Christensen said
the motion reminded him of the extraordinary contortions that he remembered of
Goofy's pitching in one of Walt Disney's cartoon classics.
"I never
dreamed a baseball could be thrown that fast. The wrist must have a lot to do
with it, and all that leverage. You can hardly see the blur of it as it goes
by. As for hitting the thing, frankly, I just don't think it's humanly
possible. You could send a blind man up there, and maybe he'd do better hitting
at the sound of the thing."
Christensen's
opinion was echoed by both Cochrane and Dykstra, who followed him into the
enclosure. When each had done his stint, he emerged startled and awestruck.
Especially
Dykstra. Offering a comparison for SI, he reported that out of curiosity he had
once turned up the dials that control the motors of the pitching machine to
maximum velocity, thus producing a pitch that went approximately 106 miles per
hour. "What I looked at in there," he said, motioning toward the
enclosure, "was whistling by another third as fast, I swear."
The phenomenon
the three young batters faced, and about whom only Reynolds, Stottlemyre and a
few members of the Mets' front office know, is a 28-year-old, somewhat
eccentric mystic named Hayden (Sidd) Finch. He may well change the course of
baseball history. On St. Patrick's Day, to make sure they were not all victims
of a crazy hallucination, the Mets brought in a radar gun to measure the speed
of Finch's fastball. The model used was a JUGS Supergun II. It looks like a
black space gun with a big snout, weighs about five pounds and is usually
pointed at the pitcher from behind the catcher. A glass plate in the back of
the gun shows the pitch's velocity—accurate, so the manufacturer claims, to
within plus or minus 1 mph. The figure at the top of the gauge is 200 mph. The
fastest projectile ever measured by the JUGS (which is named after the
oldtimer's descriptive—the "jug-handled" curveball) was a Roscoe Tanner
serve that registered 153 mph. The highest number that the JUGS had ever turned
for a baseball was 103 mph, which it did, curiously, twice on one day, July 11,
at the 1978 All-Star game when both Goose Gossage and Nolan Ryan threw the ball
at that speed. On March 17, the gun was handled by Stottlemyre. He heard the
pop of the ball in Reynolds's mitt and the little squeak of pain from the
catcher. Then the astonishing figure 168 appeared on the glass plate.
Stottlemyre remembers whistling in amazement, and then he heard Reynolds say,
"Don't tell me, Mel, I don't want to know...."
The Met front
office is reluctant to talk about Finch. The fact is, they know very little
about him. He has had no baseball career. Most of his life has been spent
abroad, except for a short period at Harvard University.
The registrar's
office at Harvard will release no information about Finch except that in the
spring of 1976 he withdrew from the college in midterm. The alumni records in
Harvard's Holyoke Center indicate slightly more. Finch spent his early
childhood in an orphanage in Leicester, England and was adopted by a foster
parent, the eminent archaeologist Francis Whyte-Finch, who was killed in an
airplane crash while on an expedition in the Dhaulagiri mountain area of Nepal.
At the time of the tragedy, Finch was in his last year at the Stowe School in
Buckingham, England, from which he had been accepted into Harvard. Apparently,
though, the boy decided to spend a year in the general area of the plane crash
in the Himalayas (the plane was never actually found) before he returned to the
West and entered Harvard in 1975, dropping for unknown reasons the
"Whyte" from his name. Hayden Finch's picture is not in the freshman
yearbook. Nor, of course, did he play baseball at Harvard, having departed
before the start of the spring season.
His assigned
roommate was Henry W. Peterson, class of 1979, now a stockbroker in New York
with Dean Witter, who saw very little of Finch. "He was almost never
there," Peterson told SI. "I'd wake up morning after morning and look
across at his bed, which had a woven native carpet of some sort on it—I have an
idea he told me it was made of yak fur—and never had the sense it had been
slept in. Maybe he slept on the floor. Actually, my assumption was that he had
a girl in Somerville or something, and stayed out there. He had almost no
belongings. A knapsack. A bowl he kept in the corner on the floor. A couple of
wool shirts, always very clean, and maybe a pair or so of blue jeans. One pair
of hiking boots. I always had the feeling that he was very bright. He had a
French horn in an old case. I don't know much about French-horn music but he
played beautifully. Sometimes he'd play it in the bath. He knew any number of
languages. He was so adept at them that he'd be talking in English, which he
spoke in this distinctive singsong way, quite Oriental, and he'd use a phrase
like "pied-à-terre" and without knowing it he'd sail along in French
for a while until he'd drop in a German word like "angst" and he'd
shift to that language. For any kind of sustained conversation you had to hope
he wasn't going to use a foreign buzz word—especially out of the Eastern
languages he knew, like Sanskrit—because that was the end of it as far as I was
concerned."
When Peterson was
asked why he felt Finch had left Harvard, he shrugged his shoulders. "I
came back one afternoon, and everything was gone—the little rug, the horn, the
staff.... Did I tell you that he had this long kind of shepherd's crook
standing in the corner? Actually, there was so little stuff to begin with that
it was hard to tell he wasn't there anymore. He left a curious note on the
floor. It turned out to be a Zen koan, which is one of those puzzles which
cannot be solved by the intellect. It's the famous one about the live goose in
the bottle. How do you get the goose out of the bottle without hurting it or
breaking the glass? The answer is, There, it's out!' I heard from him once,
from Egypt. He sent pictures. He was on his way to Tibet to study."
Finch's entry
into the world of baseball occurred last July in Old Orchard Beach, Maine,
where the Mets' AAA farm club, the Tidewater Tides, was in town playing the
Guides. After the first game of the series, Bob Schaefer, the Tides' manager,
was strolling back to the hotel. He has very distinct memories of his first
meeting with Finch: "I was walking by a park when suddenly this
guy—nice-looking kid, clean-shaven, blue jeans, big boots—appears alongside. At
first, I think maybe he wants an autograph or to chat about the game, but no,
he scrabbles around in a kind of knapsack, gets out a scuffed-up baseball and a
small, black leather fielder's mitt that looks like it came out of the back of
some Little League kid's closet. This guy says to me, 'I have learned the art
of the pitch....' Some odd phrase like that, delivered in a singsong voice,
like a chant, kind of what you hear in a Chinese restaurant if there are some
Chinese in there.