Robert Adame, RIP
Robert Adame, RIP
another take- away from Mercedes days
he went by BA, to his friends
and he was my friend,
though I am sworn to secrecy as
to what those two letters meant to him,
stood for.
he was number 65
on the fighting Tigers football team.
of 1964.
he played on one side of me,
Brian Schwarz ,number 67
played on the other, both guards,
I was at center.
I was the lightweight
of the interior line.
I guess coach Hild
though it better to have
the best blockers, guards, do the
hard work, while
my job was snap the ball
to the quarterback, either
Darius Herold or Jesse Villareal,
and then get in the way
of defensemen trying
to get into the backfield.
we thought we had a pretty good team,
won some games we had been
picked to lose, and vice versa.
but that is not what the thrust of
this piece is about, no.
basically Bobby and I grew up
at the same time
but he was years ahead
in the category of worldly wisdom.
OK, maybe not wisdom,
but experience.
junior year in high school,
sixty years ago, nineteen sixty two,
we both raised pigs
for the stock show
under the guidance of
Mr. James Dollary.
I had a Duroc, Bobby had
a Poland China.
time came for us to enter them
and we both made it past the sifter,
Mr. Bob (big Bob) Frix
and we were shown
in which stall to put them.
Bobby and I were to be “pen pals”,
as were our pigs.
the big deal was
we got to spend the nights
at the stock show with them
and sleep on the hay
in the stalls.
wow! two nights away from
home and parents.
we had our foot long hotdog
suppers and went
back to the pen.
Bobby was bored,
and the carnival was about to close,
so he said ‘come on, let’s go do something’.
the ‘something’ was to drive his old blue car
to the Blue Bar, which his father Joe owned.
I waited in the car while he went in.
he came out shortly with two Listerine bottles.
only it was not Listerine
they were filled with ,
it was tequila.
he said not to open them, as if I would…
so he put them under the front seat.
we went back to the pigs
where I watched Bobby take a swig,
so I did the same thing.
it was my first ever drink of straight alcohol,
my ears still ring.
in ten minutes my world
went sideways, my pig Hamlet,
was up in the air and I had
to hold on the fence to stand up.
Bobby asked if I had ever had tequila before,
no, nor anything else…
I swore there and then
to never repeat that, and have not,
though I like a diluted margarita,
every now and again,
when it is hot.
at least twenty five years ago,
I was in San Francisco
on business and decided to call
Fred Johnston, an orthodontist now,
just to say hey,
I was in town.
Fred was Tiger number eighty five, then.
he came to the phone and told me
straight away that
Bobby Adame had died the night before.
I was stunned, stopped still.
Fred and I talked about him, B.A..
I had little to say
except I wished I could go
to his services
which I did not, couldn’t,
but he nor his life would not be forgotten.
it has not been.
I read my Enterprises and keep up
with his brother Rodger,
now the Tiger’s headcoach,
I believe, and what a great job
he is doing, and of course
think of the one and only B.A..
so I write this remembrance
of Robert Adame, today.
who passed at age fifty one,
a number familiar to me…
Que le vaya con Dios bien, eh?
Lentz
Number 51