by Rich Wallace
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Chapter 1 - Playing Time
Chapter 2 - The Discount Bin
Chapter 3 - Speed and Brains
Chapter 4 - Special Attention
Chapter 5 - All About Sports
Chapter 6 - The Kickoff
Chapter 7 - Benched?
Chapter 8 - Never Quit
Chapter 9 - Bad News
Chapter 10 - Left Out
Chapter 11 - The Wrong Sport?
Chapter 12 - Something Different
Chapter 13 - Another Chance
Chapter 14 - The Play of the Year
ALSO BY RICH WALLACE
NOT AGAIN!
The crack of shoulder pad against shoulder pad sent Manny sailing, spinning to the ground as the runner brushed past him. Manny had been blindsided by another blocker just as he was about to make the tackle. . . .
The coaches were shaking their heads and frowning. “You guys are killing us,” Coach Reynolds said in the direction of the kickoff-team players who were scrunched together near the bench.
Manny took a seat and left his helmet on, staring at the ground. Two kickoffs, two letdowns. Both times the ball carrier had run right through Manny’s territory.
“We’re dead,” Donald said to Manny. “That was all our fault.”
“I know,” Manny said. “We blew it.”
ALSO BY RICH WALLACE
Winning Season Series
Double Fake
Fast Company
Technical Foul
Restless: A Ghost’s Story
PUFFIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
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Registered Offices: Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in the United States of America by Viking,
a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2004
Published by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2005
Copyright © Rich Wallace, 2004 All rights reserved
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HAS CATALOGED THE VIKING EDITION AS FOLLOWS:
Wallace, Rich.
The roar of the crowd / by Rich Wallace
p. cm.–(Winning Season ; #1)
Summary: After years of playing nothing but soccer in Hudson City, New Jersey,
Manny has to work very hard to play on the middle school football team, using
determination, speed, and smarts to make up for being small and inexperienced.
ISBN : 978-1-101-54973-5
http://us.penguingroup.com
For Evie
1
Playing Time
Manny was angry. He shifted his weight from his right knee to his left and balled his hand into a fist, wishing there was something to smack. He bit hard on his plastic mouth guard and looked up at the practice field.
Vinnie DiMarco, the quarterback, was rolling out toward the sideline, running almost straight toward Manny and the other subs. DiMarco straight-armed a tackler and wiggled loose, but big Anthony Martin hauled him down and tackled him hard at the sideline.
“Nice hustle, Anthony,” Manny said, leaping to his feet to avoid getting rolled on. Anthony nodded and gave a yawn that stretched his chubby brown face until his eyes were nearly shut. He looked exhausted after an hour of scrimmaging in the hot August sun.
Manny had spent the hour watching the first-string offense battle the first-string defense. He hadn’t been in for even one play. This wasn’t why he’d joined the Hudson City Hornets.
Tired football players stood or kneeled near him, their faces sweaty and their jerseys covered with dirt.
Manny expected to play. So what if he weighed only eighty-seven pounds? He was as tough as anybody out there.
Coach Reynolds walked over near Manny and looked at his clipboard. “You three runts,” he said, pointing at Manny, Donald, and Rico. “Get in there at the linebacker spots after this next play. Show me what you can do.”
About time, Manny thought. He pulled his helmet down over his dark, curly hair and ran in place for a few seconds, then jumped straight up and down a couple of times. He could feel his heart pumping harder. I’m gonna nail somebody.
The next play ended in an incomplete pass, and Manny and the other two trotted onto the field. Manny took his place as middle linebacker. He could hear the defensive linemen panting.
The offense had grinded the ball just over the 50-yard line and had come close to breaking a few long gains. Now DiMarco was calling signals, waiting for the snap. The lone running back went in motion and the ends were split wide. Everything indicated that it would be a pass play.
Don’t get burned, Manny thought. He took a step back in anticipation of a quick pass over the middle. But DiMarco took the snap and immediately rolled out to his right, toward the far sideline.
A lineman raced toward Manny and threw his shoulder into him, but Manny dodged to the side and took only a glancing blow. DiMarco had crossed the line of scrimmage now and was turning downfield, a line of blockers clearing his path.
Manny was fast and he eluded another blocker and angled toward the sideline, sensing that he could catch DiMarco about 30 yards downfield if no one else got there first.
All out, Manny told himself. Show them what you’ve got.
He could feel the dirt kicking up behind him as his cleats drove him toward the ball carrier, tasting the sweat that was trickling off his lip. He was gaining on DiMarco now, cutting down the distance as they raced for the goal line.
DiMarco crossed the 20-yard line, then the 10. Manny was inches away, and he dove, snagging DiMarco’s shin and holding on tight. They crashed to the dirt and the ball shook loose, rolling out of bounds.
Manny leaped up. He’d saved a touchdown. What would the coaches think of that?
But as he looked around he saw that the coaches’ attention was elsewhere. The other players had already started a long, slow lap around the perimeter of the field. No one was even watching.
“Nice tackle,” DiMarco said flatly. “Let’s go.”
“What?” Manny said.
“That’s it. Last play. Coach told us in the huddle. We’ve got five laps to run. Let’s go.”
“You’re kidding me,” Manny said. “I got in for one play?”
“Tough break, huh?”
Manny stood still as DiMarco jogged off.
One play?
A whistle blew. “Pick up that football, kid,” yelled one of the coaches. “Let’s see some hustle.”
Manny grabbed the football and started to run, his face getting hot with anger. Most of his teammates were half a lap ahead already. Manny ran to the sideline and dropped the football in disgust. Then he took off
after the others.
His breath was steady but hard, coming out in short little bursts as he glared ahead and moved faster. Soon he’d passed the stragglers—Anthony and other linemen drained by the scrimmage, and a few lazy backs whose places in the starting lineup were secure.
Manny picked up the pace as he began his second lap, passing DiMarco and some others and taking aim at the leaders. He swung wide to pass a few more in the end zone, then moved into the lead as he headed along the far sideline.
After four laps Manny was well ahead of everyone, and he sprinted the last one at top speed, still seething from his one-play afternoon.
Coach Reynolds was grinning as Manny yanked off his helmet and walked a few yards to catch his breath. “Good running,” he said.
“Right,” Manny said.
“You ought to run cross-country in high school,” the coach said with a laugh.
“Yeah . . . well I ain’t in high school,” Manny said, trying not to let too much venom into his words. “I’m on this team.”
The coach nodded. “I’ll try to remember that,” he said.
“I hope so.”
Coach gave him a stare, but then softened his expression. He pointed a finger at Manny. “Don’t get smart,” he said. “But keep up the hustle. I was watching that last play. There’ll be more chances, believe me.”
2
The Discount Bin
Manny stuck his cleats and mouth guard inside his helmet and carried it all by the face mask. “You coming?” he said to his scrawny friend Donald.
“Yeah,” Donald said. Donald was still kneeling by the cooler of water, wiped out from the five laps. “Give me a second. I’m not a marathoner like you are.”
Manny shrugged. “Small guys like us better be able to run. It’s too easy to get knocked out otherwise.”
They headed across the practice field toward the Boulevard. They both lived on the other side of town, a mile walk from the field. Hudson City was small but dense, the side streets lined with old houses on small lots. The Boulevard was loaded with coffee shops and delis and liquor stores.
“We’ll stop and get a soda,” Manny said.
“You got any money?”
“I’ve got a couple of dollars.”
“I got a quarter in my shoe,” Donald said. “It was digging into my foot the whole time we were running.”
“You’ll survive.”
“Yeah,” Donald said. “But I’m starving.”
“You won’t get much for a quarter.”
“Yeah, I will. There’s always the discount bin.”
They ducked into the small grocery store at the corner of the Boulevard and Ninth, across from St. Joseph’s Church. They had to turn sideways to get through the doorway because of their shoulder pads and the stacks of cardboard boxes on the sidewalk.
“Ahh,” said Manny, shutting his eyes for a second to enjoy the air-conditioned coolness. “What a difference.”
They walked up the canned-soup and pasta aisle toward the baked goods section at the back of the store. The aisles were narrow and stacked high.
“Twinkies,” Donald said. “I need Twinkies.”
They reached the back and Donald started pawing through the discount bin, where items that were turning stale or had ripped packaging were marked down. “No Twinkies,” he said. “Nothing good at all.”
Donald glanced around, then flicked his eyebrows up at Manny. He gently brought his helmet down on an individual-sized apple pie, pushing until the box was partly flattened and the pie filling was coming through the crust.
“Oh,” Donald said in mock surprise. “I didn’t see this pie at first. Looks like a bargain to me.”
Manny shook his head. Donald grabbed the pie and they hurried up the aisle. Manny slid open the door of the soda cooler and took out a couple of bottles; then they got in line to pay.
“This was in the discount bin,” Donald lied to the teenage girl at the register, handing her the pie. “It isn’t marked.”
The girl looked at the pie for a few seconds, twisted her mouth around, and sighed.
“Shouldn’t be more than a quarter,” Donald said.
“Sounds about right,” she answered, and punched in the sale.
They laughed as they left the store. “You shouldn’t do that,” Manny said, but he was grinning.
“It was an emergency,” Donald said. “I’d faint if I had to walk all the way home without eating.”
Manny had been teammates with Donald before, in Little League baseball and on a parish soccer team. Neither had played organized football before this year, but they’d be entering sixth grade in a few days and figured it was about time. Manny was a little surprised they’d made it through the cuts and actually won places on the roster. Now he was wondering if he should have stuck with soccer, where he was sure he’d be playing instead of sitting on the bench.
“That stunk getting in for only one play,” Manny said. “Weren’t you angry?”
“Sort of,” Donald said. “That’s the breaks though. Most of these guys have been playing football since third grade. We’re new at it.”
“Yeah, I guess.”
They walked along in silence for a few minutes, sipping their Cokes and looking at the traffic. They could see the New York City skyline down the hill and across the river.
“Coach said we’d be on some of the special teams, like for kickoffs and punts,” Donald said.
“When did he say that?”
“He told me before practice. He’s going to start working on that tomorrow. Gotta get ready for the game.”
Manny perked up. “Really? You sure? He didn’t say anything to me.”
“Well, he told me.”
“Hope he meant me, too,” Manny said.
“I’m sure he did.”
The season was set to begin on the following Saturday, just eight days away. Under the lights at the high school stadium.
They’d reached Manny’s street. “See you tomorrow,” Manny said.
He put his half-empty soda bottle into one of his cleats and held one shoe in each hand. He put his helmet back on his head and began running up the hill toward his house. In his mind he was racing down the field on a kickoff. The roar of the crowd was deafening.
“Don’t you ever need a rest?” Donald called.
“Nah,” Manny yelled back. “You’ve got to be in shape to run down those kick-returners.”
3
Speed and Brains
Five-year-old Sal was waiting for Manny, leaping down the two front steps as Manny came up the sidewalk.
“Hi, Manny!” he hollered.
“Hey, squirt.”
“Did you do anything great today?” Sal asked his brother, grabbing Manny’s helmet and carrying it up to the porch.
“Sure did,” Manny said. “I made this touchdown-saving tackle right at the goal line, Sal. You should have seen me.”
“You clobbered the guy, Manny?”
“I clobbered him all right. The big-shot quarterback.”
“Wow. You should be the quarterback, Manny.”
Manny laughed. “I’m too quick for that. They need me to run, not pass. What’s for dinner, Sal? I’m starving.”
“I don’t know. Daddy’s not home yet.”
“Okay. I’ll shower.”
Manny entered the kitchen and gave his mom a hug.
“You’re soaked with sweat,” she said. “You must have been working hard.”
“I was. What are you making?”
“Fried fish. It’ll be ready soon. Now go get cleaned up.”
“Cool.”
Manny’s mom worked as a bank teller. His dad was a driver for a package-delivery company. Dad could get home anytime between six and eight, depending on the workload.
Sal followed Manny upstairs to the bedroom they shared. Sal had Legos and trucks spread all over the floor. “You should clean this up, buddy,” Manny said. “I don’t want to step on a Lego and break my ankle.”
“I will. I was playing all afternoon waiting for you. I was trying to build a football stadium. Like the one you’ll be playing in. And the Giants.”
Manny patted Sal’s head and laughed. “I think Giants Stadium is a little bigger than ours,” he said. “We play at the high school field.”
“You should play at Giants Stadium,” Sal said. “You could play for the Giants, couldn’t you?”
“Maybe if I ran through their legs or something,” Manny said. “I’m hardly big enough for the team I’m on.”
Dad was home by the time Manny had showered and dressed. Manny hurried down the stairs.
“Hey, sport,” Dad said. “What’s the word? Sal said you made some big plays today.”
“Just one,” Manny said. “A touchdown-saving tackle.”
“Not bad,” Dad said. “We little guys have to use our speed and our brains, right?”
“Right.”
Dad had been a soccer player and had done some amateur boxing. The boys had a framed photo of him on their wall, fighting in the finals of the New Jersey Golden Gloves tournament at age nineteen. The picture showed him landing a powerful jab to his opponent’s jaw, but Dad had always made it clear that he’d lost the fight. “I wanted that title,” Dad said, “but he was the better fighter and he deserved it. He fought in the Olympic trials a year or so later.”
They sat down to eat. “I’m tired,” Mom said. “Busy day at work.”
“I’m beat, too,” Manny said as he dug into the big plate of food. “And hungry.”
“Better eat a lot,” Sal said. “So you can keep knocking down that quarterback.”
“Yeah,” Manny said. “And so I can help you build that stadium!”
4
Special Attention
The ball was snapped, and Manny shifted on his feet, ready to spring. The momentum was to his right, the tailback barreling toward a hole in the line. Manny charged to the spot, intent on making the tackle, his arms open and tense.
He reached for the tailback, but suddenly his legs went out from under him and he was driven back, falling flat as the runner raced past. He tasted dirt as his face mask hit hard.