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Narrative Essay on Sports
The Rhythm of the Sideline The air in the gymnasium always carried a specific, heavy scent: a mixture of floor wax, old leather, and the metallic tang of...
The Rhythm of the Sideline
The air in the gymnasium always carried a specific, heavy scent: a mixture of floor wax, old leather, and the metallic tang of sweat that seemed to permeate the very bricks of the building. For four years, that scent was the backdrop of my winters. As a senior on the varsity basketball team, my relationship with the sport was defined not by the roar of the crowd during a fast break, but by the rhythmic squeak of sneakers on hardwood during the 6:00 a.m. practices. I was a "benchwarmer," a term often used with a hint of derision, but one that I carried with a quiet, complicated pride.
Being a bench player is an exercise in sustained readiness. You are a spectator with a jersey, a student of the game who watches from a distance of six feet. While the starters moved in a blur of coordinated aggression, I sat on the hard plastic chairs, my warm-up jacket zipped to my chin, analyzing the defensive rotations and the opposing guard’s tendency to drive left. My role was to be the "scout team" during the week, mimicking the opponents' plays so our stars could beat them. It was a selfless, grueling kind of labor that offered no statistical reward.