- Published in DDT's Pop Flies
Say Hey Has Gone Away. What Is There to Say?
Willie Mays is my all-time favorite baseball player. He has been ever since I was a boy. Why I came to that conclusion at that young age, I don't know. I never even got to see the Say Hey Kid play in person. It was just a childhood intuition that can be rationalized only as an adult, the attempt to understand what instinct already knew to be true. And while I have long since shunned the idea of "hero worship" and "role models," if I ever embraced those ideas in the first place, as far as I was concerned, Willie Mays has always resided on another, higher plane of existence.
Six weeks after he turned 93, Willie Howard Mays died of heart failure in Palo Alto, California, on June 18. Now the Say Hey Kid does reside on another, higher plane of existence, whatever that may be, whether actual or imaginary, whether, to abuse the hoary cliché, it be "heaven's all-star squad" with all the baseball gods who ascended to the Great Diamond in the Sky before him.
Indeed, I won't reiterate the usual narratives and statistics that form the standard approach for obituaries. Mays's story has been told countless times, and it will continue to be told long after contemporary coverage begins to fade because his story is a part of history just as baseball is a part of history, and it isn't just American history as baseball has long been a prime American cultural export.