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tops and said,

  “Go!”

  It was his first high school play.

  When the offense spied the gangly spider-boy

  sprawled on the line in his gawky D stance

  they chose to crush him right off

  and called the play where the big back runs

  behind the big guard

  and together lay waste to resistance.

  When the two broke their huddle

  they wore tight, knowing smirks

  But as it happened, the slim sophomore,

  who’d sat on the bench through the season so far,

  found a way to shoot himself past

  those oak tree limbs

  and explode clean into the back who was caught by surprise.

  The boy felled him as if shot from a gun

  with a THWACK some said they heard in the pressbox.

  When the offense tried it again the very next play

  to erase the fluke

  and got the same result

  they stopped running that way at all.

  Full of Grace

  The team progresses

  a few yards at a time

  against the clock

  towards the title.

  The huddle forms and breaks;

  words become action,

  with no room for mistakes;

  the ball is pushed forward another short burst.

  We hit fourth down four times

  on this eighty yard drive,

  making each one by inches.

  Inches unrelated to any play-calling.

  At Hail Mary Full of Grace, I turn.

  Some of the bench are praying out loud.

  Others join in until the whole sideline is praying

  right through the score to the winning point after.

  Did God hear that? Would He listen?

  Why not, if there’s True Faith and it’s all on the line?

  Field’s Edge

  There is a something

  at field’s edge

  darkly standing

  in patient wait.

  Something sensed,

  not seen nor discussed,

  without a name;

  unless it’s “Fate”.

  Not the fate of the game

  or any statistic,

  not if a ball

  was a catch or a drop.

  Something different than that.

  Fate more essential.

  That player not moving.

  Will he get up?

  Wet Conditions

  Night’s curtain backdrops

  grave-cold rain blasting sideways,

  shorted scoreboard blinks then blanks;

  chased by bent-tree howl

  teams clash ‘cross floating yard-lines.

  Hands have turned to arctic claws

  and bloodless feet refuse awareness,

  sucking mud slows all pursuit,

  both huddles chimney upwards steaming clouds,

  --execution hurricaned.

  As wailing wind fills helmet earholes,

  all cadence is borne away;

  unpredictability dictates play,

  --raw contact now the only goal--

  in game turned elemental.

  Cry of the Zebra

  Listen.

  I wasn’t expecting this at all.

  I thought I’d just go out and make my calls

  like I always do at the Freshman games,

  but here tonight nothing’s the same—

  this varsity action is so surprisingly quick

  that I can’t even seem to be able to pick

  out individual numbers, I swear.

  Was that holding? I think I think so

  but my whistle’s all thumbs, my flag’s too slow.

  Then when I do call offsides, before I know it,

  I’ve got a coach in my face like a cop on a donut;

  the crowd’s mad as hell, the sideline is yelling

  --I’m ready to get back to my day-job selling

  quality home furnishings,

  believe me.

  A Throw

  His arm had its own life.

  Although his body contorted with the shock of the hit

  the arm still flashed the ball forward in a tight spiral.

  It threaded the seam between two reacting defenders.

  Z,

  on a simple comeback

  slid with the scramble.

  His hands shaped a round frame in front of his numbers.

  “Fourth down,” said the ref.

  Afire

  That September night

  at the end of a parched summer

  fire broke out a mile away

  in the foothills behind the stadium.

  Flames blazed up in a jagged red gash

  like a crazy stock-market chart:

  up here, down there, then up again

  across rapidly blackening bush.

  The game in progress never slowed

  as fire truck sirens and referee whistles

  all screamed the same pitch.

  Soft drifting ashes flitted past goalposts.

  The night wind billowed smoke up

  like a strange sacrifice pillar.

  One team, distracted, began to falter,

  as the other fought fixedly on.

  The Glimpse

  To the freshman on the sidelines

  the sight of his team’s offense,

  the rightness of its timing,

  players' hands extended to each other

  at the end of every play,

  the break of the huddle and the sprint to the line,

  the—everything---of it

  brought to his eyes confusing tears,

  and he wiped at his face and lowered his head.

  What’s the matter, you okay?

  asked the coach spotting him there.

  Yeah, it’s just...

  but the boy’s words ran out.

  He ended his try with a vague wave towards the game.

  The coach looked for a moment.

  Yes it is, he said.

  Lord’s Prayer

  Our Father who art in heaven

  help us in this game

  to do our best

  to not take a rest

  as a sub or as one of the starting eleven.

  Give us each play a cool clear head

  and forgive us our penalties

  as we forgive those cheapshot artists against us.

  And lead us not into intimidation

  but deliver us from all ego,

  Amen.

  On the Night of a Win

  Fathers with friends mingled happily in

  greeting their players, their sons,

  calling great game way to go you did it!

  punctured by laughter of youth sensing power.

  The coach circulated with a smile,

  enjoying the scene

  and the brief respite from pressure,

  saying the good word to all who had played.

  That was everybody, right?

  After all, it was a four TD blowout.

  In the corner of his eye one boy sat,

  a senior reserve,

  jersey still on, away from the others,

  head down on folded arms,

  his silent, suffering father with an arm there

  across the boy’s shoulders.

  The coach inside deep felt a cold ragged twist.

  Coach at Rest

  After the game he’d go home alone

  and sit in the recliner that squeaked when it moved

  and try to watch TV but instead replay the action

  of his team on the field in his head win or lose.

  The losses were hard and sometimes on those nights

  he’d quiet himself with a red wine or two;

  on the nights of the wins he’d not sleep at all

  but drive out at dawn to where trucks loaded th
e news.

  Reflection on a Ten and One Year

  Defeat isn’t ever easy to take

  especially for young men who think of it as failure.

  But failure would be not trying

  and trying totally was what this season was about.

  Trying totally is what everything is always about.

  It’s hard to do, a test of human will.

  But in sharing the attempt with others

  a bond is made that outlasts the effort.

  When players pay a common price,

  and do it from the heart;

  when they live ideals,

  when “pride”, “intensity”,” team”

  become part of everyday together

  a brotherhood forms that can’t easily break.

  It stretches as people each go their separate way

  but in stretching also binds more firmly.

  This is failure’s opposite,

  and the score of any game counts little.

  The score was never the only object.

  The other object, the larger one,

  was to turn from self to others,

  discovering that in sharing

  lies the strength to exceed self-limits.

  Life is full of mysteries that we’ll never know.

  Grasp what can be known.

  like the power of every honest moment,

  and the greatness of strivers

  who learn to be “One.”

  Explication

  Tell me again that what matters mostly

  is how much a player can bench

  when anybody can see that the kid who made the tackle

  isn’t big enough or strong enough by far,

  but he dragged his man down anyway when he had to.

  Or that it’s all in the x’s and o’s,

  when eleven beat-up defenders band together

  for four plays at the three and stop cold in its track

  the unstoppable drive of an unbeaten team

  ---with one foot to spare.

  Tell me it only boils to down to drills and technique,

  when the ball flaps from the scrambling QB’s hand

  like a live chicken thrown from a moving car,

  and the tight end lunges behind

  to make the impossible catch

  then reverses momentum to fall ahead for first down.

  Show me it’s all in those weekend coaches’ meetings

  where tendencies are combed out of scouting reports

  and smart new sets and plays are conjured up for the week,

  and then it all gets junked by the start of third quarter

  because only the dive play is working.

  But it works for six yards a crack

  on the strength of team play and the flat refusal to lose.

  Don’t tell me again

  that high school football is only a game,

  or that you or me or any of us

  will ever truly know it.

  Off-Season

  The freeway

  ran close to the high school,

  its rivers of cars a perpetual roar

  past the coach off-ramping to work.

  Sometimes home pushing the mower

  he’d wonder why he’d kept coaching so long

  while the ones he’d begun with

  had by now gone collegiate or become real-estate men.

  Was it commitment or stagnation,

  his true calling or just ego?

  There was never an answer

  when his thoughts ran this way.

  The question would hang

  at the back of his mind

  until forgotten again

  at the start of each fall.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  James Carlo coached successfully at the high school level for over forty seasons before retiring in 2013. His coaching career covered all high school levels, including varsity head coach at two different schools. He has sense stayed active in he sport, coaching in Europe for a season and volunteering his time with local youth teams. He is a contributing author of Youth Sport and Spirituality, University of Notre Dame Press, 2015.

 
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