1984 to 2004
I joined the world of fantasy baseball
in 1984. My team, Margie's Marriage Counselling, named for my wife's business,
included 25 American League baseball players selected from various teams
filling all the normal positions. I was the general manager and the fantasy was
competing against others by comparing stats, making trades, dropping under-performing players and discovering phenoms.
An early high point of fun was when Terry Vollum, an owner with media
connections, was on the cerebral CBC Morning radio show with Joe Cote waxing on
about fantasy baseball. Joe was especially taken with the inventiveness in the
team names. Margie’s Marriage Counselling was singled out for its prescient
prediction that owners’ marriages would be challenged as we became addicted to
our fantasy.
I was good at enjoying the game but not much of a competitor. All my
natural faults; impulsiveness, over-optimism and greed, led to finishes
near the bottom. One year I finished last. Margie tried to buy me the vanity
licence plate, Loser, but it was taken. I lost out on that front as well.
It turned around for one eventful season; 1989. I took in a partner, my
childhood friend Dennis. I needed Dennis because I was scheduled to be in
Israel for the season opening draft when teams were assembled.
Dennis and I did all our homework together before the draft. I
contributed tiny touches of wisdom gained in the previous five years. He added
a mature analytical sense. He was a teacher. But in order to win in fantasy
baseball you need to be a rebel. You can't get frozen into the status
quo. Dennis was qualified. In his
college days he was a political Weatherman. He had
been arrested in Chicago at the 1968 riot filled Democratic convention.
After the Fantasy League draft Dennis faxed the names of the
players he chose to me at my hotel in Jerusalem. I cut the faxed page
into tiny pieces with each player's name on one slip. I then took the slips to
the Western or Wailing Wall, which is the holiest site in the world for Jews.
The Wall is one of those special gathering places that are not visible
until you are in them. In the case of the Wall I entered the plaza it dominates
from a tiny city street in the old city of Jerusalem. You turn a corner and
suddenly it is upon you. Huge. White. Busy. Religious. Coveted. Armed to the
teeth. Similarly when I visited the Taj Mahal in 1971 I entered thru a small
green guardhouse. I turned a corner and suddenly there’s the Taj Mahal elevated
to the sky on the horizon of a huge reflecting pool. Same thing at the immense,
chaotic, exotic, ancient Jemaa el-Fnaa market which appears suddenly as
you walk to the end of any number of side streets in downtown Marrakech.
At the Wailing Wall my job was to give each of our players the best
chance for a successful season. I squeezed each slip of paper with the name of
one Counsellor on it into his own crack in the wall. And in my best cover of
Dionne Warwick I said a little prayer for each man.
Jews and others had been slipping their wishes into the wall for
generations. Even Pope John Paul II tried his luck in March 2000.
As the season progressed our team was performing well. In the stats for
the week ending May 14 we were in 1st place. We were leading in both total
hitting and total pitching. A rare achievement. Dennis had drafted well. God
had done his bit.
A highlight of the season happened August 2nd. The Counselors were in
first place. Almost every player was having a good season. I was enjoying
another sumptuous expense account lunch on the patio of the Bellaire Cafe in
Yorkville on the beautiful summer day. As lunch was ending I looked up and saw
two Kansas City Royals, George Brett, always an all-star, and Dan Quisenberry,
then the best closer in baseball, sitting a few tables over. I went to them.
They were friendly when I told them that they were on my fantasy team. George
Brett was in a slump at that time. Memorably, he apologized to me for dragging
the Counsellors down.
The Counsellors went on to win the season in 1989 but it was bitter
sweet.
The low ebb of the season came in June. Dennis died suddenly of a heart
attack while at work. He was 41. Margie and I had the gut wrenching job of
picking up Jaron and Jessamyn at school; telling them their dad had died and
taking them to the hospital. A hard day.
Dennis and I had bonded twenty nine years earlier in grade six. My dad
had died two years earlier at age 47 of heart disease. Dennis’s dad had died
months earlier at age 36 from a heart attack.
I was deeply saddened when Dennis passed with feelings of dread
for his wife Nell as I remembered how my mother suffered when my father died.
I also got the message that my own days were numbered given my family
history. That’s proved to be a very large number. Doctors now tell me my heart
barely beats I’ve taken such good care of it.
The Counsellors didn't win again under my care but that turned around
when my son, Stephen, took over the team in the around 2004.
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