The
tan house with bright red shutters on 3 Beaver
Lane in Phoenix, New York is the only house on
a short dead-end street. A street with a marshy
grove of trees on one end and a highway on the
other. It stands out sitting next to a dilapidated
and gutted blue building that looks like it once
could have been anything from a house to a bar
to a gift shop. The owner of the house stands
out too.
As
a professional softball player with Long Haul
TPS, a professional slow-pitch softball team sponsored
by the bat company Louisville Slugger, Jeff Wallace,
33, is in a league of his own. Last year, the
first baseman hit 129 home runs and had a batting
average of .738. Those 129 home runs included
32 he hit in the two-month long Softball World
Series tournament last September and October in
Daytona Beach, Florida. His team made history
too, becoming the first professional softball
team to win all four tournaments of the Softball
World Series.
Despite
all the personal and team accolades, success,
as the old saying goes, hasnt gone to Wallaces
head.
"I
dont keep track of stats," he says
flashing his 2001 championship ring, which looks
like nothing more than a bigger, gaudier version
of a high school class ring. "I worry about
how the team is doing. As long as the team wins
and has fun, Im happy.
Fun
and competition drive this former radiation technician
at Nine Mile Point nuclear power plant. Softball
consumes his schedule from mid-March to mid-November,
as does coaching young kids, a hobby he took up
this year to help some youngster become the next
Jeff Wallace of the softball circuit. When the
season is over, he takes up power lifting. On
his best days, he says, he can bench press 520
pounds, dead lift 620 pounds and squat 650 pounds.
"Given
bad knees, thats pretty good," he says.
Upon
meeting Wallace, its hard to say if big
is an accurate description of the man. He isnt
really tall and he isnt really wide and
hes isnt much of a cross between the
two either. Burly would be the one word that comes
to mind. He looks like a logger or someone who
should be wearing a construction hard hat, which
he did for a while after graduating from Oswego
High School in 1988.
His
construction background allowed him to build and
remodel his house out of what used to be nothing
but a trailer. When you walk into it, you enter
a living room/den with a big multi-paned glass
window looking out onto the 60-acre yard. He finished
the room as an addition to the house last month.
It comes complete with a guestroom and walk-in
closet.
Also
upon walking into his house, you notice Wallace
is a fan of crème-colored surroundings.
The ceilings, the drapes, the carpet, the furniture,
the appliances, the tile, everything. Even the
family dog is crème colored. The only things
that appear to be out of place because of their
bright orange, silver, blue and black color are
his bats.
The
bats are how Jeff Wallace has made his living
six months out of every year since 1995. Professional
softball is not a career he chose, he says, its
a career that chose him.
"I
didnt know slow-pitch softball existed,"
he says. "Looking back, I wouldnt trade
it in for anything."
A
good athlete in high school in Oswego, he tried
out for the Cincinnati Reds after high school,
but failed to make the cut. Instead he returned
to Central New York and worked odd jobs while
going to Onondaga Community College.
Tragedy
struck during his tenure at OCC. Both his parents
fell ill and died within a short time of each
other. Wallace and his six siblings were left
on their own and though Wallace is one of the
youngest, he had to drop out of school and lend
a hand for the sake of family.
"Life
sort of took over," he said.
As
he talks about this time in his life, I look for
some sign of regret, but the only visible emotion
I detect is a nonchalant nothing-I-can-do-about-it-now
attitude. The death of his parents was a low point
in his life, but the bond he has with his siblings
has been made stronger because of it.
All
his siblings but one live in the Phoenix area.
His oldest brother lives in Salt Lake City, but
is a frequent visitor to the East Coast. Then
there is his wife of 15 years, Colleen, a bus
driver for the Liverpool school district and his
children, Erica, 17, Hope, 11 and Brooke, 7.
For
all of his tough, stout, outward appearance --
firm handshake included -- there is a soft interior
where his family is concerned. His anniversary
is Valentines Day. He brags about his oldest
making the honor roll and wanting to go to college
and becoming a nurse, though he suspects ulterior
motives. "She just wants to get out the house
and away from us," he jokes.
He
is slightly rueful, as are most jocks, that he
doesnt have a son, but he "wears his
nephew out" and his youngest, Brooke, he
says, inherited some of his athletic genes. "She
does flips all over the house," he says.
His
family comes to some of his tournaments in the
summer, especially the one held near DisneyWorld
in Florida, but he admits leaving them to go on
the road is tough, especially when school is in
session. Softball takes him to Florida, Minnesota,
Las Vegas, Arizona and California, among other
places, where he is usually gone four days a week,
Friday through Monday. That adds up to a lot of
missed opportunities to watch his children grow
up, he admits.
Introduced
to slow-pitch softball by his father-in-law (he
grew up next door to his in-laws, but never knew
his wife Colleen, whos five years his senior,
until after high school), Wallace played on local
teams for a couple years beginning in 1990. In
1995, he went on to play with a semi-pro team
from Rochester, the Pace, where he traveled the
country and barnstormed against other semi-pro
teams.
While
he was on the Pace, he played against a professional
softball team called Steeles Silver Bullets,
a barnstorming team that plays all over the world.
After Wallaces Pace got beaten badly, the
owner of the Silver Bullets asked Wallace if he
was interested in joining them. Wallace jumped
at the chance and two years later he signed a
contract with Louisville Slugger and the rest,
as they say, is history.
"Hes
probably the best overall player player in the
country at this game," said his coach, Gary
Jost, of Long Haul TPS. "I dont think
youd find anyone who would say anything
differently."
He
might be considered the best player around by
those on his team, but Wallace is realistic and
knows he cant play softball forever.
As
a youth, sports and running wreaked havoc on Wallaces
knees. There are some days, he says, when he can
hardly walk because of the pain. He takes close
to half a dozen pills a day and visits the doctor
regularly. He has had multiple surgeries and doesnt
rule out more in the future. As long as he can
play until hes 40, he says, he will be happy.
"Ive
given serious consideration to coaching when I
quit playing softball," Wallace says. "I
want to work with kids."
Wallace
currently is an assistant coach with the baseball
team at Phoenix Middle School. He teaches them
the fundamentals of hitting and the basics of
playing the field. Its a job that allows
him to pass on his knowledge and have an impact
on other peoples lives, though he admits,
sometimes he is tougher on the kids than he should
be.
"I
bet they have some good nicknames for me behind
my back," he smiles.
Its
doubtful the 270-pound Wallace gets called many
names at all, but those who have played with him
call him unselfish, amazing and one of the best
softball players they have ever seen.
This
even after the 1999 Softball World Series game
in Cocoa Beach, the final game of the series in
which Wallace was responsible for the final out.
It was a dream opportunity: bottom of the ninth
inning, two out, bases loaded and his team down
by only one run. All he needed was a short hopper
into the outfield to score the tying run. A hard
single might score two. Instead, Wallace hit a
weak grounder to second base and was easily thrown
out. Game over. Series over. Season over.
Wallace,
ever the competitor, still thinks about that game,
but the memory has faded in the glow of the championship
ring he won last year. Softball has fueled his
competitive urge for a long time now, but Wallace
knows the end is coming soon. He doesnt
regret playing the game because it has kept him
from getting "a shitass job" like so
many of his friends. The $60,000 he makes a year
from softball is more than enough to live a comfortable
life with his family, keep the bills paid and
even send his oldest to college, depending on
where she chooses to go. He even put in a pool
a few years ago that he was in the process of
cleaning and getting ready "before the temperature
goes back down to forty" when I showed up
at his front door. He lives a good life and wants
to ride the wave as long as he -- or his bad knees
-- can.
"Ill worry about what I do when I grow
up later."
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