The awards banquet was once again a great event. It gave most of the players a chance to look spiffy before the trip home on Saturday. I chose a satiny blue dress shirt which went went with the Mets tie which I matched it up with. I actually brought four different Mets ties and let the choice on which two to wear during the week become a "game-time" decision. Those four ties represent roughly 4.5% of my total tie collection. I will let those of you who really want to know how many ties I own do a little math problem as the answer embarrasses me just a bit.
Doug Flynn brought the crowd to attention and then told us that dinner would be served first, followed by the award presentations. The catering this year was changed to a different company and I must say that the food was exceptional. If they can figure out a way to have a pizza maker from Queens come down for the week and supply him with an oven, that would be "the joint".
When the time came for the awards to be handed out the order went as it has in prior years. The teams were introduced one at a time in ascending order, starting with the 10th place finishers. After a couple of teams, their coaches and their chosen team mvps had been announced, the individual awards were handed out. Trophies for most hits, best defensive player, best batting average, best catcher, best pitcher and best positive attitude were given out. At the halfway point the newest inductees into the MFC Hall of Fame were introduced to the crowd. The six new inductees are all deserved of their inductions.
My team, Phil's Bombers, coached by Phil Regan and Lance Johnson, finished fifth with a 3-3 record. After dropping our three games on Tuesday we turned the tables and ran the table on Friday. One win in the two one-run losses on Tuesday and we probably get a chance to win it all. But alas, it wasn't meant to be. Our team mvp was Rob Thomson, who was the mvp on my team in my rookie year of 2013.
It was great to hang with the people who made the week so special. But, as usual, it happened far too quickly. Eric Hillman said that Monday was like spring training. Tuesday was Opening Day. Wednesday and Thursday was the All-Star break and Friday was the playoffs and World Series. A lot of heads nodded in agreement when he said those words. One camper spoke about how great it was to be surrounded by so many "good people". He was absolutely correct. The people in that room were all high-quality and it was a pleasure to be around them. Someone else said that in your rookie year camp is about the fantasy. In your second year it's about the baseball. And in your third year it's about the friendships that you make going forward.
As the evening came to a close the good-byes began between the players. It was obvious that no one wanted to leave and think about the normal day-to-day stuff which life throws at us 24/7/365. But ya can't outrun it. If you can, then contact me. Immediately. Seriously.
Barry Lyons, a former catcher for the Mets, may have summed it up best. Mets Fantasy Camp is about brotherhood, friendship and a love of the New York Mets. He's exactly right. We all have a mutual love-the Mets. So many of us come from different backgrounds. Different parts of the country. Our belief systems differ. Our stances on politics differ. The triumphs and tragedies that we have each experienced differ. But all of those things go away when we talk about "the Orange and Blue".
One very cool moment during the week took place when my teammate Wendy Shotsky came to bat. This in itself is cool. But this at bat saw the catcher as a former teammate of mine Lynn Spuler and the umpire behind the plate was Perry Barber. I'm gonna go out on a (very short) limb and say that this had not occurred at MFC in the past. I don't even know how many others noticed this moment in time, but I was standing at the end of the dugout closest to home plate and saw it first-hand. Luckily someone got a photo of it from almost my exact vantage point.
In what had to be my favorite at bat of the week, it was my first at bat of the game. Just before I made my way to the batter's box my teammate Izzy Kushner asked my wife if he could borrow her cell phone. He stepped over to the first base dugout as he would record my at bat from there. I was wearing a pair of sunglasses with a video camera inside of it. Luckily for me the at bat ended with me doubling to the right field alley. So I actually have video of this at bat from two different vantage points.
Sometime during the summer many of us will get together at Citi Field to display our skills, or lack thereof, upon the hallowed ground of our favorite team. The months in between then and now will disappear in the blink of an eye and it will feel like the morning after the awards dinner. When that date comes out we will immediately start finding out who's gonna be there and the fun will commence once again.
I played in the Fantasy League Championship Series in Tampa last April. I was on one of two teams who represented the Mets. We played against teams representing the Phillies, Red Sox, Pirates, Twins and two teams representing the host Yankees. I spent some time visiting with some of the Twins players. It was nice to see people from my neck of the woods, so to speak. They told me that they would love to have me join them in Ft. Myers in January 2016 for Twins Fantasy Camp. I was gracious and took the business card of the guy whom I could contact should I decide to make that happen. But even with my 13-year career working for the Twin City Nine, my allegiance will always go back to the team that my now late aunt Beatrice taught me how to love this team unconditionally over four decades ago.
And that kinda brings the circle of this year's fantasy camp trip to a close. I started by speaking at her memorial some eight days ago. I wrote her initials, BAE, on the underside of my cap near my left eye on my first day on the field. I wrote my mother's initials, RME, on the underside closest to my right eye. It only seemed right to honor them both.
In my first MFC year of 2013 I noticed a large sign over the doors that lead from the clubhouse to the practice fields that read, THROUGH THESE DOORS PASS THE BEST PLAYERS IN BASEBALL".
If you're a true Mets fan, like myself, you believe that every single day.