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THE
FOUNDING OF THE NORTH GROUNDS SOFTBALL LEAGUE
The
below is an account of the formative seasons of the North Grounds
Softball League, as told by J. Gordon Hylton ’77, a co-founder
of the League. Incidentally, Professor Hylton is the first
and only individual to play in the NGSL as a law student, an alumnus,
and a professor. We offer him our sincerest thanks for his
recollections.
The
idea of a separate law school softball league dates back to the end of
the 1975–1976 school year when Fred Vogel ’77 and I were talking about
how disappointing our experience had been playing in the University
intramural softball league. For the second year in a row most of our
games were with undergraduates; our opponents sometimes didn’t show up;
and at this time UVA intramurals used the large 12-inch Chicago-style
softball instead of the regular 9-inch ball.
We
had much more fun playing after-class (and sometimes during-class)
pick-up games on the largely unused Copeley Field, which had been
there, replete with backstop, at least since the new law school opened
in the fall of 1974 (which was also our first year at the law school).
One of us mentioned to the other at the end of the 1976 school year
that we “should organize our own league when we get back in
fall.”
We
did nothing about this over the summer, but when we returned for our
third year in early September 1976, we decided to organize a separate
fall softball league for law students. We sounded out the people who
were showing up to play pick-up games at Copeley Field on the idea, and
when they responded favorably, Fred and I went to Associate Dean Lane
Kneedler ’69 and Assistant Dean Don Lemons ’76 with our proposal.
Fortunately, neither had objections, although Dean Kneedler did remind
us that he had said nothing about providing any funding for the
project.
In
these early efforts we were very much assisted by David “Moon” Mullins
’78 and Bob “the Boomer” Barry, ’78. Fred, Dave, and I shared an
apartment at Ivy Gardens, and we met Bob, a transfer student from West
Virginia University, at Copeley Field on the first day of the new
school year. Given his propensity to hit pitches over the road behind
left field, we quickly recruited him for our team. Equally important,
as it turned out, Bob had gone to UVA as an undergraduate and was
personally well known to the people who ran the University of
Virginia’s intramurals program.
With
Bob, we went over to the Intramural Office in the old gym on the main
grounds. Not only were we able to convince the powers that be to let us
take control of Copeley Field for our games and practices, but they
also gave us a couple of bags of old softball equipment and a box of
balls. Over-ruling my objections, “Oh come on, Fred it’s just
softball,” Fred insisted on installing a large patch of Astroturf
around home plate—to facilitate play in rainy weather—and pounding into
the ground carefully measured off foul poles in left and right field.
As usual, Fred’s ideas turned out to be brilliant.
Once
we put the field in order, we began to advertise the league through
word of mouth and by posting announcements in the Law School. Fred also
used his extensive social network to encourage others to organize
teams. The daily pickup games also helped publicize the new league.
Because we were not sure how many people would be interested in
playing, we permitted each law school team to have a limited number (2
or 3, as I remember) non-law school players. (That our power hitting
shortstop Lem Marshall was not a law student may also have been a
factor in the adoption of that particular rule.)
By
general agreement, Fred was named the League Commissioner and Dave and
I assumed the roles of assistant commissioners. I made out the original
schedules and Dave and Fred and Bob and other volunteers worked to get
the field ready for opening day. Throughout most of the first season
the League was called the Law School Softball League, but Fred’s
preferred name, the North Grounds Softball League, was also
used.
Even
with the very short notice, 15 teams entered the league for that first
fall season, including a faculty team which included current faculty
members Ted White and Tom White, former dean and recent faculty member
Bob Scott, and current Virginia Supreme Court justice Don Lemons ’76.
More than 200 players, almost all of whom were law school students or
faculty, were on the original rosters.
While
most of the players were male, there were a handful of female players
that first season, including Ernie’s Crabs manager Nancy Hudgins ’78.
Original players included future New York Times Crossword Puzzle editor
Will Shortz ’77, future United States Senator George Allen ’77; future
D.C. US Attorney Roscoe Howard ’77, future National Hockey League
vice-president Skip Prince ’77, and current Virginia judge Dan Bouton
’79, George Thomas ’77, David Pettit ’77, Bill Crenshaw '77, and Doug Shoettinger ’77,
all parents of current (2009-10) UVA law students.
The
new league was divided into two divisions: a seven-team Clark Division
(named after Clark Hall, the former law school building on the main
grounds) and an eight-team No-Name Division (named after the then still
unnamed new law building). The Clark Division included teams called:
Copeley Singles; Ernie’s Crabs; Homerun Hillbillies; Law Review;
Learned Hands; Maros’ Maulers; and Sliding Scales. The No-Name Division
teams were called: Bad News Bears; Bullets; Faculty (also referred to
variously as the Diminished Faculties and the Brooding Omnipresence);
Mudhens; Paisanos; Renegades; Rookies; and the Powerhouse A’s. The last
of these was our team, which had previously been called the Copeley
Roadhogs (after a now obscure Statler Brothers routine). However, Fred
Vogel managed to convince a local sporting goods store, Powerhouse of
Athletics, to sponsor our team. (Sponsorship actually consisted only of
free yellow baseball caps, but Fred viewed our having a sponsor of any
sort as contributing to the credibility of the league.) Each team was
scheduled to play ten games with at least one game against each team in
its division.
Play
began with three games on Tuesday, September 14, 1976. Opening day
festivities included third year law student Keith Kearney ’77 playing
the National Anthem on his trumpet and newly appointed Law School Dean
Emerson Spies throwing out the ceremonial first pitch. The first game
was won by Rob Reklaitis ’78 and his Maros’ Maulers who defeated Dale
Ditto ’78 and his Home Run Hillbillies 12-11. In the other two first
day games Learned Hands defeated Ernie’s Crabs 12-10, and the Copeley
Singles won out over the Sliding Scales, 12-3.
From
the very beginning the North Grounds Softball League was closely
connected to the Law Weekly. I was the news editor and Herbie
DiFonzo
’77, the editor-in-chief, and Bruce Williamson ’78, the features
editor, were both good friends and enthusiastic softball players. In
spite of this, the story of the first games ran only on page three with
most of page one given over to stories on the new dean Emerson Spies
and the new Law Librarian, Larry Wenger, who replaced the legendary
Frances Farmer, who had retired. Somewhat belatedly, the Law Weekly ran
an opening day photo of Dean Spies and Commissioner Vogel with the
opening day umpiring crew in its October 8 issue.
Despite
this initial lack of page one publicity in the Law Weekly, the League
flourished from the start. Teams showed up for games, and surprisingly
large numbers of students showed up to watch the games. Somewhat
distressingly, the Powerhouse A’s, installed as pre-season favorites,
dropped their first two games. However, the club rebounded by winning
eight straight games.
The
initial regular season ended on October 22, 1976. The Clark Division
was won by the Copeley Singles with a 7-3 record. The No-Name
Division
was won by the Mudhens who finished 9-1, one game ahead of the
Powerhouse A’s. The 1-9 Faculty team
finished in a tie for last place.
The top four teams in
each division advanced to a play-off with
the
final four (Mudhens, Powerhouse A’s, Copeley Singles, and Paisanos)
playing a double elimination tournament. In
something of an upset, the
Singles defeated both the A’s and the Mudhens to win the first
championship. In the final game, the Singles
defeated the supposedly
power-laden Mudhens by an astonishing 24-2 margin.
The
Singles roster
included: Gary Feulner ’77 (Player-Manager), Roger Glass
’79, Gary Goldberger ’79, John Guyer ’77, Phil
Lookatoo, ’78, Jim
Murphy ’79, Donnie Olek ’77, Steve Rose ’77, Ed Rouh ’77, Doug
Shoettinger ’77, Will Shortz ’77, and Bill Twomey ’77. The umpire in
the championship game was Professor Ted White.
For
the spring, membership in the league was
opened to teams from the
business school (then in what is now Slaughter Hall) and the JAG
school. This actually made the
“North Grounds Softball League” name
even more apt, and the February 18 issue of the Law Weekly announced
the official name change to the NGSL.
Dick
Downing ’77 joined Fred, Dave, and me in the commissioner’s office.
Fred also came up with a number of ideas to publicize the spring
edition of the league, including a set of photographs of us practicing
softball in the snow which were run in the Law Weekly, and a “spring
training” opener when the assembled players took turns taking practice
swings at grapefruit. (A photo of this made
its way into that year’s
Barrister, the law school
yearbook.)
At
some point in late January, we decided to invite newly elected
President Jimmy Carter to throw out the first pitch of the spring
season. Carter had spoken at the law school in 1975—when my
roommate
Andral Bratten ’77 pronounced that Carter “was a nice guy but he has as
much chance of being elected
president as I do”—plus he had been known
to play softball with his staff during the presidential campaign. To
give him time to get settled-in in Washington, we
proposed an opening
day of March 21.
Unfortunately,
the President apparently had other commitments that day, and the
February 11, 1977 Law Weekly reprinted the letter from White House
Director of Scheduling Fran Voorde, graciously declining the
invitation. With the advantage of hindsight, I later
realized that we should have invited out-going President Gerald Ford to
throw out the first pitch, since he also had an athletic past and now
had plenty of free time on his hands.
Not
needing to wait for the president, we began the second season on
February 28, with nearly 50 teams with more than 500 players signed up
for the spring semester. Included in the mix for five Darden
teams—Darden was then located in Slaughter Hall—and two from the JAG
School. The onslaught of teams necessitated the creation of five
divisions, labeled A, B, C, D, and S (for Sissy). The last of these
provided opportunities for those who sought a less competitive
environment, but the other four played at the same level. On a
disappointing note, the faculty team folded after playing only one game
in the spring. However, the faculty’s one star player, Ted White, was
able to jump to a student team.
Suffering
from an over-sized roster bloated by Fred’s efforts to sign up as many
good players as possible, the Powerhouse A’s split into two teams. One
team, captained by Fred, retained the original name while the other,
captained by me and containing many of our original players from
earlier years played under the name the Real A’s.
Both
teams made the playoffs, but the second title went to the Mud Hens,
runners-up in the fall, who defeated the
Powerhouse A’s, two games
to
one in a best of three final series. I think we were so disappointed
with the results that the photograph of Dick
Downing and me awarding
the championship trophy to the champions did not
appear in the Law
Weekly until the following September 23.
Fred, the losing
pitcher in the final game, was nowhere to be seen in the
photograph.
Fred
and I graduated that spring, but that was not quite the end of our
involvement with the league. First, during the summer of 1977, a
reunited Powerhouse A’s team composed of law school league players in
Charlottesville studying for the bar examination won the University of
Virginia intramural softball championship.
Also, the following fall,
Fred and I were added to the roster of
a new team, the Amazing
Coneheads, which was headed by our friends and former teammates, Dave
Mullins and Bruce Williamson.
We
were able to play as a result of our final contribution to the league’s
rules, the “former commissioner player eligibility” rule. Otherwise,
the league was considerably more democratic in the second year. The
league was run by a five person commissioner’s office, headed by Mike
Sarahan ’79 and including holdover Dave Mullins and Barbara Newcomb
’78, the first female commissioner. Thirty-six teams signed up for the
second fall, and for the first time the league was divided into three
divisions called Macho, Regular, and Co-Rec, or Special. Opening Day of
the second year came on September 19, 1977, with Dean Spies again
throwing out the first pitch.
As
luck would have it, Major League Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn ’50
was scheduled to visit the law school in September 1977 at the
invitation of the Legal Forum. Learning this, we contacted him and
invited him to play for the Coneheads during his visit. Kuhn, a good
guy, accepted the invitation to play, though only upon the condition
that he could pitch. Bruce Williamson printed up a Bowie 50 Coneheads
shirt for the Commissioner who hurled a newly flawless first inning.
Unbeknownst to us, there was a photographer from New York present at
the game, and a picture of the Commissioner lobbing a pitch to an
unidentified batter showed up in the next day’s edition of the New York
Times. A photo of Commissioner Kuhn and Bruce Williamson
and their Conehead shirts is memorialized on page 89 of the 1978
Barrister.
When
I was introduced to Kuhn before the ceremonies began, Bruce Williamson
who had secured the commissioner’s appearance at the game, introduced
me to Kuhn as “former commissioner Gordon Hylton.” In reply, Kuhn said,
“Well, that does happen sometimes.”
As
it turned out, the Amazing Coneheads won the first ever Macho League
championship that fall with Fred flying in from Charlotte to play a key
role in the final victory. I missed the final, and my next appearance
in the North Grounds Softball League did not come until the fall of
2003, when, as a visiting professor at the law school, I played in a
faculty student game.
But
the story of the NGSL after the fall of 1977 is, as they say, history.
In 2007, we started the annual Founding Fathers game where players from
the 1976-77 season return to play a team composed of current
commissioners and their fellow students. So far, the Fathers are 0-3,
but we have yet to completely embarrass ourselves. We are all, of
course, delighted that the league that we started 33 years ago on
little more than a whim has not only survived but flourished beyond
anything that we could have imagined in September 1976 when the idea
first got off the ground.
December 3, 2009.
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