Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

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  • shinderhizzle84
    Banned
    • Nov 2008
    • 1836

    #1

    Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

    George Monroe opened the door to his old, beat up Chevrolet, and slammed it shut again once he had gotten out of the truck, and taken out his dusty glove and old, wooden bat.


    He locked the car with his keys, and walked towards the field, nodding at the familiar faces he saw at the practice field.


    He walked into the dugout, slammed his mitt down on the bench beside him, and popped some sunflower seeds into his mouth, attempting to separate them with this tongue and teeth.


    He had never been able to get the move down, though, and he ended up just chewing all of the seeds together and slowly spitting out a great, disgusting globule of chewed up, half-digested, mushy sunflower seeds.


    “How's it going, kid?” His skipper, Coach Patterson, asked him, giving him a slight nod.


    “Good, Skip,” George said, “Thanks for asking.” He shrugged his right shoulder slightly in a circular motion, and the older man sat down, and looked George straight in the eye.


    “Now you look here, son,” Coach Patterson said somberly. “I don't want you to lie to me—I demand, as your coach, that you be as honest as you ever would be. I don't care if that means you pretend I'm your mother—but you better not lie to me.”


    George only nodded, knowing what was coming.


    “George,” the coach said, beginning a lecture, “I don't want you playing in today's game if that separated shoulder isn't one hundred percent. You got that? Your future is more important than anyone else's on the team, and I don't want you busting what could be a great baseball career because you think we need you.”


    “Yes, mother,” George said gloomily, yet with a devilish grin. He looked up at his coach, and said, “Now can you get me a Coke from the fridge?”


    Coach Patterson chuckled slightly, and patted his star high school stud on his right shoulder, gently.


    George winced, and then tried to cover it up immediately, pretending that a mosquito had gotten into his eyes.


    When he opened his eyes to see if the maneuver had been successful, he saw Coach Patterson with his great big old eyes, staring right into him. George couldn't help but look away sheepishly. It always felt as if the elderly gentleman was staring directly into his soul whenever he flashed that glance, and it had always made George very uncomfortable.


    “Now listen here, kid.” Coach Patterson said, barely more than a raspy whisper. “I don't want you playing if you're in any pain at all. I want to make that absolutely clear. If....if you hurt yourself in tonight's championship game, I...I won't be able to blame anyone but myself.”


    “Coach, my shoulder's fine!” George protested.


    “Don't cut me that bull****, George!” His coach yelled, swinging his arm across his body as if to imitate a sweeping motion, as if he was moving the lies aside. “I know when you're happy, I know when you're upset, and God knows I can tell when you're in some goddamned pain. Hell, I've known you since the first day you ever picked up a baseball and a glove, and I was the one who's taught you everything you've ever known about this game. So don't spoil all my hard work, you stupid goddamned airhead.”


    George gulped once more, before saying slowly, “But Coach, I'm fine.”


    His coach growled venomously at him, obviously more concerned with George's well-being than the boy himself was.


    “Listen, kid,” Coach Patterson said, rising up in a fury. “I don't want you playing out there tonight. I'm scratching your name off that roster right now, you got that?”


    “No!” George yelled, rising up himself to maintain an even balance in the argument with his mentor. “Listen, Skip...why don't you just let me warm up in the pen, and I'll see how it feels, OK? I'll—I'll be as honest as you want me to, Coach. I just want to play. This is the last game I'll ever play with these guys—I grew up with this team. I've won with this team, I've lost with this team, and you better believe I'm gonna play with this team, at least this once more. They're my brothers, Coach—don't turn me away from my brothers.”


    George let a single tear drop from his left eye. George had always been somewhat of a master at manipulation situations, and had always had a knack for selling a story so well, that people's emotions ran more freely than they would have liked them to.


    “Alright, George,” Coach Patterson finally said grudgingly. “I'll let you play.”


    George made a slight fist-pump once he had fully turned his back, and was halfway out of the dugout with his mitt tucked underneath his arm before Coach Patterson stopped him once more.


    “Hey, George!” He called. “One last thing.”


    “Yep, Skipper?” George said, chewing on a piece of bubble gum now.


    “You should consider yourself damn lucky if I let you pitch for more than three innings, you got that?”


    George laughed, and said, “Alright, old coot. Thanks for caring, I guess.”


    Coach Patterson wore a face of mock rage, and reached over the dugout fence and grabbed George by the collar of his jersey.


    “Come here!” He said, playfully whacking his pitching prodigy on the forehead. “I'll give you 'Old coot'.”


    And as George proceeded to take a playful beating from his lifelong coach, he couldn't help but let the thought sink in.


    This will be the last time I'll ever play for him.
  • shinderhizzle84
    Banned
    • Nov 2008
    • 1836

    #2
    Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

    After George had warmed up in the pen for a bit, both he and Coach Patterson had determined that he was fit and ready to start the game for his Arizona High School Baseball team.


    Both teams were called to lineup along the infield foul lines, with the home team (George's Tuscon-city school) and the away team, who was a team that hailed from Phoenix.


    “Ladies and Gentlemen,” the PA Announcer said to the couple hundred people who had come out to show their support for their high school teams, “Welcome to the Arizona High School Baseball State Championships of 2008. Tonight's game will be between the Tuscon Braves and the Phoenix Tigers. Please remove any hats or caps, and stand at attention for the singing of the national anthem.”


    All the ball players, including George, removed their caps and placed them near their chests while keeping their spare hand held limply at their sides. They couldn't hide their nervousness as much as they wanted to, and occasionally opposing team players could be found staring into each other's eyes, attempting to see which team really was more nervous.


    George, however, smiled brightly, for there was nowhere else he'd rather be. He glanced in the stands, looking around for his parents.


    However, the stadium was quite large, and it was difficult to see most people's faces, aside from those sitting in the few front rows behind the plate.


    George glanced in that direction, only sub-consciously singing the words to the Star Spangled Banner under his breath.


    He didn't see much, but a few things caught his eye.


    Scouts.


    He wouldn't have known what to look for regularly, as most scouts liked to hide their identities in fear that their appearances would make their desired player too nervous or edgy, and he would not impress them as well as they'd like. Or even the fact that the desired player may try and show off, or play extra hard ; the scouts want a ballplayer they can depend on to play hard in every game—not just games they know mean something.


    But there were two men, obviously scouts, or so George was led to believe.


    There, in the front center row directly behind the home plate, were two men, deeply engaged in conversation. One man was almost completely decked out in dark red, a red so deep it was nearly maroon.


    Near the left chest of his shirt was a tiny, curly little “D” -- Diamondbacks.


    Oh ****..George thought.


    This was it, wasn't it?


    George had dreamed all of his life, ever since the team had been created, of playing one day, under the bright lights at a gorgeous, MLB-sized stadium, wearing a D-Backs uniform. Ever since he could remember, his life aspiration was to pitch the D-Backs to their first World Series.


    And when the D-Backs had won their first world series, George was not let down at all. Instead, he simply modified his life's goal, saying, “Don't worry. I'll win the D-Backs their second world series, and their third world series, as well as their fourth. I'll be the most famous Arizona Diamondback in franchise history.”


    Many would laugh sarcastically, others would lead him on with what they thought would be false hopes, and little white lies to try and “be nice” to a small child.


    Yet George had known, since he was a boy, that he would play for the Diamondbacks. Nothing would stop him.


    He glanced down at his right shoulder, dusting some muck off with his free hand.


    That's right.


    Nothing would stop him.

    Comment

    • Rexis
      Y.N.W.A
      • Jun 2009
      • 2504

      #3
      Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

      great start
      ST. LOUIS RAMS FRANCHISE (MADDEN 2010)


      LiverpoolFC Atlanta Falcons Atlanta Hawks Atlanta Braves Kobe Bryant

      Comment

      • shinderhizzle84
        Banned
        • Nov 2008
        • 1836

        #4
        Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

        It was getting late into the night, yet George Monroe had pitched well more than the 3 innings Coach Patterson had originally alloted to him.


        Who could deny the results? It was the top of the eighth, and the Phoenix Tigers were simply 4 outs away from losing the State Championships, 4-1.


        George had only allowed a single hit throughout the entire game, and even then, the hit was on a fielding mistake by his shortstop. Not that he was angry with his shortstop. In fact, far from it. George Monroe tried his best to savor every last minute, every last drop of time, that he had left with his team, with his “brothers”.


        The final out had been made, and George slowly trotted back to his team's dugout, a grin on his face, nodding appreciatively to his teammates every now and then.


        He got back to the dugout and was welcomed warmly, with high-fives and hugs all over the place.


        The Tuscon Braves knew they were going to win.


        And nothing was going to go wrong.


        Or so they thought.


        The Braves went 3-and-out in the bottom of the eighth, and out came George Monroe and the rest of the Braves' defensive unit in an attempt to close out the game, and win the school's first baseball state championship in over 23 years.


        “Hey Georgie,” Coach Patterson called him back over to the dugout before he had fully made his way to the mound.


        “Yeah, Coach?” George said, spitting out some bubble gum and popping in a new, fresh piece.


        “Do me a favor, and go easy on your arm this inning. I just want to make sure, OK? Something doesn't feel right...”


        “Yeah, sure Coach,” George said, half-rolling his eyes in sarcasm. “Whatever.”


        “I'm serious boy,” Patterson said, his voice getting deeper, now, with added stress.


        “Ok, Ok!” George protested, and he turned back towards the mound and trotted out to take his warmup pitches.


        He eyed his catcher venomously from 45 feet away, and chose his pitch from the many signs his old friend gave him.


        He wind up, and fired with about half of his strength.


        The pitch slowly sailed into the ballplayer's mitt, and his friend spit out some sunflower seeds before tossing the ball back to George, at what seemed was the equally slow pace.


        Forget this, George thought, frowning at what his coach had asked of him.


        He geared up for warmup pitch number two, and wound up, and fired a fastball right into the middle of the imaginary zone. His catcher grinned, as if to say that's more like it, and George nodded emphatically as he raised his left arm, which bore his mitt, to catch the ball his catcher had tossed back at him.


        He caught the ball easily, and transferred it to his empty right palm, before placing it in a death grip, and tucking his arm slightly behind his back.


        All of a sudden, a huge bolt of pain surged up and through his entire upper arm, coursing all the way to his shoulder.


        “****!” He yelled, falling to the ground and writing around on the mound in pure pain.


        Coach Patterson and the rest of the team ran out of their respective positions in a hurry, and Coach Patterson was the first to reach his star ace.


        “What happened, kid?” Patterson asked George, knelt over the tall, lithe boy. He tore the sleeve off of George's uniform and felt his hand around George's upper arm.


        George's entire body seemed to be throbbing with pure pain, and he was unable to hold back the tears.


        “Threw...too hard!” George finally blurted out through gritted teeth.


        His Coach gave him a patronizing look, at first, but it was quickly gone, replaced by a look more suitable to a concerned parent. That one second of admonishment, however, was too much for George, and with a grunt, he lifted himself up as best as he could, and bent over to grab the ball with his injured arm, to prove to everyone he was fine.


        However, he was once again plagued by the immense pain coarsing throughout his upper arm, and he fell to his knees, unable to withstand it.


        “Please,” He grunted. “Help me!”


        Coach Patterson was about three-fourths the size of his player, yet it seemed as if he had no trouble at all lugging up the eighteen year old and carrying him off the field like a baby.


        He was lay down horizontally across the bench in the dugout, and simply lay there, like a rag-doll, unable to do a single thing, except moan and writhe in pure pain.


        It was to his inner turmoil that he was forced to bear witness to his team's collapse.


        The last thing he remembered before falling asleep, due to the painkillers, was the loud CRACK! Of a bat meeting a ball, and the roar of an away team crowd as the Phoenix Tigers' star hitter rounded the bases after hitting a 2-out grand slam.


        The Braves never finished off what they started, and lost the game with a final score of 5-4.


        The next day, before his doctor's appointment, George Monroe simply lay in his bed, unable to muster the willpower, or the energy, to face a new day, a new chapter in his life.


        It's over... he thought miserably.


        We could have won.


        And it's all my fault.

        Comment

        • rdnk
          All Star
          • Feb 2009
          • 5730

          #5
          Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

          So, does this mean the NCAAF 10' BAP is dead?
          Ottawa Senator's Dynasty (NHL 09)
          Rising From The Ashes: A Phoenix Coyotes Dynasty (EHM 07)
          The Coaching Career of James Aldridge (NFL Head Coach 09)

          Comment

          • shinderhizzle84
            Banned
            • Nov 2008
            • 1836

            #6
            Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

            Originally posted by rexis
            great start
            thanks bro, really apprecaite that. You've got a great dynasty going.

            Yeah, I like doing dynasties, my Chisox dynasty has been loads of fun so far. They're very low maintenance, that is, unless you use HTML tables that you've made yourself, or photoshop--god, that's tough, haha lmfao.

            But I've always been drawn to writing storylines and such. Whether it's a BAP, or an RTTS, or a Top Spin 2 career (which i Haven't done yet, haha lool) I enjoy creating characters and breathing life and soul into them. Some thing I'm good at it, too, haha.

            Comment

            • shinderhizzle84
              Banned
              • Nov 2008
              • 1836

              #7
              Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

              Originally posted by rdnk
              So, does this mean the NCAAF 10' BAP is dead?
              nah, it's not "dead". I just won't be updating it as much. It's kind of hard for me to get into that career, at least, it has been so far, because although I enjoy football, I simply don't enjoy it as much as hockey, or even baseball.

              Comment

              • shinderhizzle84
                Banned
                • Nov 2008
                • 1836

                #8
                Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                George's mother had finally managed to get her large son out of his bed, into the car, and headed towards the local hospital, where he was set to have a thorough examination of every single muscle in his arm.


                They finally arrived at the place, and, after finding parking and being forced to wait in a tiny waiting room for what seemed like an eternity, they finally found themselves sitting in a tiny, all-white examination room, with George being robed in a hospital gown that was a good five or six inches too short for him.


                The doctor came in, and looked over his charts once more before shaking both George's hand and that of his concerned mother's.


                “How you folks doing, besides from one of ya being in pain?” He joked, laughing slightly.

                Neither patient found the attempt at humor amusing, however, and the doctor soon shut up, slightly humiliated and put-off by the lack of positive reception to his joke.


                “Doctor, we're really worried,” George's mother said, clutching George by the arm.


                She tugged on him too hard, however, and he winced out loud, making it clear she was hurting his bad arm.


                “Sorry...” she mumbled before letting go of her son and sitting primly in her own seat.


                “Well, from what the both of you have described, it sounds like we're going to have to take an MRI. Would you please follow me?”


                Both son and mother nodded their agreement, and trailed the middle-aged doctor out of the examination room, through a few deserted hospital hallways, and through a pair of light-wooden double doors, before they were greeted with an overly-large MRI machine and two doctors sitting inside a small, enclosed space behind some dry wall and a glass window. MRI Specialists.


                “Lie down,” the doctor instructed to George, who willingly obeyed, lying with his head closest to the open monster that was the MRI machine.


                “OK, George,” said a crisp, cool woman's voice from over him. He noticed a small speaker built into the MRI machine, placed directly over his head.


                “Can you hear me?”


                “Uh, Yes,” George said, unsure where to talk.


                “Don't worry, George, you're doing great,” the voice said to him encouragingly.


                “But I haven't done anything yet,” He mumbled.


                The voice laughed, then, and said, “My, are you always this sharp?”


                George grumbled an inaudible reply, and the voice lay silent for just a moment.


                “OK,” The voice said, now the deeper, more masculine voice he recognized as belonging to his doctor. “Now, you'll see a diagram above your head light up and change colors. When it shows a green man with some squiggly lines that look like they're coming from the region near his mouth, you can breathe, but only nice and slow, OK?”


                “OK,” George muttered.


                “Good. But when you see an orange diagram that looks like it's the same thing, but with a large circle with a cross placed over it, you may not breath, at all.”


                George frowned and scratched his head.


                “It's OK,” the cool female voice said, now having obviously taken over her original position. “The most you'll be holding your breath will only be for about seven to ten seconds, so it shouldn't be too bad.”


                George only nodded while he muttered a soft affirmative.


                “Good. Oh, and also, once you're inside the machine, please try and refrain from any movements whatsoever. Twitching your nose will be about the largest movement you can make, OK?”


                “Yeah, sure,” George said. “Can we just get on with this?”


                “Okedoke,” the cool voice said once more.


                All of a sudden, George felt himself being moved, as if he was luggage on a conveyor belt, inside the gaping jaw of the machine, head-first.


                He heard a loud clicking noise, and saw the green light appear.


                He took his last breaths as slowly and deeply as he could, savoring each and every one of them, before the countdown in green ended, and the orange light went on.


                BA-SHOOMP, BA-SHOOMP, BA-SHOOMP.


                The machine was incredibly noisy, and George himself had been slightly gripped with fear. Was the machine broken?


                All of a sudden, the green light went on once more, and he let out a breath of relief, as the loud noise had seemingly ceased to exist when the green light came on.


                However, that thought was too short-lived, as the orange light came on once again.


                BA-SHOOMP, BA-SHOOMP, BA-SHOOMP.


                The noise seemed even louder this time, yet George still did his best to maintain his cool, and try and keep himself as collected as possible.


                Finally, both the orange light and the clunking died out together, and he was slowly pulled back out of the MRI Machine, and realized that he was once again out in the open air.


                “Thanks a bunch for being a trooper, George,” the female voice said once more. “You can get up now, and we'll have the results for you in about twenty minutes. Please leave your gown here, and put on your regular dayclothes.”


                George went behind an impromptu curtain and pulled the gown over his head, and then took his time putting on each item of clothing, treating his right arm gingerly.


                Finally, him and his mother were waiting in the designated room, too nervous to talk to one another.


                After another eternity, a familiar face—that of his doctor's—came into the room, looking over the test results one last time before looking into the faces of his patients.


                This time, however, his aspect was not one of humor and joy, but of nervousness, anxiety, and distraught.


                “What's wrong, Doctor?” His mother asked worriedly, having seen the look on the man's face. She rose up out of her chair, and placed her hand directly over her mouth.


                “Well, George,” the doctor began. “I need to ask you a question, first. Are you really dedicated to getting a pro career in baseball?”


                “YES!” George nearly yelled.


                “Are you sure?”

                “YES!”


                “Well, son, you're going to need a ****load of rehabilitation. You've got a torn labrum. But it's not like any other tear I've ever seen. It's bad, kid—it's real bad. Whatever you did that day may just ruin your career in the end.”


                George put his heads in his hands, unable to look at the world around him, which had changed to him in such a drastic fashion.



                “You're going to have to work with me every day, every minute of the next year, if you even want to have a slight fraction of the MLB career you were destined to have.”


                “Sure thing, Doc,” George said solemnly. “I'll do whatever it takes.”


                “That's good to hear, kid,” The doctor said, smiling sadly. “The first thing I'm going to recommend is to get that upper arm in a splint. The next thing, and George, I want your WORD on this, you got me?”


                George nodded.


                “You've got to PROMISE me that you won't even do so much as TOUCH anything sports related for at least a year. I don't care if there are scouts that want you to run practices, or drills, or whatever. If you want to be able to get past the opening sprints without writhing on the ground in pain, you better swear to this, or else.”


                George took a moment to summon up the courage to look up directly into the eyes of his doctor.


                “Yes, Doc. I promise.”

                Comment

                • shinderhizzle84
                  Banned
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 1836

                  #9
                  Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                  OK. So, just so you guys know how this is going to work out on a game like MVP 05 (or 09, haha), which doesn't have an RTTS or BAP mode of any kind, I'll explain it to you NOW so hopefully there will be no questions later.

                  I've completely simmed the first season of a dynasty mode with the team my player has been drafted by (which will be revealed a little later, haha ), and have made a couple of transactions, just so I could maintain a good GM rating so I could keep my job with the team I wanted him to be drafted by.

                  Then, once I had reached the draft, I used my X round pick to get the highest overall SP available in the draft, and used his original name as the name for my story's character (George Monroe). Then, once I had signed him to an x year contract worth x amount of dollars, I edited his potential rating so that he could eventually grow up to be a big-time superstar and such, and also edited his appearance, because frankly, a lot of the cpu-generated draft picks are ugly as **** in this game.

                  And that's it. I'm going to start him off in a league and position that I see fitting, and will try to play most games, as long as I know for a fact that he'll be making an appearance. If his position is ever in the bullpen, I'll probably just sim game by game and track his statistics, until I deem he's doing well enoguh to be in the starting rotation.

                  I'm going to list the trades and transactions that I made during the first season, now, as best as I can remember them :P .

                  I didn't write them down the first time, haha.

                  Comment

                  • shinderhizzle84
                    Banned
                    • Nov 2008
                    • 1836

                    #10
                    Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                    Alright, so I made two big trade-deadline deals in the 2009 season of the Arizona Diamondbacks. I know some of them aren't incredibly realistic, but please bear in mind that all the players I traded for were doing poorly and were on the block for a long time.

                    TRADE 1:

                    ARI TRADES:

                    3B Mark Reynolds
                    SP Yusmeiro Petit

                    TO TB FOR:

                    C Dioner Navarro
                    CF Felix Perez

                    TRADE 2:

                    ARI TRADES:

                    SP Doug Davis
                    SP Jason Garland

                    TO NYY FOR:

                    2B Robinson Cano
                    RF Xavier Nady

                    Comment

                    • shinderhizzle84
                      Banned
                      • Nov 2008
                      • 1836

                      #11
                      Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                      1 YEAR LATER:


                      Finally. The day had come.


                      George Monroe arose out of his bed after taking his time waking up, eager to greet the bright new day with a smile on his face and a song in his throat.


                      Even his mother didn't care that he was singing with his awful voice again—she shared his happiness, and together, the two got ready for what would be their last visit to the rehabilitation center.


                      They finally made their way into the office after waiting only a short while, where they sat down and waited for the doctor to come in to finally give George the all-clear to play once again.


                      It had been so long, he had almost felt as if he had forgotten how to throw.


                      Finally the doctor came in, and smiled briefly before sitting down in a chair facing George.


                      He rolled the short sleeve on George's t-shirt up, and felt around his shoulder area, squeezing gently in some areas and softly rubbing in others.


                      “Feels pretty good, buddy,” The man said enthusiastically.


                      “Am I good to go, Doctor?” George asked the man earnestly.


                      “looks like it. You shouldn't have any pain for a while, kid. I just want to congratulate you personally. It's been obvious at times that the rehab phase has been difficult for you, kid. So take it from me,” the doctor said slightly-pompously, extending his hand towards the young pitcher, “You've done a great job. I look forward to watching you on TV some day.”

                      The three of them laughed for a moment, but an eerie silence superseded the laughter for just a moment.


                      “Well,” his mother said, arising from her chair and dusting some dirt off of her skirt. “I think we'd best be going. Thanks so much, Doctor. You may have just saved my boy's well-being.”


                      The doctor grinned in appreciation and shook both mother and son's hands once more before the two made their way back to their car.

                      They drove home in silence, both of them too wrapped up in their own giddy thoughts to speak with one another.


                      When they got home after a small grocery-detour, George immediately got set to using his newly-healed arm once again, helping his mother with the groceries.


                      “GEORGE!” She shrieked from inside the house. He dropped both bags, afraid his mother had been seriously hurt.

                      “Mother?” He yelled. “Are you O--”


                      He stopped dead in his tracks, then, as he saw his mother leaning over the house's answering machine with a concentration he had never seen from her before.


                      “Come, quickly!” She said quietly, beckoning him over. He joined her, and she hit the “REPEAT” button on the machine once more.


                      “Hello, Monroe family,” An elderly man's voice said. “My name is Rodney Davis, and I'm the area scout here for the Arizona Diamondbacks. For about a year, now, we've gathered a heavy interest in the only child in your family, George. And with the offseason draft coming up quickly, we'd like to let you know that we're heavily interested in choosing him as a draft choice. If you've got any questions at all, whether it's about MLB life, or about the organization itself, please don't hesitate to call me, my number's...”


                      Both he and his mother scrambled to the nearby cabinet, George grabbing a pad of paper while his mother grabbed a pen. His mother opened the pen cap with shaking hands and quickly jotted down the number.


                      Once the message had stopped playing, they both let out audible signs of delight—his mother choosing a high pitched squeal, while he let out a more masculine shout of joy.


                      They hugged each other, and neither of them spoke, for both of them knew that the hug itself spoke more words than a conversation could ever achieve.


                      “I love you, mom,” George said, and his mom squeezed him tighter.


                      “You better love me,” she said, as the two finally let go of each other. “Especially after all those medical bills come through.”


                      They both laughed, and they settled down by the kitchen table to begin unload their groceries.

                      Comment

                      • shinderhizzle84
                        Banned
                        • Nov 2008
                        • 1836

                        #12
                        Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                        The rest of the summer went by too fast, it seemed, and with every passing day, the draft drew closer and closer.


                        George knew that he was going to be drafted. Hell, wasn't that all that mattered to him?


                        The truth, however, was that he was incredibly nervous about it, nonetheless.

                        Would he go as a late-rounder? Or would he be a surprise pick, and go in one of the first few rounds?


                        Would a different team draft him, instead?


                        What would happen if the D-Backs changed their minds, and decided not to draft him, after all?


                        Don't think that... said a threatening voice in his head.


                        He took a deep breath, and tried to fall asleep.


                        Before he knew it, he was sitting in MLB Network's studios, and was waiting in his chair, holding a death-grip on the armrests.


                        His knuckles were ghostly white, and his mother's face looked nearly as pale when he risked a glance at her.


                        “Now with the 16th overall pick in the 2009 MLB Amateur Draft,” said the PA announcer, “The Arizona Diamondbacks.”


                        George Monroe took a deep breath, trying to settle his stomach.


                        He was shaking from head to toe, unable to open his eyes.


                        Just focus on your breathing...a steadying voice in his head said to him, over and over again, in an attempt to soothe him.


                        In, and out.


                        In, and out.


                        But if he didn't make it in the draft, was he out?


                        DON'T THINK LIKE THAT!! The voice shrieked at him warningly.


                        Oh God...


                        After what seemed like an eternity of this torment, he heard a faint click, click, and opened his eyes to see that D-Backs general manager Josh Byrnes had stepped up to the podium at the center of the stage.


                        “Hello. With the 16th overall choice in the 2009 MLB Amateur Draft, the Arizona Diamondbacks would like to select, from local Tuscon, Arizona....


                        “...George Monroe!”


                        “OH MY GOD!” His mother screamed, and the two Arizonians rose together, in front of countless cameras and applauding audience members. Back in their homes in Arizona, or even other places, D-Backs fans watched, some in awe, some in pleasure, and many others in disgust.

                        And as George Monroe buttoned up the white and red jersey which had his name printed on the back, and placed the baseball cap upon his forehead, he couldn't help but think of one thing.


                        I made it...

                        Comment

                        • shinderhizzle84
                          Banned
                          • Nov 2008
                          • 1836

                          #13
                          Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                          Mass chaos ensued almost every single night at the Monroe's house. Parties involving neighbors, extended family members, and his high school buddies ensued almost nonstop.


                          However, the party that meant the most to George was the party thrown especially by Coach Patterson and his varsity baseball team.


                          George was lying in his bed on a hot January's day when the telephone next to his bedroom went off.


                          “'Ello?” George answered slothingly.


                          “Uh, yes, is this George Monroe?”


                          “Yes, it is,” George said, now sitting up at full attention. “How may I help you?”


                          “Yes, this is Josh Byrnes, GM of the Arizona Diamondbacks. We still haven't heard back from your agent about our initial contract offer, and we just wanted to make sure everything was alright.”


                          “My agent? Sir, there must be some mistake, I do--”


                          He was cut off by his mother's voice calling him from down the stairs of his house.

                          “Mom! I'm on the phone!”

                          “Honey!” She called back. “You got a call from Mr...Mr. Sisnick?”


                          “Sosnick??? I got a call from Mr. Sosnick???”

                          “Yeah hun!”


                          “Mom! Why didn't you tell me about this earlier!”


                          “I'm sorry, honey, I thought you wanted me to be your agent! We had a verbal agreement the other day, I mean, I have an MBA and everything!”


                          “So sorry, Mr. Byrnes,” George said, turning his attention back to his boss. “Apparently my new agent is Matt Sosnick.”


                          The man laughed, and then said, “That's what I like to hear, kid. Hope you find our contract offer up to snuff.”

                          They hung up after some final farewells, and George immediately dialed in the number of his “new agent”, Matt Sosnick.


                          “Sosnick here,” Said a rough man's voice from the other end of the phone.


                          “Uh, yes,” George began, nervous. “This is George Monroe...are you available to speak with me now?”


                          “Georgie, my man!” Sosnick said, immediately warming up to the boy. “You're going to be like a son to me, kid, I guarantee it.”


                          “Er...” George trailed off. He didn't really know what to say to a comment like that, seeing as the only father he had ever had had run away from his mother and him near the time he had been born.


                          “Listen, kid, I gotta run, but before I go, I'm gonna give you the information of the D-Backs' contract offer for you to think over, okay?”


                          “Yeah b--”


                          “No time for that now, son,” Sosnick cut his client off with a sharp intake of air. “The contract goes for 4 years total, and you'll get eight-hundred thousand a year, starting off in AAA. Bye, gotta--”


                          George gasped in air as sharply as possible in a final attempt to get the attention of his agent.


                          “WHAT?!” The man demanded, now much more hostile than he had first been.


                          “Uh, that contract sounds fine, Mr. Sosnick. I'll take it.”


                          “Great, kid, that's great to here. Is there anything else you'd like to know from me, at all?”


                          “But...” George trailed off, confused. “I thought you just said you had to go.”


                          “Bah!” the agent exclaimed. “These things can wait. I don't have to go anywhere.”


                          George simply shook his head.


                          “Sorry, Mr. Sosnick. That'll be all. I guess I'm just still adjusting to the life of a pro baseball player.”


                          “That's the spirit, kid, keep your focus in there, everything will turn out great!”


                          “Uh, thanks, sir, have a good one.”


                          “You too, Billy-Boy.”


                          The two of them hung up their phone lines almost simultaneously.


                          Billy-Boy? George thought, shaking his head in dismay.


                          Unbelievable....I'll still be in Tuscon.

                          Comment

                          • shinderhizzle84
                            Banned
                            • Nov 2008
                            • 1836

                            #14
                            Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                            The month went by quickly, and soon enough, George Monroe had packed up his new, high-technology black mitt along with his new black Rawlings wooden bat, headed down in his old Chevrolet and made it to the Tuscon Electric Park in downtown Tucson, which was the home to the Tucson Sidewinders, the Arizona Diamondback's AAA Minor League Baseball Affiliate.


                            He arrived at the field, not knowing what to expect for his first ever practice as a professional ballplayer.


                            Almost the moment he stepped into the locker room, a giant, cream-pie was stuffed directly in his face.


                            Now drenched in whipped cream, he wiped as much of it off of his face as he could before he finally got his first view of a professional locker room.


                            A nice shade of mahogany wood was used as siding for the walls of the locker room, and everywhere he went, broken wooden bats, dirty baseballs so blackened he could barely see the stitching, and worn and torn baseball mitts lay scattered across the concrete floor.


                            It was ironic, George thought, that the walls be so nicely decorated, when compared with the flooring, which made porter-potties look like 5-star lounges.


                            “Welcome to the team,” said a bright and cheery man's voice from behind him...the culprit behind the pie-scheme. “My name's John Hester. I play catcher, but since Miguel Montero's been called down from the show, I've been playing some first for the most part. You can just call me death, k, kiddo? Now, would you be a good sport, and go over to your stall before you get another pie in the face?”


                            George slowly made his way across the room, walking slowly from stall to stall, staring into each nameplate, looking for his own.


                            A bunch of the guys in the locker room started snickering furtively, and when George glanced up it seemed as if they all stopped simultaneously.


                            “What's so funny?” he asked nervously. Something was up.


                            “Oh, please allow me to point you to your 'stall'.”


                            The catcher motioned for George to follow him, and George nodded, and obliged.


                            The catcher made his way past stall after stall, until they were in the dirty, mucky, and smelly bathroom.


                            A tiny wooden chair that looked as if it belonged in a pre-school classroom had been placed right next to the only urinal in the bathroom, and John Hester made a flourish and a bow before exiting promptly.


                            George set down his bag silently, fuming, and sighed once more.


                            This was the life of a pro ballplayer. A rookie pro ballplayer.


                            And he better not leave out the rookie part.

                            Comment

                            • shinderhizzle84
                              Banned
                              • Nov 2008
                              • 1836

                              #15
                              Re: Can You Hear the Rattlesnakes? An MVP 05 RTTS-Style Story

                              Months had gone by, and George Monroe had suffered through rigorous practice after rigorous practice.


                              And after every day of hard work and tremendous sweating, George would plop down uncomfortably in his toddler-sized chair and strip off his jersey, making extra sure not to throw it near the awful-smelling pile of “water” that nobody had dared clean up since the beginning of the practice season.


                              “Hey, Georgie, can I see you for a second?” Asked the Sidewinders' manager, Bill Plummer.


                              “Yeah, sure thing, Skip,” George said, and hurried into and out of the showers and through a new pair of clothing.


                              When he reached his manager's office, he respectfully knocked three times before he heard some sort of confirmation that he could enter.


                              “Take a seat, Georgie,” Plummer mumbled through a mouth that was full of an overly-large cigar, motioning at the chair across his desk.


                              George took the seat courteously, and waited patiently for his manager to speak.


                              “First of all, kid,” The older man said, taking one puff of his cigar and taking it out of his mouth. “I just want to commend you on how you've dealt with all the crap the team's put you through so far. I know it's tough being the rookie here, kid, but I've got to say that the crap they've been giving you so far has been some of the worst I've seen, yet you've dealt with it like a pure champ, kid. That's what I like to see.”


                              “Er..thanks, coach,” George managed to slur out, forcing a smile.


                              “Anyways, that's not the reason I called you in here for.”


                              George slouched his shoulders, afraid of some bad news. Was he going to be demoted to AA?


                              “You've been showing a lot of heart out there kid, a lot of heart.”


                              “Tha--”

                              “But that's not all it takes to win ballgames, you understand?”

                              George only nodded, not wanting to risk being cut off once again.


                              “That's why I figured I'd be fair, at least to start out this year's season. With all of the crap you've put up with so professionally, as well as the amount of *** you've worked off in practice so far this year, you deserve a top spot on that rotation of ours.”


                              George's heart fluttered up through his chest and into his larynx.


                              “But with the amount of skill you've shown in the pitching drills, you barely deserve to be on the starting rotation, at all. Triple-A isn't some walk in the park, you hear me, kid? Hard work and heart can only get you so far, OK? Just ask Jeff Francoeur.”


                              George emitted a short bark of laughter, one which was immediately silenced when his superior gave him a death stare right in the eyes.


                              “Anyways,” Plummer droned on. “The real reason I've called you in here, is to let you know that you'll be starting out the season with the third spot in a 5-man starting pitcher rotation. Now, I feel that's pretty generous, seeing the amount of skill level you've shown us in some of the pitching drills so far. But then again, with the way you've been working, I can't help but say, 'You've earned it, kid.'”


                              “Jesus, Coach! Thanks a bunch! Don't worry, I won't let you down.”


                              “You better as hell not boy!” Plummer yelled suddenly, leaning over the desk and grabbing George by the collar of his shirt. Images of his old coach, Coach Patterson, quickly dug themselves up from his mind, and he smiled slightly, remembering his mentor.


                              Plummer must have noticed, however, and yelled, “And get that stupid silly smirk off your face, boy. Not TV Camera's gonna wanna have that face all over their channel. It looks like you're a baby right before it takes a huge crap...”


                              “S-sorry coach,” George stammered, before departing from the office.


                              Once he heard the door shut firmly behind him, he opened his cellphone and dialed his house.

                              “Hello?” He heard his mother's voice answer the phone on the other end of the line.


                              “Mom, make sure you watch the Sidewinders' game this weekend on Saturday—I'm starting!”

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