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1965. The baseball summer of all baseball summers.
That year, our Babe Ruth team, the "Suburban Pavers," was good and all the better because of Coach Petrie and Coach McKay.
In the team photo, Coach Petrie is in the back row, smiling his cocky all-American smile, hands tucked inside his back pockets. To us kids (he was just 27 at the time) he was the quintessential baseball guy: sleeves pushed above the elbows, a navy pullover windbreaker collar turned upward, always shouldering a bat and always chewing his wad of Spearmint. He was all baseball.
So was Coach McKay. He couldn't walk. He slouched in his wheelchair. His arms and legs spasmed. It was hard to decipher his speech. At our first practice that year, when Coach Petrie drove up to the first base line and carried Coach McKay from the front seat to his wheelchair, I froze. The unexpected juxtaposition of the baseball diamond (my safe haven, my home away from home) with a man leaning crookedly in a wheelchair unnerved me.
To me, Coach McKay had invaded my heaven-on-earth. I suppose that's because back then we rarely saw and for sure never spoke with anyone with a disability. At my school, "special ed" kids were tucked away in a room at the end of the hall next to the locker rooms; they ate their lunches separated from us.
Coach Petrie gathered us and said, "Fellas, meet Coach McKay. Listen to him. He knows more about baseball than anyone I know."