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Steve Dalkowski -Ron Shelton's Take on a Bako legend
Ron Shelton has been to Bakersfield. You don't do movies like The Best of Times without spending some time here. He is better known as the director of Bull Durham, White Men Can't Jump and Tin Cup. He was in the Baltimore Orioles organization for quite few years and wrote a great piece on a Bakersfield legend, Steve Dalkowski. Here is a unique story published in the Los Angeles Times today with serious local color written by Ron Shelton. He was a little guy, which was shocking at first, with short arms, thick glasses and an easy smile. They called him "Dalko" and guys liked to hang with him and women wanted to take care of him and if he walked in a room in those days he was probably drunk. This was the legend; this was Steve Dalkowski, the hardest thrower who ever lived. Ted Williams stepped in for one pitch during a spring training game and walked away. "Fastest I ever saw," he said. Teddy Ballgame, who regularly faced Bob Feller and Herb Score and Ryne Duren, wanted no part of Dalko. Some guess his fastball from a mound approached 110 mph. We'll never know. Racked with alcoholic dementia, Dalko has been in a New Britain home for 15 years. He attends minor league games, a celebrity now. He gets out of the home for family picnics. He is, if you can use the term, at peace, according to his family.
Dalkowski will be inducted today into the Baseball Reliquary's Shrine of the Eternals -- its Hall of Fame -- along with Roger Maris and Jim Eisenreich, during an afternoon ceremony at the Pasadena Central Library. But what lingers is not the drinking or the abuse or the desperation. We've seen that and know these same demons touch us at times. It's the gift from the gods -- the arm, the power -- that this little guy could throw it through a wall, literally, or back Ted Williams out of there. That is what haunts us. He had it all and didn't know it. That's why Steve Dalkowski stays in our minds. In his sport, he had the equivalent of Michelangelo's gift but could never finish a painting. Writer-director Ron Shelton ("Bull Durham," "White Men Can't Jump," "Tin Cup") spent five years playing infield in the Baltimore Orioles' minor league system. 2 comments from 2 users
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posted by
sagefever
on Jul 20, 2009 at 10:34 AM
posted by
NancyII
on Jul 20, 2009 at 10:42 AM
Great story Adam! Baseball is my only sport of real interst and I love all the stories that go with it. I'm not as good a fan as I once was but from this point on every year my ears perk up and I feel the old stirring for Americas pastime sport.
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