Doc: A Memoir

Read Doc: A Memoir Online

Authors: Dwight Gooden,Ellis Henican

Copyright © 2013 by Dwight Gooden and Ellis Henican

All rights reserved

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

Published by Amazon Publishing
P.O. Box 400818
Las Vegas, NV 89140.

Jacket photograph © Marion Ettlinger

Jacket design by Archie Ferguson

ISBN 9781477809891

“Never Would Have Made It”
Writer Credits: Marvin L. Sapp / Matthew Richard Brownie
Copyright: © 2010 Songs Of Universal, Inc. (BMI) / Marvin L. Sapp Music (BMI).
All rights for the world on behalf of Marvin L. Sapp Music administered by Songs Of Universal, Inc. / Unknown Publisher. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

For Ella Gooden, the greatest mom in the world. You have been my true inspiration from the very beginning. You have always been there for me, putting me in the right position to succeed and helping me reach my goals. Whatever the situation, good or bad, you taught me to never give up. You kept me grounded and humbled through my glory years. In the rough times, you always knew what to say. My words cannot come close to explaining what you have meant to me. I can't ever repay you or thank you enough. All I can do is tell you how much I love you, how much I appreciate you and how you really are the greatest mom in the world.
Contents

INTRODUCTION Parade Rest

PART I Dreaming

1 Whose Dream

2 Dark Side

3 Young Phenom

4 Getting There

PART II Playing

5 Rookie Season

6 Cy Season

7 Party Time

8 Series Season

9 Off-Season

PART III Hurting

10 Dusting Off

11 Burning Out

12 Sliding Back

13 Suicide Squeeze

14 No-Hitter

15 Pushing It

16 Some Dad

17 Behind Bars

18 High Low

19 Room Service

PART IV Saving My Life

20 Fame Game

21 Candid Camera

22 Cast-Offs

23 Show Time

24 Staying Strong

25 Judgment Day

26 Ready Steady

27 Why Now?

28 Forward March

About the Authors

INTRODUCTION

Parade Rest

G
ROWN MEN AND WOMEN
were clapping and waving. Little children were yelling themselves hoarse. Secretaries leaned out of upper-floor windows, tossing shredded computer paper to the street. A throbbing mob of blue and orange, people as far you could see, jammed together on the sidewalks, shouting out our names.

“Mookie, Mookie, Mookie!”

“Ray, Ray, Ray!”

Three men in shirts and loosened ties were dancing on a narrow ledge six stories up, doing a high kick they must have stolen from the Radio City Rockettes. One false step—they’d never kick again.

They didn’t look too worried though. They were too stoked to care.

Big-bellied construction workers hugged total strangers, as rolls of toilet paper flew through the air. Wall Street office drones wept tears of joy. If I had to take a guess, I’d say zero New York children made it into school that day. Even some Yankees fans couldn’t help but cheer. Anyone who beat the Red Sox was okay with them.

For only the second time in history, and for the first time in seventeen
years, the New York Mets had won the World Series. We’d finished off the hated team from Boston, and now the official victory parade was rolling up Broadway. The crowds were so huge and so pumped, the wooden police barricades were no more than a suggestion. Every time an open convertible passed, another wave of fans would burst forward. Then the cops would run into the street and shoo them back.

So this is what two million people looks like?

The Canyon of Heroes, this stretch of Lower Manhattan is called, for all the great achievers who have been celebrated here. Not just sports champions, but people who really changed the world: Charles Lindbergh, Douglas MacArthur, Albert Einstein, the Apollo 11 astronauts, the American hostages released from Iran—all of them have taken that slow ride up Broadway to City Hall. And now it was our turn, this bad-boy mob of talent and heart, some of the greatest guys you could ever play ball with, as loud and rambunctious as the city we’d just won it all for.

Davey in the lead car followed by two sanitation trucks with snowplows, sent to clear the knee-deep confetti.

Keith and Gary, Howard and Jesse, pumping their firsts in the air. Lenny, Wally, and Tim, looking thrilled in their open cars. Darryl waving from a bright-red Cadillac. Ray Knight, the series MVP, was positively beaming. Pitcher Ron Darling’s smile was so bright, he could have subbed for the lights at Shea Stadium.

Every time a politician tried to speak—Ed Koch or Alfonse D’Amato or Mario Cuomo—boos swelled up from the crowd. No one had come to hear
them.
The fans were there to cheer their champions—and themselves. “Thank you all for making a dream come true,” our catcher Gary Carter said, and the people roared.

Of course they did. It was their dream too.

“This is so much fun,” our manager, Davey Johnson, told the people on the sidewalk and the many, many others watching on TV. “I think we ought to try to do it again next year.”

Mookie Wilson, our switch-hitting center fielder, was thinking even bigger. “Nineteen eighty-six,” he thundered, “the year of the Mets. Nineteen eighty-seven, year of the Mets. Nineteen eighty-eight, year of the Mets.” Our victory was barely twelve hours old, and Mookie was already talking dynasty.

It was a glorious celebration. And right at the front of the crowd, a small boy was standing with a hand-lettered sign.

WE LOVE YOU, DOC,
it said.

Too bad I couldn’t thank him or even wave.

I really wish I could have. But as everyone gathered in Lower Manhattan, I was twenty-five miles away.

As my teammates rode through the Canyon of Heroes, I was alone in my bed in Roslyn, Long Island, with the curtains closed and the TV on, missing what should have been the greatest morning of my life.

I’d spent all night in a sketchy housing project apartment near the Roosevelt Field mall, getting wasted with a bunch of people I hardly even knew. I was drinking shots of vodka. I was snorting lines of cocaine. And more lines of cocaine—and more lines of cocaine. I didn’t leave the drug party until after the sun came up. As my teammates toasted our triumph, I was nursing a head-splitting coke-and-booze hangover, too spent, too paranoid, and too mad at myself to drag my sorry butt to my own victory parade.

I had never felt so lonely before.

I hope I never feel that way again.

You’d have to look hard to find another young athlete in any sport who had risen so high so quickly and then fallen so hard. Too much, too fast, too young, my life was spinning wildly, and I was the one who didn’t have a clue.

I’d been the National League Rookie of the Year. I was the youngest player ever to appear in an All-Star Game, and when I stepped on the mound—one, two, three—I retired the side. Three days before my twenty-first birthday, I won the Cy Young Award as the league’s best
pitcher. That year, I also won the pitching Triple Crown, leading in wins, strikeouts, and earned runs. No pitcher had done that in thirteen years, and it would take another dozen before anyone did it again. For most of that breathless run, there was truly no stopping me.
Sports Illustrated
called me “Dwight the Great.” I was featured on the cover of
Time.
Nike hung a 105-foot mural of me on Manhattan’s West Forty-Second Street. I was facing west, coming out of my wind-up, looking like I just might hurl that ball across the Hudson River to New Jersey and beyond.

Heads up, LA!

And why not? With all that I’d accomplished as the Mets’ young pitching ace, who could rule anything out?

New York’s combative sportswriters could hardly agree on anything, but all of them seemed to agree on this: in a very short time at a very early age, I had become one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball, well on my way to greatest-ever territory. The Hall of Fame talk had already started. And now, to cap it all off, my team had just won the World Series in a come-from-behind seventh-game victory in front of the home crowd at Shea Stadium.

If I had died that minute, I would have died a happy man. In hindsight, that might have saved a lot of people a lot of grief—me at the top of the list.

I was still only twenty-one.

After Jesse Orosco threw his final game seven strikeout and the Red Sox were put away at last, I ran out of the bullpen, where I’d been warming up for a late-game relief call, and out to the pitcher’s mound, dry-diving onto a twisted pile of my teammates. In an instant, it seemed like the whole team was there. Hugging, slapping each other’s backs, rolling around together in the infield dirt. Fans were bursting past police officers in riot gear, including some cops on horseback, and jumping onto our pile. As quickly as possible, team security hustled the players off the field and into the safety of the locker room.

The party revved up fast. Champagne corks were flying as the TV crews grabbed their postgame sound bites. The players were shouting each other’s names. People started pouring champagne over other people’s heads. All of us agreed how great we were.

But in the early craziness of the locker room, two thoughts were crowding all the others out of my head:
I gotta call my dealer. And I gotta call my dad.

My father was watching at home with my mom in Tampa. I called him from the clubhouse phone, getting it out of the way as soon as I’d had my second gulp of champagne. I always called my dad after a game. He deserved this victory as much as I did. “Yeah, it feels great, Dad—thanks,” I told him before hanging up the phone. “I love you.”

I traded a few more handshakes and hugs.

By then, the beer and the hard booze were coming out—the vodka and the Rémy Martin. That stuff was always kept out of view of the reporters, tucked away in the back of the players’ lockers or in the equipment room. But it magically appeared that night. After what we’d just accomplished, who was going to complain? I had a couple of rounds, Absolut and grapefruit.

Then I grabbed my chance.

I didn’t think anyone would notice in the excitement of the moment, and no one did. I slipped into the trainer’s office, where I knew I could make my other call without being disturbed. I had the number memorized. I tried to appear casual, like maybe I was ordering a pizza.

“Hey, I’ll be coming by later tonight,” I said to my dealer.

“Congratulations, man!” he said.

“Yeah, thanks,” I said. “Just make sure you’re available, okay? It’s gonna be a big party.”

“I got whatever you need,” he told me.

The drinks were still flowing. People were still hugging and calling each other’s names. Guys who’d had little squabbles during the season were making up, shaking champagne bottles, and spraying each other.
I bumped into Bob Ojeda, who was shouting, “I love you, man!” I told Ron Darling how awesome he’d pitched in the series. Lenny Dykstra, as bouncy and wide-eyed as ever, looked as though he could hardly believe he was there—or that he’d whacked that clutch game three home run.

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