike ICHAEL. I don’t want this hang ] s hanging over us all peeeenting me for breaking your ‘windshield— I. resent you, Mike, it won’t i with the windshield. iain. ° “ you see that fungo I my responsibil-28 ROUNDING THIRD Act MICHAEL. Still, I'd feel better. It’s a way of teaching the team about personal responsibility. DON. Mike, I have no problem if you want to stop talking. MICHAEL. Tell me something. Would Tony pay for it? DON. Hey. drag Tony into this. Tony spent three years in the Phillies organization and he'd be in the ma- jors today if he hadn’t blown out his knee. He knew how to hit fungoes. MICHAEL. I’m just going to leave money in your van. If you don’t want it you can give it to a local shelter. DON. Mike! For the love of God, we have a game to play! (DON and MICHAEL address the team.) DON (continuing). Okay, guys, here we go! Tito, you're shortstop, because Kahil asked if he could, so Kail, you're in centerfield. I know youd both rather have it the other way, but that’s my one rule. Go get "em! MICHAEL. Have fun! DON. Which means wi Look at me, Ti (DON demonstrates “ready with hands on knees.) Look ali get your glove down all the way strong throws to second! knots! Jimmy, a lit MICHAEL (yells to the team). Play to the best of your 1 No one can ever ask for more than that! We're all winners if we do our best, on the playing field or at work or at home! DON. Can I stop you, Mike? If you're going to go with that concept, don’t say it like that, Act I ROUNDING THIRD 29 MICHAEL. How should I say it? DON. “Play within yourself” ne “Play within yourself”? It sounds dirty. . It’s not dirty. It means just play your game, don’t to play beyond your abilities. Bae MICHAEL. But don’t we want them to try to exceed what they’ve already done? To strive for excellence? DON. Yes, we do, Mike. : MICHAEL. I see our job as creating ; 1g @ safe and m atmosphere where children can dare to be great ecaise a aren’t afraid to fail. eae A . f aa $ not something I want you yelling from my ace T don’t feel comfortable yelling, “Play within DON. You don’t want them do you? MICHAEL. Good God, no! DON. Just go with a different concept. Mi Mi (fells) Let's go out there! Look alive &" ICHAEL ili ae Gels). Philip! If he hits the ball to you, you DON. Small point, Mike, but in baseball we don’t say ‘hurry.” We say, “go.” MICHAEL. But we want him to go fast, don't we? DON. Or his ass will be planted on the bench. MICHAEL. Doesn’t “go fast” mean “hurry”? pon Technically, yes, Mike. But don’t yell “hurry” be- ‘use it’s just plain wrong and these kid i Pressionable age. Se ee 8 a i MICHAEL (yells). Go! Go! Go! playing within someone else,30 ROUNDING THIRD Act I DON. Nice chatter. But we generally don’t yell that during a timeout. (DON and MICHAEL sit on the bench. The game goes on.) Can I point something out, Mike? MICHAEL. Sure, anything! (Off DON’s nod toward the bleachers.) What are we looking/at? DON. Timmy’s mom. MICHAEL. What about her? DON. She wants me. MICHAEL. She wants you? DON. See what she did when I looked at her? (DON licks his lips.) MICHAEL. She's eating. DON. What rock do you live under, Mike? Wake up! ‘There’s a whole fun house out there of lonely, desperate, troubled moms. That’s a major coaching perk. They see a slick guy like me and even you parading around, they can’t be blamed for letting their minds run wild. MICHAEL. Huh. DON. I know. If I was single it would be nothing but shock and awe. (Yells to team.) Last inning, let’s hold vera! MICHAEL. It’s only the sixth inning. DON. This is Little League, Mike, that’s all we play. MICHAEL. Not nine innings? Boy, everything I know is wrong. (Yells,) Come on, play within yourselves! (Looks at DON) You're looking at your van, aren’t you? DON. No. MICHAEL. Just so you know, you're getting the money whether you want it or not. DON. Stop it, Mike. I mean it. (Yells,) Jimmy! Do not pitch until the dog is off the field! Act I ROUNDING THIRD 31 MICHAEL. You keep looking out there, I know what you're thinking. DON. You don’t have a clue what I’m thinking. MICHAEL. You're looking at your van. DON. No, I am not looking at my van. MICHAEL. You were looking at your van. DON. No I wasn’t. MICHAEL. What were you looking at? DON. I don’t have to tell you what I was looking at. MICHAEL. I know you don’t have to tell me, becaiise I know. DON. You don’t know dick. And don’t look as if you know because you don’t. MICHAEL. It’s pretty hard not to look as if I know be- veause I do know. DON. I was looking for my wife. Okay? MICHAEL. Oh. I guess | didn’t know. DON. I thought she’d show up. Opening day. MICHAEL. Did she say she was coming? DON. Last year, she didn’t have to say. She was just here, every inning of every game. With the best snacks, liome- made health bars, the kids loved "em. Loved the snacks, loved Linda. MICHAEL. That’s her name? Linda? DON. You should be a private detective, the way you fig- ure things out. MICHAEL. Maybe she’s still coming. The game’s not over. And the traffic’s kind of rough today... DON. You're the only one who ever runs into traffic in this town. I don’t know how the hell you find it. (Yells,) Nice catch, Tito! Okay, guys, two more outs and we go home! (DON and MICHAEL watch anxiously. MI- ee32 ROUNDING THIRD © Actl face ROUNDING THIRD 33 CHAEL starts making a clicking sound.) Mike? Would you stop it? MICHAEL. What? (DON makes the clicking sound,) Oh, that. It’s just nerves. Sometimes it’s accompanied by a aan later, Frank. Try to look at Coach. Over here, DON. Don’t do it anymore. | NN. T don’t want to see anything like that again. What- MICHAEL. It’s outside my control. Ever since a childhood [ever the hell i was, it wasn’t baseball, boating accident. - ICHAEL. Point of order, Don. You said you wouldn't DON. No backtalk, Mike. (Yells.) Yes! Just one more out! get on the kids about physical errors... Bases loaded, so you’ve got a play at any base! Ready [bON. That's true, Mike. What we saw here in right field position! Timor! Timor! (They watch a fly ball to right today was a whole salad bar of mental errors, field.) ICHAEL. He missed the ball. That’s a physical error. MICHAEL. Oh, dear God, no. ‘ON. If he had used two hands, as per my instructions, he DON. Easy catch and we win; Frankie! Watch it all the Ff would have caught the ball. Hence, mental error, way into your glove! Two hands! (Beat,) Damn! Well MICHAEL. By that definition, everything is a mental error. go chase it, Frankie! behind y Since the mind instructs the body what to do, tnissing a MICHAEL. His glasses flew off. He can’t see. ground ball could be called a mental error. DON, There itis! Don’t hold the ball, Frankie! Do not hold ON, Could be and will be: for oan the ball in my outfield! Throw the bal ICHAEL. So everything’s mental. MICHAEL. Throw the ball, Frank! No ON. Preity much. I certainly think holding onto the DON. Don’t nun it i in right field and running in what looked like a fig- MICHAEL. Throw it to the boy who’s \we-eight pattem while the tying and winning runs score playing catch— is a huge, fat, stinking, mental error. DON. Hit that cutoff man! (DON explodes as the tragedy WiCHABL, Then why did you make this point about never unfolds.) yelling at "em for physical errors if you don’t think MICHAEL. It’s okay to cry. Go on, let it all out... there’s even any such thing as a physical error? DON. Hey! Heads held high! You're ballplayers! (To MI- Son (to the team). Kids, Assistant Coach Mike is raising CHAEL,) Jesus Christ. What a living nightmare. Some interesting philosophical points which we can sort MICHAEL. Except for that one play, it was a wonderful } out in private, at a mandatory coaches’ meeting. In the meantime, choke back those tears, chin up, go shake DON. Excellent point, Mike. The operation would have hands with the other team. been a total success if the patient had lived. (Addressing the team.) Listen up. My one rule is this: do not ever, ever, ever hold onto the bal in my outfield. Frankie, I’m + talking to you. Look at me, please. Over here, ICHAEL. We'll go to the outfield and find your glasses 1 for it, like34 ROUNDING THIRD Act I MICHAEL. Come on, Frank, let’s see if we can find your glasses before the lawn mower gets them. (MICHAEL leaves. DON gives a final look around for his wife, then leaves,) (THE PARKING LOT BY THE BALLFIELD. Thunder. MICHAEL approaches DON.) MICHAEL. Do you really think we're going to play today? DON. Eighty percent. The rain-outs back up on each other and it’s a bitch by the ass-end of the season. MICHAEL. I see you patched up your van. DON. Just put cardboard over the broken windshield. It ‘was pouring in the front like a son of a bitch. MICHAEL. Look, I would feel better if you'd let me pay for the windshield. I don’t like owing you. DON. You don’ i MICHAEL. I feel . DON. That’s your issue, probably from childhood, some- thing your parents did or didn’t do. MICHAEL. Are you ever going to get your windshield fixed? DON. This isn’t the time, while we're on a winning streak. MICHAEL. You're not fixing your windshield because the team is winning? DON. You're obviously new to the game, Mike. MICHAEL (re: rain). Think it’s going to stop? DON. It’s not bad. I mean it’s wet, but you have to expect that with rain. MICHAEL. How long do we wait? DON. Till the commissioner makes a decision. He should be here soon. He’s in a work-release program, Act I ROUNDING THIRD 35 MICHAEL. The commissioner is a criminal? DON. That’s a harsh word, Mike. He’s a good commis- sioner, and nobody wants the job. Nobody wants to coach, either. You give up your li screamed at by crazy parents, half the kids resent you, it puts a huge strain on your family, and if you do it right you don’t sleep at night. MICHAEL. Then why do you coach? DON. Why does Sinatra sing? Here’s a better question. Why do you try to coach? MICHAEL. | thought it was important to have a special ac- tivity with my son, DON. There are other activities out there, my friend. MICHAEL. Yes, I know. We joined Indian Guides, DON. Sounds like fun, MICHAEL. Does it? DON. Was it? MICHAEL. No. We had to go camping in the rain and call each other by our Indian names. DON. What was your Indian name, Mike? MICHAEL. That DON. Yes MICHAEL. What's important is we decided to leave the tribe and try baseball. DON. Tell me your Indian name. Was it...Chief Itchy Itchy Scrotum? MICHAEL. No, Don. DON. So what was it? MICHAEL. I’m not going to tell you. DON. Well, until you tell me your rea! Indian name I’m going to call you Chief Itchy Itchy Scrotum,36 ROUNDING THIRD Act I MICHAEL. It’s not a real Indian name. It’s just the name we were assigned. DON. By who? MICHAEL. The tribal council. DON. Sounds pretty official to me. So what name did the tribal council give you? Chief— MICHAEL. Don’t call me that. 1 mean it. DON. What are you going to do? Scalp me? MICHAEL. I’m serious. Stop it. DON. If I said it just once in front of the kids they’d never let you forget it. Years from now, you'd be known all over town as Chief Itchy Itchy Scrotum— MICHAEL. Don’t do that. Don’t say it in front of the kids. DON. Then tell me. Chief. MICHAEL. Look, I’ve had enough of that crap in my life, stupid people calling me stupid names. DON. What was that, Mike? jd because I didn’t go to college and I don’t have a big-ass job in the city? MICHAEL. I don’t think that. DON. Yeah, You do think that, It just slipped out and that’s what you think. You think I’m stupid. MICHAEL. I don’t think you're stupid. DON. Then what do you think I am? MICHAEL. I don’t know. DON. Say it. Stupid. Right? MICHAEL. No. You're...above average. DON. Above average? You know who else is “above aver- age”? Everybody in the whole United States. MICHAEL. That’s not possible— DON. Unless they’re really stupid. Act I ROUNDING THIRD MICHAEL. I don’t think you're really stupid. DON. Goddamn right. I bet I can name all the states and state capitals before you. Want to try me? Huh? MICHAEL. | don’t need this right now. DON. I'll even beat you with the provinces, you halfwit in- bred Canadian bastard. You going off to pout in your wigwam? MICHAEL. Hey! We're coaches. We should be, setting an example. I thought if there was name-calling and humili- ation it would be from the kids. DON. Why should they have all the fun? Mike, baby, I’m trying to be friends, most guys would be enjoying the hell out of this. MICHAEL. This is how you make friends? DON. What do you want me to do, take you to the movies and snuggle? Is that how guys get acquainted in Can- ada? MICHAEL. No. DON. You're making me work too hard, Mike. You won't even tell me your Indian name. Which leaves me no choice but to call you Chief Itchy— MICHAEL. Okay! Leaping Wolf. Okay? DON. That's it? You were Leaping Wolf? MICHAEL. Briefly. DON. Why didn’t you want to tell me? That’s a pretty goddamn good name. MICHAEL. You really think so? DON. If anybody ever called me Leaping Wolf I'd put it on my driver’s license and tattoo it across my ass. MICHAEL. That's very sweet. But please don’t call me that.38 ROUNDING THIRD Act I DON. Let’s get in the van, Wolf. My wife made cookies. (They get in DON’s van. DON continuing; getting out cookies.) Watch out for the broken glass. MICHAEL. Do you smell something? DON. Nah. MICHAEL. Like an animal died in your van or something? DON. Oh, that. (DON holds up a foot.) MICHAEL. You aren’t changing your socks, are you, Don? DON. Not till they lose. MICHAEL. So you really are pretty superstitious. DON. No. I just don’t want to jinx the team. MICHAEL. Look, I know I’m a newcomer, but can you explain the possible connection between the activities of nine boys on a playing field and your socks? DON. It’s about faith, Mike. Believing. That’s what the ‘game is all about. Okay? MICHAEL. I’m afraid I have to draw the line if you want me to worship your socks. DON. That's right, take shots at me. I never had to defend myself to Tony. He understood. Once we're on a win- ning streak, he goes five weeks without changing his T-shirt. His girlfriend gets hammered, spills a tub of salsa on it and he can’t wear it the next game. So we get bombed, 8 to 3. Thanks, Tony. MICHAEL. I didn’t know you had solid evidence to back this up. DON. Last year was unbelievable. Tony and I would go out, plot strategy, have three or four pitchers of beer and really think outside the box. For the kids. By the end of the season we'd just sit in the dugout not saying a word. It was beautiful. Act ROUNDING THIRD 39 MICHAEL. If you're making a pitch for not talking, I’m okay with that, DON. Oh, hell no, Mike, you and I don’t know each other well enough to not talk. MICHAEL. You talk to your wife? DON. Of course! Well, not much lately, truth be told. A cold front has moved into the area. Probably from Can- ada, thank you very much, MICHAEL. But the way you look at it, things must be g00d if you're not talking, DON. I don’t know about you, but not talking with a woman is a whole different thing from not talking to a normal person. I can’t believe she hasn’t come to a sin- gle game this year. MICHAEL. Why hasn’t she? DON. She’s just busy all the time. I can’t keep up with where she goes, but you gotta be supportive of every whacked-out notion she dreams up: the group, the job, the volunteer community multiethnic inner-city nonde- nominational blah-de-blah-blah, all of which I respect. But the time gets consumed, and here we are, two guys eating cookies in a van in the rain. I haven’t even met your wife. I don’t even know her name. MICHAEL. Barbara, DON. Unbelievable. MICHAEL. Why is that unbelievable? DON. Six games in and I haven’t even met Babs. See, it’s all different. The parents last year— MICHAEL. I bet they were pretty aniazing. DON. How did you know? MICHAEL, Lucky guess.40 ROUNDING THIRD ActI DON. You know what they would do at the games? The Wave. Now, personally, I hate that crap, but it worked, it got the kids jazzed. And afterwards, me and Tony and Linda would go out and drink beers. I know you don’t drink beer, you have your reasons, not a criticism, I’m just saying we'd have some laughs after the games. Tony was going through a nasty breakup, his girlfriend Trish didn’t necessarily kill his dog but was a possible accessory. She had mental problems, a disease, not her fault, I don’t judge. Maybe one night after the game you and Babs and me could go, not for beer, but what does she like, wine coolers? ; MICHAEL. Is that the commissioner with the thing on his ankle? DON (gets out of the van). It’s stopped raining! Let’s play two! (Calling,) C’mon, team! Out of the cars and onto the fiel MICHAEL. I hit fungoes! Carefully! (THE BALLFIELD. DON is coaching first base.) DON (calls to Frankie, the batter). Start something going, Frank. You're the man! Big hitter! Get ready up there! Look at me! (Demonstrates correct batting stance.) Step into the ball. You're bailing out on every pitch. Like this. Like you're scared. (Demonstrates Frank's awk- ward stance, aimed at getting out of the way of the pitch,) Don’t worry, he’s not going to hit you! (Recoils as if hit,) Ouch! Bad luck! You're okay, Frank, that’s what the helmet is for. How to take one for the team. Now pick yourself up and come on down to first base. (To Frank, now the runner at first base.) Shake it off, Act I ROUNDING THIRD 41 Frankie, a slight ringing sensation in your ears is per- fectly natural. One out, you have to run if it’s on the ground. (Calls to batter.) Wait for your pitch and drive it, Kahil! Elbow up, look at me! (DON demonstrates his batting stance for Kahil,) Now look to me for the signal before you get in the batters’ box! (DON does a compli- cated series of signals, looks at Kahil, does the signals again, more slowly, then calls) Hit away! (To the run- ner.) You're the tying run, Frank, look alive. Wait till the end of the inning if you have to cry. (To the batter.) Guard that plate, Kahil, keep the rally going! Yes! (To runner.) Go, Frank, it’s going to drop, he doesn’t have a chance! Run, Frankie, run! (Beat,) Shoot! Get back, Frank! Now! Back! Don’t get doubled up! He caught it, the lucky little so and so! My fault... (The game ends. DON, defeated, slumps on the bench.) MICHAEL. Don? When you were coaching first, do you think that was a mental or a physical error? Since you weren’t even on the field, it couldn’t have been physical, so it must have been mental, right? DON. Shut up, Mike. I exercised poor judgment. I let the team down, MICHAEL. Come on, our first loss since opening day. And everyone played great. Except for you...and you didn’t even play. DON. What the hell is wrong with you? MICHAEL. I’m trying to be a friend and cheer you up. DON. Well, stop it! What kind of man are you? Losing doesn’t even bother you. MICHAEL. The game is over. Everybody did their best. ‘Now families are congratulating their kids, maybe taking them for ice cream. Two other teams are getting ready toROUNDING THIRD Act I 2 play, full of hope. Win or lose, it’s a pretty nice after- noon in the park. DON. Tell me something, Why are you here? MICHAEL. What? DON. I want to know why you're here. Making fan of me and making fin of the game of baseball. MICHAEL. I'm not making fun of you. I guess I’m just glad to be a part of this. I was the kid who never got picked to play, who ended up always watching. 1 don’t want Frankie to be the kid who never gets picked. That's why I’m here. DON. Well, I hope this is a rich and fulfilling experience for both of you. MICHAEL. You don’t own baseball, Don. So let me and my kid have just a little piece of it for ourselves, okay? (Putting equipment away.) Hey, have you seen the other shin guard? DON. No. MICHAEL. It’s gotta be here someplace. DON. Unless Eric wore it home by accident. Kids will make you crazy with the whacked-out stuff they pull. (DON finds the shin guard.) Here it is. MICHAEL. Ob, good. Thanks DON (holds onto ii). That doesn’t mean you stop looking. MICHAEL. What? DON. I'm the one who found it. And it was your responsi- bility. So you have to keep looking. MICHAEL. How am I supposed to find it? DON. I can guarantee you won't find it if you don’t look. MICHAEL. Where do you want me to look? DON. Just around. I’m sure it'll tum up someplace. (M/- CHAEL goes through the motions of looking.) Any luck? Act I ROUNDING THIRD 43 MICHAEL. Not yet. (DON tosses the shin guard on the : ground. MICHAEL gets it,) Oh. Here it is. 1 found it. DON. Nice going. (Watches MICHAEL put the shin guard in the bag.) Man, I fee! like I’m all alone this year. MICHAEL, What do you mean? DON. Tony would have enjoyed the hell out of that, hav- ing to look for a shin guard I already found. MICHAEL. I enjoyed it. DON. Did you, Mike? MICHAEL. Yes I did. Big-time. DON. Honestly? Because I couldn't tell. MICHAEL. It was more of an inner enjoyment. DON. There you go. You wouldn’t even share your enjoy- ment. So I have to come up with hilarious stuff like making you look for the shin guard and I have to enjoy it enough for the both of us. I do it all. You know who besides me has brought snacks? Answer? Nobody. MICHAEL. I didn’t know you were bringing all the snacks. DON. Well now you do, Snacks are an integral part of the Little League experience. How come you never bring snacks, Mike? 1 can accept I won’t ever hear any bril- liant game strategy from you, but how about a word actoss the pillow to Babs that a little contribution would be much appreciated? Huh? MICHAEL. The name is Barbara. DON. It she doesn’t want to come to a single game, fine. I don’t judge someone else’s lack of support for their own child, But Babs could get down off her high horse and stop at the Food Emporium and buy some worthless crap to show the kids we care— MICHAEL. My wife is dead, Don,44 ROUNDING THIRD Act I DON. What? MICHAEL. Barbara. My wife. She’s dead. So she won’t be bringing any worthless crap for the kids. DON. What are you saying? When did this happen? MICHAEL. A year ago. DON. Babs is dead? I never even got a chance to meet her. MICHAEL. The name is Barbara. I'll bring snacks next game. I didn’t know I was supposed to. DON. Jesus Christ, Mikey. MICHAEL. And while we're on it, don’t call me Mikey. Or Mike. My name is Michael. Is that asking a lot to want to get called by my own name? DON. Why didn’t you ever tell me about your wife? MICHAEL. I didn’t want to talk about it. I just wanted to be the assistant coach. DON. So you let me ramble on like some kind of a five-star asshole, how we should all get together for wine coolers and why doesn’t she bring snacks... MICHAEL. It’s okay. DON. Yeah, sure, it’s okay for you, but what about me? I feel like a jerk. See, Mikey, Mike, Michael, you keep it all bottled up inside, creating a ball of stress that will just build and build and one day explode and kill you, but that’s not my business, I don’t judge. The question is, how am I supposed to know who's sitting next to me on the bench? MICHAEL. I told you, didn’t 1? DON. Sure, it only took seven games. MICHAEL. About the only time I don’t think about her is when I’m here, I’m tired, Don, I needed a break. DON. So where is Frankie’s father? MICHAL. Nepal. Act I ROUNDING THIRD DON. Nepal? The one in... Nepal? MICHAEL. That's the one. He’s been on a pilgrimage for seven years now. DON. I'd like to take a goddamn pilgrimage, Where do 1 sign up for my pilgrimage? MICHAEL. So in answer to your question, I'm Frankie’s father. DON. Good for you. Frankie’s a smart kid. MICHAEL. Why do you say that? DON. He just seems smart. MICHAEL. Why? Because he never understands the drills the first time? Because he still doesn’t know what a cutoff man is? DON. I don’t know, he seems smart. Maybe it’s the glasses and the way he’s always so out of it. I just don’t get why everything’s a big mystery with you. Your dead wife, your kid’s father, your Indian name— MICHAEL. Can I ask you something? How come you never make Frank stay after practice? DON. You said that was punishment. You thought the kids should run off and be captains of their little ships. MICHAEL. | just would like him to be better friends with the other kids on the team. DON. If Frankie ever caught a fly ball or got a hit it would sure help make his bones. MICHAEL. That's why he needs extra practice. I hate to see Bric get all the breaks because of his eye-twitch. DON. Michael, 1 got twelve kids on my team and no one to help me teach the fundamentals. MICHAEL. Then why don’t you ask Tony to come back and coach?46 ROUNDING THIRD Act I DON. I would, but his kid’s in Babe Ruth League and ‘Tony’s coaching. He makes fun of the guys who stick around coaching after their kids move on, the Get-a-Lifers. So now I never see him. My goddamn best friend. Everyone’s so busy and you never see the people you care about and your time gets sucked up by people who don’t matter. (Watching MICHAEL struggle with the equipment,) Could I make a’small, supportive sug- gestion relating to the equipment? MICHAEL (turning on him). V've got it, Don. So why don’t you give me a break and leave? DON. What's your problem? MICHAEL. You. You're my problem. DON. I didn’t do anything. What did I do? MICHAEL. Maybe it’s nothing you did. Maybe it’s just who you are. DON. You think it’s easy being me? I'd like to see you try it, you wouldn’t get through the first ten minutes of my day. My wife would scramble you up and eat you for breakfast with a side of sausage if you were me. I know and it’s all I can do to hold the line. So how word is even in your vocabulary. MICHAEL. Fine. And how about you stop torturing me. I thought this was supposed to be fun. DON. Where did you hear that? This isn’t supposed to be fun. MICHAEL. Then why are we here? DON. Jesus Christ! Look, Michael, in world you hand out Pop: they're great and nobody that’s a helluva world but it isn’t the real world. In the Act I “ROUNDING THIRD 47 real world everything’s hard. Jobs are hard, money's hard, being alone’s hard, being with someone else is im- possible. Ever notice who the happy people are? Win- ners, Everyone else is thirty seconds away from blowing their goddamn brains out. You want to give these kids something? Make "em winners. Give "em a shot at a life that doesn’t break their heart. That’s the hardest thing you'll ever do, which you'd know if you made a real commitment. MICHAEL. I made a commitment! DON. Did you, Michael? MICHAEL. Yes, I did! (MICHAEL’s cell phone rings. They stare at each other as it rings.) I actually have to take this. DON. Some kind of commitment, big-shot. (MICHAEL answers the phone as LIGHTS FADE TO BLACK.) END OF ACT IACT IL (THE BALLFIELD. MICHAEL addresses the team.) MICHAEL. 1 guess we'd better get started. Since Coach Don isn’t here, I guess I’m in charge. Just for today, Jet's try something different. All of you play the position you want to play, how does that sound? (Beat,) Hey! 1 be shortstop! Give me a min- ute, I'll figure something out here. Maybe we'll rotate, so everyone gets a chance... (DON enters.) MICHAEL (continuing). Look who's here! We'd about i fou, Coach Don! DON. My one ral about tardiness—everyone can be late once. oh ” :’s Jimmy? aerate ping give mor of yu a cance 0 pitch, Rusty, I can’t help but think if you hamess all your many pounds to a fastball, you'd be an object of terror on the mound. MICHAEL. Jimmy didn’t hurt his arm, did he? DON. Nah, Jimmy's arm is perfect. Unfortunately, Jimmy’s head is a different story. 48 Act II ROUNDING THIRD MICHAEL. Is he all right? DON (to the team). Some of you heard the rumors at school. Sadly, it’s true. Jimmy’s gone and got himself a part in Brigadoon. MICHAEL. Thank God he’s okay. DON. Jimmy apparently feels his talents are best used in service to the American musical theater. He wanted me to read this. (Gets out paper, I've decided to leave the team. the fans, who've always been gr organization. At this point in my life, I’m looking for- ward to a new challenge, and the chance to spend more time with my family.” (Beat,) There’s a proud traditi baseball of rising above tragedy. I hope you kids w: just that and win another championship. Now grab a and start warming up! (DON sits on the bench, depressed.) MICHAEL. I had no idea Jimmy was a song and dance man. DON. You think you know your own kid and then... whack! You get hit in the face with a two-by-four, MICHAEL. You know, Frankie went through this stage of wearing his mother’s shoes and scarfs and belting out ‘old Motown songs in front of the mirror: “Stop! In the name of love!” DON. Is this supposed to make me feel better? MICHAEL. The point is this: When Barbara and I finally accepted that this little whirling diva was, Frankie, he an- nounced he was going out for soccer and that was it for the Supremes. DON. Interesting personal aneédote, Michael. Much appre- ciated. Jimmy hasn’t sunk to the dress stage yet, but this sure as hell is a wake-up call. Here I am, trying to brace
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