Griffey's Return Worth Every Second of Waiting - Page 2

And yet, a twinkle of hope never went out. The lone event that lightened Griffey’s burden was an interleague return to Seattle in 2007. When he pledged to retire as a Mariner, I fancied the idea that a one-year contract was in the future — a consolation prize, little more than gestural symbolism, but better than nothing. After all, my life was not a Hallmark movie, nor a child’s book complete with the happiest of endings. What more could I hope for?

I knew some things are beyond the reaches of fate. But two weeks ago, something broke that mold.

Griffey, a free agent for the first time in his life, signed with the Mariners.

The birth of my first child will have a tough time replicating the joy that overcame me when I heard the news. I don’t know if I’ll ever fully understand it. I don’t know how something this unreal, this otherworldly, this patently unfathomable, could have come about.

I know I’m sentimental. Sport evokes these swings in emotion that would make Shakespeare pale in awe. It’s become a schtick for me to bemoan, to aggrandize and to inject more passion into the sporting world than necessary. In the end, these are men who throw leathery orbs around a field of grass. Their movements are inconsequential, and there’s no reason for the idolization that comes about with each passing generation.

Or so you say. See, that inconsequence means nothing to me. Your arguments fall on deaf ears, for I am too busy rewatching Griffey’s 1995 run on my iTunes, reliving the instant when I became a sports fan.

Now here I am, attending school in Houston, a young adult looking back through the images of my childhood. But if you try to find me on April 14, I’ll be at the Mariners’ home opener, looking down from the stands at the image of my childhood.

During the telecast of that fateful Game 5, announcer Brent Musberger said, “Ken Griffey Jr. is fulfilling his destiny.” Musberger may have been 14 years early, but he was right — Griffey’s destiny has come true. And my childhood, unlike so much else that goes awry in the world, has become complete.

And sometimes, that’s life.

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Article Author: Casey Michel

Casey Michel is a student at Rice University who, despite a Pacific Northwest rearing, somehow found himself in Houston. He bleeds Blazers black and Mariners blue, and likes to think his teams are always just ONE player away.

Visit Casey Michel's author pageCasey Michel's Blog

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Article comments

  • 1 - Douglas Mays

    Mar 11, 2009 at 9:43 pm

    Yah mon!!!! Griffey is home! It was a smart choice for him to come back to the Mariners at the tail end of his career. It is better than fading out non-descript on some other team who picked him up for the hell of it. Class move in stylee.

    Plus, his presence and experience I hope will be the unifying bond that the Mariners need. They lost a zillion games last year. Good players, but the sum of the parts did not equal a whole.

    Overall, I would say to keep an eye on the Mariners this year.

    best,
    DM

  • 2 - REMF(MCH)

    Mar 11, 2009 at 10:11 pm

    DM -
    Your take on baseball is much better than that of Democratic primaries.

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