It’s bowling night, a typical Wednesday for my Dad, 1980 in Menomonee
Falls, Wisconsin. He’s 38, bowling age
38. The name etched into his brown swirl
designed custom ball reads “NICK.” The Arial
font inscription used to be white. It’s nicotine stained a sweaty-grey/yellow. With a soft
right handed curve, the ball leaves his hand and his custom fit tan Velcro wrist
guard. Chunk. Roll.
Crash. He left 1 pin. His score on the overhead projector at
Petroff’s Lanes reads 168 in the 9th frame. The “one eyed whop” as his buddies
affectionately call my half Italian dad, picks up the spare and pours Miller
High Life from the pitcher into his glass before he sits back down with his
Custom Products teammates. If you don't know, the derogatory term "whop" is an acronym for "without papers."
It’s surreal sometimes, especially filling out the racing
age on the waiver at Cincinnati’s Wednesday night Ault Park Crit race
series. I’m now older than my dad on
bowling night. With a zipper instead of
buttons and spandex for cotton, I’ve got my sponsor’s jersey on. Custom Products, a metal fabrication company
was owned by a buddy of my dad.
BioWheels bike shop is owned by my buddy Mitch. The rest is the same. Pro bike.
Pro shoes. Name sticker on my bike. Some having raced
earlier, wives of friends racing are sitting in the grass with their kids or
chatting with friends. No doubt there’s
a hidden bottle of Sierra Nevada in someone’s cooler. We’ve got nicknames too, only a little more
politically correct. There’s OB and
Pistol Pete. My friend I-Pro James has a
shaggy snarled greying beard. It’s
bowling night, a typical Wednesday for me, 2012 in Cincinnati, Ohio. I reluctantly scribble “45” on the form.
Sometimes I get suckered into thinking I’m just like Dad,
which is worrisome. He died in his early
60’s of all the things related to not eating healthy or exercising. I'm sure the blatant racism among his friends didn't help either. I breathe a sigh of relief as I roll up to
the start behind a 23 year old. The
similarities end with the sponsor jersey, my age and that I’m competing in a
sport on a Wednesday night. While most
guys around me have a 20oz bottle of GU Brew electrolyte drink, pretty sure
every guy on my dad’s team had their own pitcher of Miller High Life or PBR,
likely 2 or 3. I’m sure a few guys after
the bike race headed for a vegetarian burrito at Chipotle, but still got to bed
at a reasonable hour. My dad and his
buddies in 1980 could turn 3 games of bowling into an all night affair capped
off with an after midnight breakfast at Milwaukee’s famous diner George Webbs. Think Frisch’s Big Boy’s little brother. There they’d pull out the smokes and “shoot
the shit.” My dad’s treat to his drunken
teammates, a full 20-odd slice butter-slathered loaf of toast.
2 comments:
A great story. It's scary how age catches up with us like this! I think the great thing about cycling is that you never have to retire, well, not for a long while anyway!
Darrel buy bikes 247
Dude- I remember those nights in the Falls...45 damn you're old.
Peace
Deano
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