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He went down in piece by piece. First a Falcon bent his head in a funny way weeks ago. He came back and threw touchdowns and made Ned and me jump in our bar seats. "Dad," said Ned, "high five!" Then a Raven hit Griffin on a slide and made his yellow-stockinged leg twitch funny like a tree limb in a stiff wind. Then Robert Griffin himself send the final message, sprinting out of bounds during his first playoff game, a yard or two from the Seahawks' end zone, and he took off his own helmet and everyone except his coach knew the magical first year was over.
About a year ago Ned got wound up to play football -- real, helmeted concussion-oriented football -- and late last summer I said maybe he and I would head to FedEx Field this year. Sure, I said, train down, hotel in suburban D.C., tickets to FedEx off Craigslist.
There was a plan that evaporated like many plans in my life since becoming a dad. Okay, Ned. So after Hebrew school next Sunday let's say we head to Dorreans. It’s spelled “Dorrian’s”, and some might remember it as the place Robert Chambers met Jennifer Levin that night of the 1986 rough-sex murder in Central Park. Bum rap for the bar, because these days it’s a hell of a place to bring your 12-year-old whose religious school is just a few blocks away and who may or may not just be following a pro football team just because his dad does.
Robert Griffin III (RG3) was the rookie sensation quarterback of the Washington Redskins this year. He played high school ball at Copperas Cove, Texas. If you go on that school’s site and click “Athletics,” you can custom-make a T shirt for Ned in yellow and maroon with the number 10 on the back with “Griffin III” on top of it. (I do this for him.) RG3 could run as far as he could pass, at least until his knee bent like a limb. And he could pass far. On Thanksgiving (at Dallas, 4 p.m., FOX), Ned’s grandfather said he hadn’t seen RG 3 yet. “You’re in for a treat,” I said.
He was: RG3 still moved over a football field then the way water runs over rocks in a stream.
“Are you showing the Steelers game?” I say at Dorrian’s, being the dad who brings his kid to bars and who hopes his kid notices that real fans of an NFL team designate individual games by the name of the opposing team. They show us to the corner table where Ned and I, in the weeks ahead, will sit to watch the Steelers, Panthers, the Eagles’ game. Here we’ll sit. “Ned, want a Sprite?”
He does, week after week. He cheers with me and we high five. This bar plays “Hail to the Redskins!” in this place after each Washington touchdown. After the Steelers and Panthers games, they play the song a lot. Ned and I take three weeks off from Dorrian’s during the Cowboys, Giants and Ravens games – locally shown in the case of the first two, and we were puking the third. The third game, it will turn out, will be the key to the rest of our time at Dorrian’s as that’s when RG3’s knee did the tree limb thing.
Ned sits silent as RG3 folds up. I sit silent too.
I miss RG now, on the eve of the Super Bowl. Now we – are Ned and I a “we”? – wait in another off season that feels like temporary death, the fans who have control over what these rich young men do. No control even as I’ve brought my kid into the grown-up dark of the bar to sip a Sprite and cheer cheer cheer.
Ned and Alex and I get about halfway up the block from our apartment building this morning when Alex starts stopping in his walk.
“Bus?” Alex says, “Bus?”
“Alex, there is no bus this morning. Strike. We have to take the subway this morning, with Ned.”
We take the subway: Ned will get off at E. 68th Street, like he always does, for his school. Difference is, Alex and I will ride with him and travel on for another six stops on the 6 line to the street where Alex’s school is. “Ned, is this about normal for the 6?” I ask midway through the ride. He shrugs. “A little heavier than normal?” He nods.
Earlier, after Ned had clicked on the local news station over his cereal, he asked what was going on with this school bus strike. “Ned,” I said, “here’s the deal. It used to be people were kept according to how long they’d be on a job. In other words, being senior meant they laid off people junior to you who made less money. But now, they lay off people who are senior and who make more money because they figure it’s better to keep the people who make less money.” I was laid off in 2009 because of such reasoning.
Now they want to do this to the senior drivers. Union officials said New York City bus drivers will stay on strike until the city agrees to put a job protection clause back into their contract. More than 8,000 bus drivers and matrons went on strike Wednesday morning, meaning some 150,000 students (one of them Alex) to find other ways to get to class. “The first days will be extremely chaotic,” said NYC schools chancellor Dennis Walcott. Drivers with years of seniority worry their experience will make them too expensive to hire unless job protection provisions are included.
Most of the kids affected have what our society, when somebody else’s money isn’t at stake, has called “special needs.” I sort of see the union's point, but I also sort of wish they'd waited five years. Last time NYC had a strike like this, I was a high school junior and schoolchildren of my own were a dreaded thought (though a wife who looks like Jill certainly was not). Grandpa calls to ask if there’s any problem with Ned’s transportation. No, Ned takes the subway to and from school himself, and he often stops after school to play football on the playground or do his homework in the library.
On the comments section of the local news site some parents say traffic is great without school buses – drivers who flash their yellows with only one car behind them, drivers who slash across lanes – and that parents should take their kids to school anyway. Others point out that parents who’ve just secured new jobs or who work on hourly contract lose a boss’s regard or real dollars because of this mess. Some other readers say isn’t it all too bad?
Yes. But who speaks for us? Alex and the people like, our family and the people like us? Who speaks for me and my son when that one car behind the flashing-yellow bus decides Screw it and slips by the side of my son by just a few inches? All the agencies and all the government initials that seem to be there when we want something they can provide are absent in the busing news stories. That leaves this reporter and this dad with the idea that we’re toothless in this argument. I wish people would just admit it.