We made line ups and we played. My line up consisted of Felix Millan, Rusty
Staub, John Milner, Cleo “Baby” Jones, Jerry Grote, Bud Harrelson etc… His
consisted of Jerry Kenny, Danny Cater, Bobby Murcer, Bill Sudakis, Thurman
Munson and Celerino Sanchez. We followed
the line ups and we batted exactly like the players did. I mean exactly, the same ticks, phantom
swings, hunches and bat position the real player had. If they did it, we
did it. This included hitting lefty or
righty. It was a big deal. To this day you can try me. If you want to see
exactly how Jerry Grote, Felix Millan or John Milner batted I can still do it with
100% accuracy. My favorite was Willie Mays. I imitated his smooth loopy phantom
swing to perfection.
In real life, the Mets and Yankees were actually evenly
matched in the early 70’s, with the edge going to the Mets because of the
pitching, But Gary Rind kicked my butt almost every game. I could play, but
Gary was on a different level. My record was literally like 3-23 but I didn’t
care. I loved playing. As for Gary, well, he got bored of pounding my head in every
game and eventually he stopped visiting my little ball field I made in my back
yard. That didn’t stop me. I spent hours by myself playing self-hit whiffleball Met/Yankee games by
myself, playing game after game. Writing line-ups, recording each result, retrieving
hit whiffle balls and going back to the plate to continue the inning while even
compiling batting and pitching stats. I
couldn’t get enough. But then in March
of 1975, I discovered Strat-O-Matic. Actually, it found me.
Met fans are accustomed to hearing Keith Hernandez mention
Start-O-Matic. Strat-O-Matic is the world’s greatest baseball simulation game.
It’s played with player cards and dice It
sounds silly, but it is AMAZINGLY accurate. I overheard Scotty Trelin and Neil
Ferber talking about the game in 10th grade Biology. I was instantly
interested and barraged them with questions. They told me it was available at Hermann’s
(a local NY sporting goods store) I was there that night…and I bought the game.
The game came with a board (which I never used) and two teams, dice, x-cards, an x-chart (for error results), a
fielding, stolen base and injury chart (yes, players got injured!) and of course, an order
form. I immediately ordered the entire
1974 season (via mail order) and I dove in and played the games CONSTANTLY. The
two random teams the game came with were the 1974 Brewers and the 1974
Expos. Talk about yawn. You couldn’t get anymore middle of the road than them,
but I was just grateful to have it and I played that game as much as I could
while I waited for my season cards to arrive. I played it so much that to this day I
can’t hear the names Steve Renko, Bob Coluccio or Larry Lintz without thinking
of it.
Now, I got my best friend Tom DeSantis hooked as well. In
the hot summer months of vacation from 74 to 77 and beyond, we weren’t
out playing baseball or going to the park
pool as often as we were in my bedroom with the air conditioner blasting
eating peanut
butter sandwiches playing game after game of Strat-O-Matic. Mostly at
night. To be honest we did venture outside during the day and played
"Strat" as we called it at night, but on the REALLY hot days, we stayed
in the cool and went at it. We played while the Mets were on TV or the
radio, nothing stopped us. Mostly we played
our own leagues and then we would play important series together (Like
the
Mets/Yankees or Mets/Dodgers or our individual championship series) He
had his Mets
and his way to manage and I had mine. We played 162 games and we shared
our results (as they
happened. We did stats and shared them and had a great time. When we had
an
important homer, we would throw a die on the others game sheet and when
that
grabbed each others attention we would reveal the game
event that happened. It was usually a big hit or a homer. Two dice
tossed on each others page meant a player hit two homers in the game, 3
meant three…and so on. In
big situations in our games we would make the other person stop and
listen
while we announced our game like Bob Murphy and Lindsay Nelson. Looking back, it reminds me of the same
dedication that D & D players had years later.
I literally played Strat-O-Matic for the next 10 to 15
years. Eventually, I got to the point where I drove to Railroad Ave, in Glen
Head NY and picked up my orders instead of waiting for them to arrive. I also
graduated to the “advanced” version of the game to be even more accurate. But Strat-O-Matic went hand and hand with my
love of baseball and of the Mets. I never even thought about playing any other
team. It was ALWAYS the Mets. Every year that was the team I played, managed
and enjoyed. I played through the late
70’s and early 80’s and sweated out games started by Ray Burris, Kevin Kobel, Doc Elis and Pat
Zachary. Meanwhile, I got to manage the
likes of Lee Mazzilli who owned the much desired AA rating in base stealing always
giving him the green light to go. Dave
Kingman who’s card always seemed to have equal amounts of Homeruns and
Strikeouts on it. I played with my other
friends, tried to get my nephew into it, it was sincerely my biggest hobby and/or obsession.
Eventually, I graduated to computer sims. Micro league
Baseball, Strat-O-Matic computer game (all graphic only), High Heat, MVP
baseball, The 2K series and my current favorite MLB: THE SHOW. I still, only
play the Mets. I’m actually playing a season right now that features the Mets
roster as it would be if the season started today. I have Bartolo Colon, Curtis Granderson and
Chris Young on the roster. I also have Ruben
Tejada at Short and Ike Davis at 1st…and so far so good. By the end of March I’ll have MLB: THE SHOW
2014….and it will continue.
But it all started with Strat-O-Matic. That’s the game that fueled (and was fueled
by) my love of the Mets and baseball and took the seed that started in whiffle
ball and let it grow to the personal tradition it is today. Strat-O-Matic is still around. It’s still
played the same way and still has a huge fan base. There are adult leagues that play religiously
every week and if I had more time I would definitely start one or join one. But
if I did, I’d have to have the Mets. The Mets or nothing. There’s just no two
ways about it. The Mets and
Strat-O-Matic; a summer heaven!
4 comments:
That was like reading an alternate version of my childhood. I got into Strat about a half decade or so later. But I remember it started sports board game trend that escalated as I entered my teens into Strat FB, BaskB, hell even Hockey. Then APBA FB, BB and BaskB. My Yankee fan friend took a step further and bought Extra Innings and a few others I can't recall.
As much as I loved Strat my all-time favorite baseball simulation was Sher-Co. It had real-life field dimensions, updated rosters throughout the year, rainouts. I used to play Strat and Sher-Co back to back, same line-ups to see which gave the more accurate result. Those end of '70s/early '80s Mets were just as bad in simulation as they were on the grass of Shea. I did play the computer version of Strat in a league several years ago. It wasn't the same, but I enjoyed it.
I really liked the Old Time Baseball CD-Rom game from the mid-90s. It had every season and team. There was also this guy who did mods and shared them for free-they enhanced the game a great deal.
But Strat-O-Matic started it all. The anticipation on waiting for the games to arrive in the mail and the excited feeling when they arrived is something I remember with great fondness.
I played Sher-Co...and I found it too complex to play (for my liking) but it was amazing!
Same here. 1975 version. Played the whole summer of 1976.
Split teams across 4 guys. Played an 82 game season.
Full stats. Mets stunk. Best team I had were the Twins.
Carew leading off against Tanana; 3-10 **SINGLE**; Carew stealing 1-17; NINETEEN; SOB!!; WTF!!; Okay, who didn’t shuffle the split cards.
That's awesome....and the disappointment when a sluggle had homeruns on 1-11 or 1-12
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