Chapter One
Warming Up
Three decades after he threw his last pitch, Sandy Koufax was back in uniform at
Dodgertown, a rare occurrence given his belief that baseball uniforms do not
flatter those of a certain age. This is where he made his debut in the spring of
1955 and Vero Beach is where he has chosen to make his after-baseball home - an
odd choice for a man said not to like the game and the attention it brings him.
Mornings when he's in town, he works out in the training room. The clubhouse
guys gave him a key. He brings the bagels.
On this particular day in February 1997, he was at Dodgertown for a seminar on
sports medicine. He had been recruited by Frank Jobe, the Dodgers' team
physician, to teach an audience of biomechanical experts how to throw a ball. He
couldn't very well say no: he was on Jobe's operating table at the time. He had
torn his rotator cuff falling down the stairs. The Boys of Summers Past are not
immune to senior moments.
Thinking of Koufax as clumsy is as disconcerting as the sight of the familiar
"32" confined to this minimalist stage: sitting behind a buntingdraped table in
a multipurpose room at what is now known as the Conference Center at Dodgertown.
He looked thinner than in memory, thirty pounds less than his playing weight,
the legacy of an afterlife as a marathoner. The old baggy uniforms always made
him look less imposing than he was. His hair was thinner too, but silver, not
gray. He had the appearance of a man aging as well as one possibly can, somehow
managing to look graceful in uniform while perched beside a droopy fern.
In 1955, Dodgertown was a baseball plantation with diamonds that disappeared
into the orange groves on the horizon. No one could have envisioned then the
industry that baseball would become; the science that throwing would become; or
the pitcher Koufax would become. A pitcher so sublime, people remember always
the first time they saw him - among them fellow lecturers Duke Snider and Dave
Wallace. What Wallace, a baseball man, recalls most is leaving the stadium
convinced: "The ball comes out of his hand different from anybody else's."
His virtuosity was a synthesis of physiognomy and physical imagination. He
didn't just dominate hitters or games. He dominated the ball. He could make it
do things: rise, break, sing. Gene Mauch, the old Phillies skipper, was once
asked if Koufax was the best lefty he ever saw. Mauch replied: "The best righty,
too." As Billy Williams, the Hall of Famer, put it: "There was a different tone
when people talked about Sandy Koufax."
Hank Aaron was his toughest out: "You talk about the Gibsons and the Drysdales
and the Spahns. And as good as those guys were, Koufax was a step ahead of them.
No matter who he pitched against, he could always be a little bit better. If
somebody pitched a one-hitter, he could pitch a no-hitter."
John Roseboro was his favorite receiver: "I think God came down and tapped him
on the shoulder and said, 'Boy, I'm gonna make you a pitcher.' God only made one
of him."
He was an artist who inspired ballplayers to reach beyond their usual idiom for
metaphor and simile. They called him the game's Cary Grant and Fred Astaire and
compared him to the Mona Lisa and the David. "He looked like
Michelangelo," Ernie Banks said. "Pitching, walking, what ever he did was kind
of in rhythm with life, stylish." Sometimes one analogy did not suffice.
As Koufax's teammate, the noted art historian Lou Johnson, said, "He was
Michelangelo and Picasso rolled into one."
Absent the radar guns and computer-generated technology of the late twentieth
century, which turned acts of grace into biomechanical models, he was admired
rather than analyzed. His fastball remains elegantly understated, unmeasurable,
unknowable. His curveball lives on in grainy television footage and in the
memory of the unfortunates who tried to hit it. There are those, romantics and
catchers, content to leave it at that - Roseboro among them: "That SOB was
unusual. There's never been another like him and I don't think there ever will
be. Trying to explain how he throws, how he got his control, how he thinks - he
was just un-fucking-usual. Who gives a shit how he threw it?"
Koufax cared. Long after he retired, he became a roving pitching coach in the
Dodgers' minor league system and a stealth advisor to an ardent cadre of
pitchers, coaches, and managers who quote him like a shaman - Sandy
says! - and then get in line for his autograph just like everyone else. He
didn't want them to do what he said because Sandy Koufax said, "Do it." He
wanted them to understand why it worked.
He had come to see his body as a system for the delivery of stored energy,
intuiting the principles of physics inherent in the pitching motion. This
realization not only put him ahead of batters, it put him ahead of science. It
would take decades for the gurus of biotech medicine to catch up. Later, when he
had the time, he visited their labs and delved into their textbooks seeking
proofs for what he knew empirically to be true. He learned to break down the
pitching motion into its component parts and to put the science of motion into
accessible language. He improvised drills using a bag of balls and a chain-link
fence, giving impromptu clinics in the parking lot of Bobby's Restaurant in Vero
Beach. He held whole pitching staffs in thrall with his knowledge - sitting, as
John Franco of the Mets put it, "bright-eyed at his feet in the middle of the
locker room like little boy scouts."
His face changes when he talks about pitching. His eyes light up, his grammar
comes alive ...
Excerpted from Sandy Koufax
by Jane Leavy
Copyright © 2002 by Jane Leavy
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Copyright © 2002
Jane Leavy
All right reserved.