The wiry Neidhardt is
wearing a visor over bedhead hair, with his trademark #420 jersey
untucked
nearly to his knees. He does not appear to be a man who got much
sleep the night before. Furthermore, he is probably drunk. Quite
possibly high. If he doesn't look much like a baseball player—or
even a beer league softballer—that's because he's not.
Instead, he and his dynastic Boulevard
squad—in the midst of a tight first round battle—are angling for
their third consecutive championship in something far more serious.
It's a sport that has recently hooked more than 600 local folks of
all (and I do mean all) shapes
and sizes. This is P.E. for grownups: a bouncy red ball and an
intake of cheap beer that can charitably be described as a touch
inappropriate for a Sunday afternoon.
This is kickball.
—
Like a
lot of folks, my athletic peak came when I was too young to drive.
Between fourth and eighth grade, I could play anything and hold my
own against anybody. I was one of the better point guards in the
YMCA, I led my little league team in batting average, and I was a
fleet receiver in backyard games of touch football. Though my
competitive drive at the time probably bordered on anti-social
(throwing Gatorade coolers onto the field, lambasting referees with
all the curse words in my prepubescent vocabulary), the main thing I
remember is just how much fun playing sports on a
near-daily basis was.
It was one of my favorite things about school. We'd get there
early and play in the morning, play during P.E., scarf our
sandwiches at lunch and play in the leftover minutes, get out of
class and play as a reward for good behavior. I was in an
afterschool program, and we'd play all through that too. Not just
the major sports, but also all those fantastic kids' games—four
square, dodgeball, battleball, kickball, wiffleball, crab soccer,
pickleball. (Did anyone else play pickleball? The etymology is
baffling, but it was sort of like tennis, with a low net, wooden
paddles, and a plastic ball. You weren't supposed to “slam,” but we
did anyway, of course. Awesome game.) I recognize that grade school
P.E. was a miserable experience for some people, and that nebulously
graded athletic competition can be unfair, silly, or downright
mean-spirited. But for me, battling for playground
supremacy—throwing our bodies around, the result of every point
weighted with all the joy and all the pride we had—was as easy and
natural and free of spirit as anything I've ever done.
Later, disheartening factors would emerge. As it turns out,
most people, including me, can't really hit a curveball. Some of us,
including me, will never crack six feet tall.Our once-flawless
metabolism will slow to near a halt. And so forth.
What's more, without the aid of the massive social engineering
experiment that is school, most of us quit getting together in big
groups to play games. We certainly quit playing games involving
bouncy red rubber balls.
Unless, one day, we decide otherwise. “Kickball is one of those
things we're weaned from as we get older,” says Larry Betz, the
self-proclaimed Grand Poobah of All Things Kickball and the founder
of the Little Rock Kickball Association. “Growing up in rural north
Arkansas, we'd play in the springtime and it was something I felt
comfortable and confidant playing. Baseball bored the crap out of me
and the ball moved too damn fast, but anyone could play kickball.
Then, we're forcibly pulled from the game when we reach a certain
age. I never really understood why.”
—
Betz
first came up with the idea to start a local kickball league a
couple of years ago. A bartender at the time, he worked all night on
New Year's Eve with two buddies, Eric Davis and Brock Mays. When the
night finally wound down in the maiden hours of 2002, the guys went
back to Betz's house to crash. They had some beers and started
talking about how much they missed playing the games of their youth.
With an alcohol-induced hardihood, they hatched a plan: they would
start a league of their own. Mays was gung-ho about wiffleball; Betz
thought they should go with kickball.
It might have been just another drunken chimera if not for a
pair of tragedies that cemented the night in Betz's mind. In August
of that year, Davis died in a car accident. A month later, Mays took
his own life. When New Year's Eve rolled around, it was a tough time
for Betz. Both of the men he had shared the holiday with a year
before were gone. A year passed.
“On New Year's Day of 2004, I started to reflect back on the time
since I'd lost my buddies,” he explains. “I kept re-living that old
talk we'd had about kickball and wiffleball.” To honor the memory of
his friends, Betz resolved to start a kickball league. “I started to
talk to people at the bar about it,” he says, “but of course no one
believed that I would really do it.”
Betz admits that organization is not his forte, so the doubts
of his friends were not entirely without merit. Still, he pressed on
with his plan, and serendipity was on his side: “I was very lucky.
Whenever I needed advice on something, I'd randomly run into someone
who could help at a bar. It just seemed like it was destined to
happen. I don't know how, but everything just fell into place in an
orderly fashion.”
It didn't hurt that Betz (who now teaches literature and
composition at several local colleges) is a man possessed of both an
infectious optimism and a zen-like calm. He's a huge dude—a good
spot over 300 pounds—who often sports a thick, black goatee. He
could look like a bouncer, but his naturally affable demeanor
quickly belies anything that might be considered menacing. To the
folks in the kickball league, he is something between wise patriarch
and the loveable bad uncle. Or, simply: “The Poo,” the persona he
created for himself as the Grand Poobah of All Things Kickball. “I
did that jokingly,” he explains. “I used to get home at three in the
morning and send e-mails real drunk, saying I was the Grand Poobah.
It was accidental, but I created this tongue and cheek character
that made me seem more accessible. And it's funny—I was no more an
authority than anyone. I hadn't played since sixth grade either.”
Betz came home from bartending one night and jotted down some
rules, basically lifting the rules from T-ball, with a few twists.
He was unaware at the time that leagues were sprouting up all over
the country, many of them affiliated with the World Adult Kickball
Association, a seven-year-old organization that has been at the
center of the adult kickball craze and fancies itself the sport's
“authority and governing body.” In all, WAKA has TK leagues/team.
The Little Rock Kickball Association uses a smaller ball and plays
with slightly different rules than their WAKA brethren.
Betz is glad that he bypassed the organization. “We're
independent of other leagues, and I'm happy that we did it
ourselves,” he says. “It allowed us to develop in a vacuum of
ignorance and we've avoided a lot of issues that other leagues have
gotten into.” The biggest difference is cost: WAKA charges $65 per
person, whereas Betz charges $200 for an entire team to play (the
money goes to reserving fields, trophies, and maintaining the
website). “They're a large franchise and they're set for profit.
There's no way I'm going to ask for that much money when I can do
the same thing for less money. It's hard to say you're playing an
outsider rogue sport when you're incorporated.” When WAKA officials
discovered the LRKA, says Betz, “they sent me a really threatening
e-mail, almost implying I was doing copyright infringement. I said,
‘you can't copyright kickball!'” That was the last he heard from
WAKA.
Once he had created his rules, it was just a matter of
spreading the word, which was no problem for the gregarious Betz,
then still a bartender, with all of his connections to Little Rock
nightlife. In short order, it became clear that he had struck upon
an idea that people had been craving: “It just got bigger and
bigger. It all spread from word of mouth. It started with people
that worked in bars and restaurants, and then spread to lawyers and
professionals.” A few of the radio stations picked up on the story
and made fun of the fledgling idea: as they saw it, a league for a
bunch of fat drunks to play a child's sport. But the taunting was
another bit of fortuity for Betz—the publicity only brought more
folks into the fold. He was hoping for six to eight teams for the
first season, but ended up with sixteen.
Betz used student loan money to pay for reserving fields and
other costs, so he wouldn't have to charge the inaugural players a
dime. Betz himself hadn't played in a couple of decades when he
organized an open practice that March for his ragtag group of
kickball wannabes. About thirty or forty players from various teams
showed up. “We only lasted about 40 minutes,” Betz recounts. “I'm
pretty sure that each and every one of us pulled a quad. That first
season, there weren't too many athletes. We had night owls and fat
guys. That was the very first lesson we learned: if you're going to
play kickball, you'd better stretch.”


By last
spring, when I first signed up to play, the LRKA had grown well
beyond what Betz could have imagined, with 36 teams competing in the
league's third season (next fall, more than 40 teams are expected to
register). I joined an upstart squad, the V's, made up of a few of
my friends, but mostly older high schoolers. Playing alongside
eighteen-year-olds who just got back from a soccer tournament is a
healthy reminder of just how quickly my own body has gone about
losing basic functions, such as recovery time or range of motion.
Betz is right about stretching. If you haven't kicked a rolling
object as hard as you can in a while, muscles that you simply
haven't used in a good long while don't work like you remember.
Warming up before my first game, I took a few practice kicks.
The first one that I really reared back and kicked hard nearly
killed me. I felt my thigh tense up, and there was sharp, fleeting
pain all over the place: groin, butt, lower back. The ball,
meanwhile, went about 50 feet—25 up and 25 down. I decided I'd stick
to bunting when I could, and win or lose, I began to think of each
Sunday as a smashing success if I escaped without pulling my groin.
It's enough to make you think twice about that waiver you
signed to play in the league in the first place. The risks of
kickball, according to the LRKA “include, but are not limited
to: injury to internal or external organs; loss of or damage to
sight, hearing, or teeth; pain; and scarring or disfigurement.”
Okay, the risk of disfigurement is low, but folks do play hard, and
as embarrassing as it is to go to a doctor for a kickball incident
and end up on crutches, it does happen. A good friend of mine tore
his ACL on a slide, a severe injury to a ligament in the knee that
I've mostly heard of in the context of professional running backs.
The league has also become seriously competitive. While there
are still plenty of teams that seem more intent on getting drunk
than winning games, part of the experience now is watching grown men
and women yell at umpires, teammates, opponents, and themselves.
There hasn't been a physical fight yet, though it's gotten close on
a couple of occasions. “We had a couple of girls roll in the mud one
time, but we've never actually had physical violence,” says Betz,
who himself seems to be of two minds about the ways that the LRKA
has changed. “I liked the laid back Sundays when we were just
hanging out. But I also enjoy watching a good game. It's human
nature that people get competitive. I like the fact that it's
all-inconclusive. Whatever your age or ability, there's a niche for
you.”
One niche that most folks in the league share: beer. “We're a
social organization first,” notes Betz, “with the thin veneer of a
competitive sports league.” Not everyone drinks (half of my
team wasn't even legal), but for most, it just wouldn't be kickball
if you weren't a little snookered. A haggard approach is standard,
whether a baserunner is rounding third at a dead sprint with a
cigarette still hanging in the mouth, or a shortstop takes the
position with a beer still in hand. Even the umpires are typically
taking sips between pitches.
Part of this is a simple matter of hair-of-the-dog, since it's
not easy to play anything with a Sunday morning hangover. Kickball
in the throes of dehydration, headaches, and general weariness is
pretty miserable, not to mention that such a state causes noticeable
problems in areas vital to performance, such as body control or
depth perception. At that point, one is best advised to start
drinking again.
Whatever happened the night before, drinking together on a
Sunday is a vital part of the kickball experience. Even as the
league has grown more athletic and competitive, the coaching more
impetuous, and everything more, well, serious, the LRKA
thrives because of that loose and silly spirit of boozy camaraderie.
It thrives because of instead of staying home to sleep in or watch
television, we get out on Sunday and get together. To get hammered,
yes, but also to run around outside and hang out and talk shit and
play together, like we used to.
—
My team,
as luck would have it, was one of the better squads (the relative
youth of my teammates was a huge plus, as they were usually more in
shape and more sober than anyone else out there by a long shot). Our
competition ran the gamut. The league is a bizarre cross section of
the community. There are bartenders, stockbrokers, lawyers,
politicos, writers, waiters, artists, students, teachers, and the
perpetually unemployed. Ages range from 18 to 60. There are players
who weigh barely one hundred pounds and a few probably pushing four
hundred. There was an all-women team, No Boys Allowed (a rule states
that each team must play at least three women in the field, but no
such minimum exists for guys), and an all-black team, the Super
Friends. “I would never have predicted the universality of
kickball,” says Betz. “But if you think about it, we've all probably
played it as a kid, so it makes sense. No matter how different the
walks of life we may come from are, when you meet a grownup that
likes to play kickball, that's not something surface-level, like
sharing a profession. That's a real, strong tangible connection.”
The Super Friends are the league's most entertaining team. They
take the field with style: Donning superhero capes, they were fond
of entering games to thumping hip-hop blasted over bass-heavy
speakers that they brought out to the park. Each has a
super-identity such as Spiderman or Mr. Incredible. The team is
composed of eight brothers and sisters aged 18-28, along with
various cousins and folks related by marriage. “We've been playing
together all of our lives,” says team captain Kamal Rahmaan, A.K.A.
TK, “so everyone knows what everyone else is going to do on the
field.” Keeping it in the family also means a healthy dose of
sibling feuding. While some in the league have accused them of poor
sportsmanship, almost all of their trash talking and rancor is
directed at each other. This can occasionally cause
problems. I once saw a Friends outfielder become so frustrated at
his teammate at first base that he abandoned the actual play on the
field and pegged his own first baseman.
The Friends' goal this year was the same as every other squad:
to finally beat Boulevard. Heading into the playoffs last spring,
the Bread Sox had never lost in the three-year history of the
league, a streak of more than 30 games. They don't overwhelm with
their talent, but they always seem to find a way to win. A scrappy
group, they have an incredible knack for taking advantage of other
teams' mistakes, which is the perfect approach in a league where
newcomers, drunks, and non-athletes make miscues by the dozens.
Boulevard also has brash self-assurance to spare, with the tone
set by their cocky, trash-talking pitcher, Jason Neidhardt, the
kickballer that everyone loves to hate. On the popular LRKA internet
message board, Neidhardt takes the humble moniker “Defending
Champs,” and last spring, he enjoyed needling opposing teams with
suggestions that only a few squads could even compete with
Boulevard, while the rest of the teams should be designated “lower
level.” “A lot of what he said was rude,” admits teammate Kara Bibb.
“But it was all in good fun. It was a little disheartening that
everyone always booed us this season. But that was our cheer this
year: Boo is for Boooolevard.”
On the other end of the spectrum were several loveably
incompetent crews, such as the Freeps and the Uncivil Libertines,
both of which managed to lose every single regular season game. Josh
Doering has captained the Freeps since the LRKA was formed. “I first
joined up mostly to have an excuse to drink and smoke on the Lord's
day,” he explains. The first edition of the Freeps was raucous and
pretty bad, but last fall's squad managed to win about half their
games. With a taste of success came a more competitive approach
which wasn't as entertaining as far as Doering was concerned, so he
got an entirely new batch of folks for the spring season. “My goal
was to lose every single game this year and we accomplished that,”
he explains. “We're 30, 40, 50 years old, and we're running around
out there playing kickball. It's just more fun to revel in the
absurdity of it.”


On DATE
at PARK, I took my spot at catcher with the V's up 2-1 in the bottom
of the seventh and final inning of our second round game of the LRKA
playoffs. We were matched up against Los Barrachos, the top seeded
team in our conference, and the game had been a grueling defensive
battle. I myself had reached base a couple of times (once on a dive
at first—a bad strategic maneuver, as any baseball coach will tell
you that it's faster to run through the bag, but diving is much more
thrilling) but failed to score.
Los Barrachos were masters of the bunting strategy, getting
their fleet players on base before the big kickers would try to boot
them home. In the bottom of the seventh, they were executing the
bunt perfectly, and with the help of a series of errors on our part
and a few bad calls (okay, sometimes I'm the idiot arguing over
kickball), they managed to tie the score. With one out and the bases
loaded, the Barrachos' kicker came to the plate with a simple
mission: If he could get a flyball deep enough, the runner on third
could tag up and score.
He let a few errant rolls from our pitcher, TK, go by before he
saw a pitch he liked and thumped the ball in a tall arc to center.
As our fielder made the catch, the runner tagged and headed for the
plate. No matter your arm strength, the physics of the bouncy ball
make the deep toss difficult, and despite a valiant effort, the
throw came late, on one hop, to TK. She desperately tried to swat it
at the runner, who was nearly home, but it sailed harmlessly into
the fence behind the plate. Their runner was safe, and the game—and
our season—was over.
Despite the nostalgic comforts of the old “good game, good
game…” handshake line ritual, it was a heartbreaking loss. Still, we
had fallen to a worthy opponent, and a teammate had just the right
consoling words: “At least now, we can just focus on getting drunk.”
And so we did.
Like the overwhelming majority of the crowd, we took an
Anyone-But-Boulevard approach to cheering. The Bread Sox had
survived a tough battle against the Black Diamonds in the first
round the previous week, taking advantage of a bevy of errors in the
field to mount a 6-run rally in the bottom half of the final inning
to take the win. They also employed the clever strategy of aiming
for a particularly hungover/still-drunk Black Diamonds outfielder,
who, I was informed by his teammates, had passed out the night
before at Willy D's Piano Bar, woken up the next morning still at
the bar, and gone straight to the game.
It was a major scare for the defending champions, but when I
asked Neidhardt if he had ever been worried, he was, as usual,
unbowed: “Never!” he told me. “We always wait until our backs are
against the wall, but then we always come through. That's
why we're Boulevard.”
In fact, that would be the last time in the playoffs that their
backs were really against the wall. They cruised by The No-Homers
Club in the second round and then outlasted the Super Friends in the
semifinals. It was a typical match for both teams: the Bread Sox
were hyper-aggressive on the basepaths and the Friends were
overeager to drill baserunners with the ball, leading to errors,
which in turn led to the Friends' assorted brothers and sisters
nearly ripping each other apart. Which, finally, allowed Boulevard
to prevail.
Los Borrachos fell in an upset to Kickball Kamp in the other
semifinal. Alas, the Kamp proved no match for Boulevard, who
dominated the final for their third consecutive championship.
Even if the V's fell short and the bad guys won in the end, I
was happy (and plastered) when it was all over. The spring season
had been the first organized kickball I'd played since I was a boy,
and I couldn't wait to do it some more.
“The biggest difference between now and when we were kids is
the fact that most of us can see beyond the immediate game, see the
uniqueness of it,” says Betz. “As a kid, you don't realize how lucky
you are. Now you realize Sunday is something you can look forward
to. The ball is malleable; it fits to whatever you want it to be.
All of us have that common denominator: we play kickball.”