877
by J.R.
An Out Well Worth Waiting 7 Years For
By ANDREW KEH
Published: October 2, 2012
MIAMI — It ended rather predictably, the sixth-inning meeting between R. A Dickey, one of the baseball’s best pitchers this year, and Adam Greenberg, the player on a feel-good, one-day contract making his first major league appearance in seven years.
Dickey fired three of his signature high and fast knuckleballs — his secret weapon during his Cy Young bid for the Mets — and Greenberg, after taking the field to thunderous applause, looked at the first one and then swung and missed the next two, bringing his plotline to an abrupt, unceremonious end.
But the applause for Greenberg was just as loud as he walked to the Miami Marlins’ dugout; all things considered, he may be the happier of the two.
Dickey allowed three runs in six innings of a 4-3 Mets’ loss in 11 innings, failing to add a final bit of luster to his Cy Young candidacy. His final numbers are impressive — a 20-6 record, 2.73 earned run average, and 230 strikeouts over 2332/3 innings — but his fate rests in the hands of the voters.
Greenberg, meanwhile, fulfilled his dream of getting a second major league plate appearance, and first at-bat.
Earlier in the day, he was careening through a whirlwind of news conferences, television interviews, introductions and reunions, handshakes and smiles, and, not to mention, the rigorous preparations for a game. But when he came upon a jersey with his name and number on it, he took a moment to reflect, to think, “That’s me,” and to consider just what that meant.
“Seeing my name and my number, that’s a dream come true,” he said of seeing a jersey with his name and number on it. “Every little thing: Putting on this hat the first time. This shirt. The little things. Nice socks. New shoes.”
He added: “And then to see the jersey. That was the whole goal, to get that jersey.”
Greenberg, 31, garnered national attention this year because of an online campaign by Matt Liston, a filmmaker. Greenberg’s first plate appearance came with the Chicago Cubs on July 9, 2005. He was hit in the back of the head by the only pitch he saw, a 92-mile-per-hour fastball. The incident derailed his career and left him with intense headaches, vision trouble and vertigo for two years. He played 674 games through 2011, all in the minors and most for the independent Bridgeport Bluefish in Connecticut.
Last month, the Marlins granted Greenberg his wish, agreeing to sign him to a one-day contract.
Greenberg addressed the perception that his one day with the team was a sideshow or for publicity, and that it undermined the hard work of other players who fight for the same chance to play.
“I didn’t start this campaign; I didn’t ask for it,” Greenberg said, adding, “They wouldn’t have made this decision if I couldn’t run the bases or couldn’t swing the bat at a level that warrants being at the big league field, and I earned that seven years ago.”
Also in attendance was Fred Van Dusen, the first and only other player before Tuesday to have a hit-by-pitch in his only plate appearance in 1955, and to never play the field.
Greenberg said he hoped Tuesday would not be an end, but a starting point. Such an outcome may prove unlikely. But for a day, he was accepted as part of the Marlins. He chose to keep individual messages from his temporaryteammates personal. But he said, “Seeing their facial expressions, that says it all, and they’re smiling.”
And acceptance as a teammate meant being subjected to its rules and rituals, including rookie hazing.
“I’ve got to go sing and dance in front of them like a real rookie, dress up a little bit,” Greenberg said. “That, to be honest, is what I’m more nervous about. I’ve lost more sleep over that than the at-bat.”