Touched by an Angel
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Michael Miller
Josh Ring has never met Vladimir Guerrero. But Ring, a student at
College Park Elementary School in Costa Mesa, now has a rare
collector’s item from last year’s American League Most Valuable
Player.
He has an actual game bat, smothered in pine tar and splintered
along the handle, with the Anaheim outfielder’s uniform number -- 27
-- prominently penned on the knob.
“You can tell it’s his because he’s a big pine tar guy,” said Jeff
Ring, Josh’s father. “He doesn’t even wear batting gloves.”
Josh, a Little Leaguer himself, has collected his share of
baseball memorabilia.
“I go to games,” he said. “I got Curt Schilling’s autograph. I
have John Lackey’s, Bengie Molina’s, and I got a lot of the [Lake
Elsinore] Storms’ autographs. I got nine in one day.”
Now, however, Josh is the owner of a genuine museum piece -- and
he got it under the oddest circumstances.
Last December, for College Park’s holiday musical production, Josh
and a group of classmates sang the novelty song “Nuttin’ for
Christmas.” The opening lines of the song involve baseball -- “I
broke my bat on Johnny’s head/somebody snitched on me ... “ -- so
Josh offered to bring a family treasure of his to display in the
show: his first baseball bat, which he broke in half while hitting a
line drive.
“One day we were practicing, and he hit a line shot over
shortstop, and the barrel went flying,” Jeff recalled. “I just hit
the ground. Then he came up with the handle and said, ‘Are you mad at
me?’ And I said, ‘Are you kidding? You’ve broken your first bat!’”
The Rings kept the two halves of the bat on display in the house
-- a tribute to their son’s upper-body strength -- until the school
musical rolled around. Unfortunately, the bat was headed for a fate
worse than splintering.
During rehearsals, College Park Principal Patricia Insley and
parent volunteer Jennifer Piatti took it upon themselves to clean out
the backstage area. When they came to the remains of Josh’s bat, they
had no idea it was a prop in the show.
“She held up the bat and said, ‘This looks dangerous,’” Insley
said. “So we threw it out. Then, the next day, Josh came up to me and
said, ‘Dr. Insley, have you seen my bat?’”
Josh and his father searched the campus trash bins that night with
a flashlight, but the trash was already gone. Insley was crestfallen
over the gaffe, and even wrote Josh a mock letter from Santa when his
parents bought him a new bat for Christmas.
Piatti, however, suggested contacting the Angels to see if they
could find a replacement. The principal called Tim Mead, the Angels’
vice president of communications, and got a surprise call a month
later.
“He told me to drive down to Angel Stadium,” Insley said. “He just
told me he had something.”
When Insley arrived in the front office, an administrative
assistant presented her with a used bat, explaining that Vladimir
Guerrero had used it in a game. She didn’t know who Guerrero was, but
soon found out.
“I came home that day, and my son, who’s 17, had some friends
over,” she said. “I held up the bat and said it was from Vladimir
Guerrero, and they all said, ‘Oooooh!’”
Though the bat doesn’t bear the MVP’s name, Josh recognized the
number on the knob when Insley presented it to him Monday in music
class.
“The minute he saw 27,” Insley said. “His eyes just lit up.”
Although Insley didn’t name a specific player when she contacted
the Angels, Mead said the community relations department chose
Guerrero, in part because of his star status and in part because of
his character.
“He’s so good for us in the organization,” the vice president
said. “He’s so good to people and kids. This wasn’t just somebody off
the street asking for something. We get a lot of ‘can I have’
requests. We’ve never met the person involved, but if he was a
baseball fan, we wanted to give him something from one of the best in
the game.”
Furthermore, when Mead first received an e-mail from Insley, he
could identify with her plight.
“My wife’s a school teacher,” he said. “So I know how important it
is for any teacher to take care of a student.”
The Angels’ public relations office keeps bats and balls on hand
throughout the year to give to local charities, hospitals and
auctions. Players often sign or donate equipment during spring
training, although Mead says he isn’t quite sure about the origins of
the bat that went to Josh. By the looks of it, it may have cracked
after slapping a line drive, just like its new owner’s previous
timber.
For now, the Guerrero bat is resting on a trophy shelf in Josh’s
room. And the family won’t be taking it to school plays any time
soon.
“We’re trying to make a letter box for it,” Josh said.
“So it won’t end up in a Dumpster,” his father added.
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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