{"id":16894,"date":"2011-09-21T10:48:03","date_gmt":"2011-09-21T17:48:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/seamheads.com\/?p=16894"},"modified":"2011-09-22T01:29:09","modified_gmt":"2011-09-22T08:29:09","slug":"la-incandescencia-de-aquel-juego-perfecto-de-armando-bastardo-that-armando-bastardos-perfect-game","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/2011\/09\/21\/la-incandescencia-de-aquel-juego-perfecto-de-armando-bastardo-that-armando-bastardos-perfect-game\/","title":{"rendered":"La incandescencia de aquel juego perfecto de Armando Bastardo. (That Armando Bastardo&#8217;s perfect game)."},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Una noche de hace seis a&#241;os convers&#233; alrededor de una hora con un hombre que hab&#237;a llenado de gloria al b&#233;isbol del estado Sucre. &#8220;Est&#225; bien, vamos a hablar, pero me tienes que decir si en el mercado de Cuman&#225; todav&#237;a se consiguen aquellos dulces de casabe, coco, clavo especia y papel&#243;n. Pi&#241;onatos, eso es lo que m&#225;s recuerdo de Cuman&#225;&#8221;. La emoci&#243;n me hizo apreciar una pel&#237;cula paralela al di&#225;logo. Los zapatos deslizaron sobre varias piedras pulidas por el desgaste de los neum&#225;ticos. Felipe me templ&#243; por el hombro de la camisa. Me reclam&#243; que Pap&#225; lo iba a rega&#241;ar si yo llegaba a la casa con los zapatos sucios. El titular de mitad de la p&#225;gina call&#243; el jarabe mandibular de Felipe. &#8220;Armando Bastardo lanza juego perfecto en victoria 5-0 del MOP Zona 10 ante Urbanos&#8221; Mientras esquiv&#225;bamos, postes, carros y personas en la acera y la calle, las im&#225;genes de una discusi&#243;n en el pasillo posterior del jard&#237;n centelleando sobre el peri&#243;dico me hac&#237;a dudar de lo que le hab&#237;a dicho a Felipe. &#8220;Eso que dices de los 27 outs seguidos, sin que nadie se embase, es mentira, eso no lo creo hasta que no lo vea. Si pitchear sin que te anoten y te den hits es bien pel&#250;o &#191;C&#243;mo hace un pitcher para que no se le embase nadie? Ni que los bateadores fueran mochos&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Ahora sonaban con eco de lanzamiento espacial los nombres de Sandy Koufax, Jim Hunter, Jim Bunning, Don Larsen,&#160; y todos los pitchers que recitaba Felipe que hab&#237;an lanzado perfecto en las Grandes Ligas. El hecho de que en la liga profesional venezolana no se hubiera lanzado ninguna de esas joyas aumentaba mi incredulidad del hecho. Sin embargo Felipe volv&#237;a a la carga. &#8220;Si, pero en el b&#233;isbol amateur AA que era tan bueno como el profesional tambi&#233;n hubo un juego perfecto, lo lanz&#243; Gustavo &#8220;Mocho&#8221; Garc&#237;a lanzando para el Locomotora de La Guaira, el 19 de abril de 1952, le gan&#243; 5-0 al Intendencia Naval. Garc&#237;a era de Car&#250;pano, desde ese momento ese juego perfecto fue otra de las armas que esgrim&#237;an los carupaneros en su rivalidad deportiva y general con los cumaneses. Aquel b&#233;isbol amateur era tan bravo que en Cumanacoa existe una leyenda que habla de un equipo local que venci&#243; al propio &#8220;Pat&#243;n&#8221; Carrasquel en un juego de exhibici&#243;n en los a&#241;os cuando jugaba en Grandes Ligas&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Bastardo empez&#243; a rememorar sus tiempos de pelotero en Cuman&#225; con cierta mirada nost&#225;lgica. &#8220;Me tuve que venir a Caracas porque all&#225; era dif&#237;cil conseguir trabajo. Empec&#233; a trabajar en el MOP y me dieron la oportunidad de jugar en el equipo AA.&#8221; Subimos la acera de la calle Las Flores y devoramos las letras del peri&#243;dico. &#8220;El MOP-Zona 10 se fue adelante con jonr&#243;n solitario de Oscar Riva&#160;en el cierre del primer inning&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Felipe levant&#243; el peri&#243;dico mientras pas&#225;bamos sobre el puente de la acequia. Estaba casi seguro de que este Armando Bastardo era el mismo que jugaba con la selecci&#243;n juvenil del estado Sucre cuando ganaron los campeonatos nacionales de 1966,1967 y 1968. El era uno de los baluartes sino el principal de aquel equipo. El propio pitcher de cabecera, el muchacho de la pel&#237;cula. Me qued&#233; mirando a mi hermano con una envidia enorme porque lo que me hab&#237;a tocado ver del equipo de Sucre fue el subcampeonato de aquel torneo nacional de Cuman&#225; cuando perdieron la final 2-1 ante Anzo&#225;tegui. Bastardo dej&#243; marca de 13-3 en aquellos 3 campeonatos juveniles. La actuaci&#243;n que m&#225;s se recuerda es una donde lanz&#243; 17 episodios en blanco antes de que el juego fuera suspendido por lluvia. El juego se reanud&#243; varios d&#237;as despu&#233;s y Sucre se llev&#243; el campeonato.<\/p>\n<p>En la punta de los pies asom&#233; los ojos sobre el peri&#243;dico. &#8220;En el quinto otro vuelacerca de Rivas con dos corredores a bordo alej&#243;&#160; 4-0 al MOP Zona 10 ante el abridor Rub&#233;n Illas&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Aquellos equipos de Sucre que ganaron esos campeonatos juveniles ten&#237;an mucha m&#237;stica, mucho respeto. Hab&#237;a mucha qu&#237;mica con el manager Ram&#243;n Rivas. Siempre sal&#237;a alguien que hac&#237;a la jugada o daba el batazo&#8221;. Bastardo apretaba entre las manos su agenda.<\/p>\n<p>Corr&#237; paralelo al flujo de la acequia que arrastraba hojas de jabillo, envolturas de alimentos, pedazos de madera. Atraves&#233; la tela met&#225;lica del parque y sub&#237; el tobog&#225;n con el impulso que llegu&#233; al polvo segu&#237; hasta las espaldas de Felipe. &#8220;En el octavo tramo Silvio Flores destap&#243; imparable y Rivas se apareci&#243; con su cuarto incogible, un doble remolcador&#8221;. Con cada paso raspaba m&#225;s las puntas de mis zapatos en mi intento de tocar el papel. Quer&#237;a cerciorarme de que aquello no era verdad. Entonces restall&#243; en mis parietales otro comentario de Felipe. &#8220;Entonces si ves el box score del perfecto de Koufax vas a pensar que es un cuento de hadas. Gan&#243; 1-0 y al otro pitcher Bob Hendley, creo que se llama, s&#243;lo le dieron un hit que no tuvo nada que ver con la carrera&#8221;. Le pregunt&#233; por qu&#233; si en la liga profesional juegan tantos peloteros buenos, nunca hab&#237;a ocurrido un juego perfecto. S&#243;lo escuch&#233; un silbido y una risa ahogada.<\/p>\n<p>En la cuadra siguiente atravesamos el pavimento y avanzamos entre las hierbas y la arenilla del solar aleda&#241;o a la escuela &#8220;Jos&#233; Luis Ramos&#8221;. Entre las hondonadas de arena que llevaban a la calle Bol&#237;var alcanc&#233; el peri&#243;dico.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;En el noveno acto Sim&#243;n Delgado emergi&#243; por Francisco Oliveros como primer bateador de Urbanos, bate&#243; un globo hacia los predios de Luis Maldonado en la segunda base. Era un elevado inofensivo pero alejado del camarero. Maldonado se arroj&#243; de cabeza hacia su izquierda y atrap&#243; la pelota cuando estaba a punto de tocar la grama. Superado el susto, Bastardo retir&#243; a Pedro Mill&#225;n con rodado al campocorto Silvio Flores, y al emergente Tadeo Flores con roletazo por la tercera almohadilla. El segundo juego perfecto del b&#233;isbol amateur se hab&#237;a logrado en el estadio Chato Candela un 23 de septiembre de1971&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Bastardo hoje&#243; un libro de pitchers venezolanos donde estaba documentada su haza&#241;a y se inclin&#243; en la silla de la sala. &#8220;Hasta el noveno inning no sab&#237;a nada del juego perfecto.&#160;Si hab&#237;a notado que casi nadie se me acercaba y me preguntaba &#191;Qu&#233; est&#225; pasando aqu&#237;?&#8221; Cuando &#237;bamos saliendo para servir en el noveno escuch&#233;: &#8220;Hay que echar el resto, es un juego perfecto&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Cuando baj&#225;bamos hacia la superficie anaranjada de la calle Bol&#237;var, un s&#243;nido que bajo del follaje de los jabillos hizo voltear a Felipe mientras yo saltaba desde la mitad del talud hacia la calle de tierra. &#8220;Urugujuru&#8221;. Un estruendo de aeropuerto estremeci&#243; las orillas de la acequia. Nos asomamos con el coraz&#243;n en la boca y vimos las plumas de un buho de medio metro temblando entre las aguas. Corrimos hasta alcanzar la punta de la acera de la casa. Entrando al porche templ&#233; la p&#225;gina deportiva, pero Felipe no la solt&#243;. &#8220;S&#243;lo cuatro de los 27 outs los hizo en los jardines. Una l&#237;nea de Francisco Dep&#243;n a la izquierda en el primer episodio, un par de elevados al bosque derecho de Francisco Oliveros y de Pedro Mill&#225;n en el tercero y un elevado de Rafael Barrera al leftfield en el octavo. &#8216;Muy pocas veces us&#233; la curva&#8217;, agreg&#243; Bastardo. &#8220;Casi todos los lanzamientos que hice fueron rectas en la esquina de afuera'&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Alfonso L. Tusa C.<\/p>\n<p><strong>English translation<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>One night six years ago I talked for about an hour with a man who had filled with glory both the State of Sucre and Venezuela&#8217;s baseball pages. &#8220;It&#8217;s ok but you have to promise me if it&#8217;s possible to find in the Cuman&#225;&#8217;s market those sweets made of cassava, coconut, cloves and brown sugar. Pi&#241;onatos, that&#8217;s what I most miss from Cuman&#225;.&#8221; The emotion made me watch a movie parallel to the dialogue. The shoes slided on several stones polished by the automobile tires. Felipe tugged me by the shirt&#8217;s shoulder. He complained Dad was going to call his attention if I arrived home with the shoes full of dust. The headline at the middle of the page stopped Felipe&#8217;s voice. &#8220;Armando Bastardo hurls a perfect game in a 5-0 victory of MOP Zona 10 before the Urbanos&#8221;. As we avoided, poles, cars and people on the sideway and the street, the images of a discussion in the garden&#8217;s rear path shining on the newspaper made me doubt about what I had told Felipe that day.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What you say about the 27 outs in a row, no runners on base, that&#8217;s false, I don&#8217;t believe until I see it. If hurling a no-hitter is pretty tough. How does a pitcher perform in order to avoid that any runner get on base? Should I believe the batters are handicapped?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Now I could hear clearly the names of&#160; Sandy Koufax, Jim Hunter, Jim Bunning, Don Larsen and all the pitchers that Felipe recited about throwing a perfect game in MLB. The fact that no perfect game have been hurled in the Venezuelan winter league raised my incredulity about the fact. No way, Felipe insisted. &#8220;Ok, but in the Class AA of amateur baseball that was so good as the one played in the professional league also there was a perfect game, Gustavo &#8220;Mocho&#8221; Garc&#237;a threw it pitching for Locomotora La Guaira on April 19<sup>th<\/sup>, 1952. He beat the Intendencia Naval 5-0. Garc&#237;a was born in Car&#250;pano, Sucre. From that moment his perfect game became other of the weapons the Car&#250;pano&#8217;s natives had in their sports and general rivalry against the Cuman&#225;&#8217;s natives. That amateur baseball was so tough that there is a legend in Cumanacoa, Sucre about a local team that defeated Alex Carrasquel in an exhibition game during the years when he played for the Washington Senators in MLB.<\/p>\n<p>Bastardo started to recall his times as a baseball player in Cuman&#225; with a kind of sentimental gaze. &#8220;I had to come to Caracas because it was very difficult to get a job. I began to work for the MOP (Ministry of Public Operations). There, they gave me the chance of playing for their Class AA baseball team.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We got up to the sideway of Las Flores streetand consumed the letters in the newspaper: &#8220;The MOP Zona 10 team took the lead with a solo dinger of Oscar Rivas in the bottom of the first frame.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Felipe raised the paper as we passed over the bridge on the little stream that crossed the town. I was almost sure that this Armando Bastardo was the same pitcher who played for the juvenile team of the State of Sucre when they won the national championships in 1966, 1967 and 1968. He was one of the aces if not the star of that team. The leader of the pitching staff, the kid of the movie. I stayed looking at my brother with a big envy because what I could see from the juvenile Sucre team was the second place in that national championship when they lost the final game 2-1 before the Anzo&#225;tegui team. Bastardo left a 13-3 record in those 3 juvenile championships. His most recalled performance is that where he threw 17 innings in shutout before the game was suspended by the rain. The game was resumed several days later and the Sucre team won the championship.<\/p>\n<p>I raised on my tip toes to fix my eyes on the newspaper. &#8220;In the fifth frame another Rivas&#8217; dinger, this one with two runners on base, put 4-0 the MOP Zona 10 edge on the starter Rub&#233;n Illas.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Those teams of the Sucre State that won those juvenile championships had a lot of pride and mystique. There was a great chemistry with the skipper Ram&#243;n Rivas. There always was someone who made the play or batted the decisive hit&#8221;. Bastardo grabbed his personal notebook between his hands.<\/p>\n<p>I ran along the flowing of the little stream. It carried dry leaves, groceries packages, pieces of wood. I got into a kids playing park and climbed the toboggan, after sliding on the dust I got to Felipe&#8217;s back. &#8220;In the eighth frame Silvio Flores hit a single and Rivas got his fourth hit, an rbi double&#8221;. With each step I etched more the tip of my shoes against the pave, because I was trying to touch the paper. I wanted to be sure all of that wasn&#8217;t true. It resounded in my skull another comment from Felipe.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Then what are you going to think if you see the box score of Sandy Koufax&#8217;s perfect game? Will you say it&#8217;s a fairy tale? He won 1-0 and the other pitcher, Bob Hendley, only accepted one hit and it didn&#8217;t have anything to do with the run.&#8221; I asked him why if in the Venezuelan winter league play so very good players, it never have happened a perfect game. I only heard a whistle and a mute laugh.<\/p>\n<p>In the next block we crossed the street and advanced trough the grass and the sand of the place at the side of the &#8220;Jos&#233; Luis Ramos&#8221; school. I finally reached the paper in the irregular sand soil that carried us to the Bolivar street.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;In the ninth frame Sim&#243;n Delgado pinch hit for Francisco Oliveros as Urbanos leadoff batter. He hit a pop up to the second baseman Luis Maldonado. It was a routine pop up but away from the second baseman. Maldonado dived to his left and took the ball when it almost touched the grass. After that scary moment, Bastardo retired Pedro Mill&#224;n with a grounder to shortstop Silvio Flores, and the pinch hitter Tadeo Flores with another grounder to the hot corner. The second perfect of the Class AA Venezuelan baseball was a fact that took place in the Chato Candela stadium on September 23<sup>rd<\/sup>, 1971.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Bastardo looked at a book of Venezuelan pitchers. There it was documented his great game. He bent in the chair of the living room. &#8220;Until the ninth inning I didn&#8217;t know anything about the perfect game. I&#8217;ve noticed that almost nobody got closer to me. I asked: &#8216;What&#8217;s going on here?&#8217; When we were going to the field in the ninth inning I heard: &#8220;It&#8217;s time to give our best. It&#8217;s a perfect game.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When we got down to the orange surface of the Bol&#237;var street, a sound coming from the jabillos trees made Felipe look back as I jumped from half the downhill to the street. &#8220;Urugujuru&#8221;. An airport explosion shook the stream borders. We came back with the heart in the mouth and saw the feathers of a half a meter owl trembling in the water. We ran until arriving home. Arriving to the porch I tugged the sports page but Felipe kept holding it. &#8220;Just 4 of the 27 outs were done in the outfield. A line drive of Franciso Dep&#243;n to left field in the first inning, a couple of flies to right field by Francisco Oliveros and Pedo Mill&#225;n in the third inning and another fly to left field by Rafael Barrera in the eighth. &#8216;I used the curve just a few times&#8217;, said Bastardo. &#8216;Almost all the pitches I did were fastballs in the outside corner.'&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Alfonso L. Tusa C.<\/p>\n<p><em>Alfonso&#8217;s work has been featured in Venezuela&#8217;s daily newspaper, El Nacional and in the magazine Gente en Ambiente, and he&#8217;s collaborated on several articles for newspapers, including the daily paper Tal Cual. He&#8217;s also written three books and biographies for SABR&#8217;s BioProject.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Una noche de hace seis a&#241;os convers&#233; alrededor de una hora con un hombre que hab&#237;a llenado de gloria al b&#233;isbol del estado Sucre. &#8220;Est&#225; bien, vamos a hablar, pero me tienes que decir si en el mercado de Cuman&#225; todav&#237;a se consiguen aquellos dulces de casabe, coco, clavo especia y papel&#243;n. Pi&#241;onatos, eso es [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":75,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-16894","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16894","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/75"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=16894"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16894\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=16894"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=16894"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=16894"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}