<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER II. </h3>
<h3> BASEBALL PRACTICE. </h3>
<p>With the close of the afternoon session, many of the boys, palpitantly
eager to get out onto the field, went racing and shouting, down through
the yard and across the gymnasium, where their baseball suits were
kept. Eliot followed more sedately, yet with quickened step, for he
was not less eager than his more exuberant teammates. Berlin Barker,
slender, cold, and sometimes disposed to be haughty and overbearing,
joined him on his way.</p>
<p>"We'll soon be at it again," said Barker. "The season opens Saturday,
and I have a feeling it's going to be a hot one. It wouldn't surprise
me if we had to play a stiff game in order to take a fall out of
Barville. You know, they developed a strong pitcher in that man
Sanger, the last of the season. Why, he actually held Wyndham down to
three hits in that last game, and Barville would have won only for the
blow-up in the eighth inning."</p>
<p>Roger nodded. "Lee Sanger certainly did good work for Barville after
he hit his pace; but Springer ought to be in good shape for the
opening, not having been compelled to pitch his wing stiff, the way he
did last year."</p>
<p>"Confidentially, Roger," said Berlin, "I've never regarded Springer as
anything great. I wouldn't say this to any one else, for we are good
friends; but I fancy you know his weak points. He's not a stayer; he
never was, and he never will be. With the game coming his way, he's
pretty good—especially so, as long as he can keep the bases clean; but
one or two hits at a critical moment puts him up in the air, and he's
liable to lose his head. Only for the way you steady him down behind
the pan, he'd never show up half as well as he does."</p>
<p>Now, this was a truth which no one knew better than Eliot himself,
although he had never whispered it to a living soul. Springer owed his
success mainly to the heady work, good back-stopping, clever coaching
and steadying influence of Eliot, who did nearly all the thinking for
Phil while the latter was on the slab. This, however, is often the
case with many pitchers who are more than passably successful; to the
outsider, to the watcher from the stand or the bleachers, the pitcher
frequently seems to be the man who is pitting his brains and skill
against the brains and skill of the opposing batters and delivering the
goods, when the actual fact remains that it is the man at the
"receiving end" who is doing nine-tenths of the thinking, and without
whose discernment, sagacity, skill and directing ability, the twirler
would make a pitiful show of himself. There are pitchers who recognize
this fact and have the generosity to acknowledge it; but in most cases,
especially with youngsters, no matter how much he may owe to the
catcher, the slab-man takes all the credit, and fancies he deserves it.</p>
<p>"Oh, Springer's all right," declared Roger loyally; "but, of course, he
needs some one to do part of the work, so that he won't use himself up,
and I have hopes that he'll succeed in coaching Grant into a good
second string man. He's enthusiastic, you know; says Grant is coming."</p>
<p>"Queer how chummy those fellows have become," laughed Barker shortly.
"I don't know whether Rod Grant can make a pitcher of himself or not,
but I was thinking that Hooker might pan out fairly well if only Phil
would take the same interest and pains with him as he's taking with
Rod."</p>
<p>"Perhaps so," said the captain of the nine; "but I have my doubts. Roy
is too egotistical to listen to advice and coaching, and he entertains
the mistaken idea that curves and speed are all a pitcher needs. He
hasn't any control."</p>
<p>"But he might acquire it."</p>
<p>"He might, if he only had the patience to try for it and work hard, but
you know he's no worker."</p>
<p>They had reached the gymnasium, and the discussion was dropped as they
entered and joined the boys in the dressing room, who were hurriedly
getting into their baseball togs. Hooker was there with the others,
for he had a suit of his own, which was one of the best of the
discarded uniforms given up at the opening of the previous season when
the team had purchased new suits. There was a great deal of joshing
and laughter, in which Roy took no part; for he was a fellow who found
little amusement in the usual babble and jests of his schoolmates, and
nothing aroused his resentment quicker than to be made the butt of a
harmless joke. He had once choked Cooper purple in the face in
retaliation for a jest put upon him by the audacious, rattle-brained
little chap; but later Chipper had accepted Roy's apologies and
protestations of regret, practically forgetting the unpleasant
incident, which, however, Roy never did.</p>
<p>"Ah-ha!" cried Sile Crane, bringing forth and flourishing a long,
burnt, battered bat. "Here's Old Buster, the sack cleaner. Haowdy do,
my friend? I'm sartainly glad to shake ye again."</p>
<p>"Up to date," said Cooper, tying his shoes, "I've never seen you do any
great shakes with Old Buster."</p>
<p>"Oh, ain't ye?" snapped Sile resentfully. "Mebbe yeou've forgot that
three-sacker I got with this club in the Clearport game."</p>
<p>"Um-mum," mumbled Chipper. "Now you mention it, I do have a faint
recollection of that marvelous accident. You were trying to dodge the
ball, weren't you, Sile? You just shut your blinkers and ducked, and
Pitkins' inshoot carromed off the bat over into right field and got
lost in the grass. If we all hadn't yelled for you to run, you'd be
standing there now, wondering what had happened."</p>
<p>"Yeou're another," flung back Crane. "I made a clean three-sacker, and
yeou know it."</p>
<p>"Well, anyhow, you got anchored on third and failed to come home when I
bunted on a signal for the squeeze. The Clearporters had barrels of
fun with you over that. I remember Barney Carney asking you if you'd
brought your bed."</p>
<p>"Oh, rats!" rasped Crane, striding toward the open gym door and
carrying his pet bat. "Some parts of your memory ought to be
amputated."</p>
<p>"What a cutting thing to say!" grinned Cooper, rising to follow.</p>
<p>The field, surrounded by a high board fence, was located near the
gymnasium, and in a few minutes all the boys were on it and ready for
business. Announcing that they would begin with a little plain
fielding practice, Eliot assigned them to their positions.</p>
<p>"Do you care to go into right, Roy?" he asked, turning to Hooker as the
last one.</p>
<p>"Not I," was the instant answer. "That's not my position. I'm no
outfielder. Right field, indeed!"</p>
<p>"Oh, very well," said Roger. "Tuttle, go ahead out."</p>
<p>"Sure," said Chub agreeably, waddling promptly away to fill the
position assigned him.</p>
<p>"Springer will bat to the outfield and Grant to the in," directed the
captain. "After we warm up a little, we'll try some regular batting
and base running, using the old system of signals."</p>
<p>Hooker, who had a ball of his own, turned away, and found Fred Sage,
whose sole interest in the line of sports lay in football, and who,
therefore, had taken no part in baseball after making a decided failure
on one occasion when, the team being short, he had allowed himself to
be coaxed into a uniform.</p>
<p>"There's an extra mitt on the bench, Fred," said Roy. "If you'll catch
me, I'll work a few kinks out of my arm."</p>
<p>"Can't you find somebody else?" asked Sage reluctantly. "I came out to
look on."</p>
<p>"Oh, come ahead," urged Hooker. "Get your blood to circulating. Who
would ever think you were the quarter back of the great Oakdale eleven?
Here's the mitt, take it."</p>
<p>"Come over by the fence," requested Fred. "I'll let that do most of
the backstopping."</p>
<p>Over by the fence they went, and Hooker began limbering up, calling the
curves he would use before throwing them. He had them all; but, as
usual, he was wild as a hawk, and Sage would have been forced to do
some tall jumping and reaching had he attempted to catch the ball more
than half the time.</p>
<p>"You've got some great benders, Roy, if you could ever put them over,"
commented Fred.</p>
<p>"I can put them over when I want to," was the retort. "It's only a
chump pitcher who keeps the ball over the pan all the time."</p>
<p>Satisfied after a time, he decided to stop, not a little to the relief
and satisfaction of Sage. Eliot was just announcing that the team
would begin regular batting and base-running practice, and immediately
Roy asked the privilege of pitching.</p>
<p>"All right," agreed Roger, "but remember this is to be batting
practice, and not a work-out for pitchers. Start it off, Springer, and
run out your hit. You'll follow him. Grant. Come in from the field,
Stone and Tuttle. Let some of the youngsters chase the balls out
there. We've got to have four batters working."</p>
<p>Chub and Ben came trotting in as Springer took his place at the plate.
The captain requested two younger boys to back him up and return the
balls he chose to let pass, and then Hooker toed the slab, resolved to
show these fellows what he could do. He put all his speed into the
first ball pitched, a sharp shoot, which caught Springer on the hip, in
spite of Phil's effort to dodge it.</p>
<p>"Say, what are you tut-trying to do?" spluttered the batter, as he
hobbled in a circle around the plate.</p>
<p>"That one slipped," said Hooker. "I got more of a twist on it than I
intended."</p>
<p>Phil picked up the bat, which he had dropped, and resumed his position.
Three times Roy pitched wildly, and then when he finally got the ball
over, Springer met it for a clean single, and trotted to first.</p>
<p>"Now play the game, fellows," called Eliot, from behind the pan.</p>
<p>Hooker's small eyes glittered as Rodney Grant stepped to the plate.
Like a flash he pitched, again using an in-shoot.</p>
<p>Grant stepped back, held his bat loosely and bunted. As bat and ball
met, the Texan's fingers seemed to release the club, and it fell to the
ground almost as soon as the ball. Like a jack-rabbit he was off,
shooting down the line toward first, while Springer, who had known by
the signal just what was coming, romped easily to second.</p>
<p>Hooker had not intended for Grant to bunt that ball, having tried to
send it high and close; and now in his haste to secure the sphere, he
stumbled over it, and ere he could recover and throw, the speedy boy
from the Lone Star State was so near first that Eliot shouted, "Hold
it!"</p>
<p>His face flushed, his under jaw outshot a bit further than usual, Roy
returned to the box, ignoring Chipper Cooper, who was cackling with
apparent great delight.</p>
<p>Tuttle waddled toward the pan, bat in hand.</p>
<p>"I'll strike him out easy enough," thought Roy. Instead of that, he
pitched four wide ones, all of which were declared balls by Sage, who
had been requested to umpire; and Chub jogged to first, complaining
that Hooker had been afraid to let him hit.</p>
<p>Then came Stone, who let a wide one pass, but reached a bit for the
next, caught it about six inches from the end of his bat, and laced it
fairly over the centerfield fence, a feat rarely performed on those
grounds.</p>
<p>"My arm isn't in shape yet," said Hooker, trying to remain deaf to the
laughter of the boys, as the runners trotted over the sacks and came
home. "I won't pitch any more to-day, Eliot."</p>
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