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By Jerilyn Watson Lou loved to play baseball games on the streets of New York City, where he grew up. Yet he did not try to play on any sports teams when he entered high school. He thought of himself as a ball player only for informal games with friends. Then one of Lou's high-school teachers heard that he could hit the ball very hard. The teacher ordered Lou to come to one of the school games. VOICE TWO: So Lou Gehrig went to that game. He became a valued member of the high school team. He also played other sports. The boy who feared noise and people was on his way to becoming a star baseball player. VOICE ONE: Lou played in Hartford that summer after completing high school. He earned money to help his parents. His father was often sick and without a job. VOICE TWO: But, the fact that Gehrig had accepted money for playing professional baseball got him into trouble. Officials of teams in Columbia's baseball league learned that Lou had played for the professional team in Hartford. The other teams got him banned from playing for Columbia during his first year at the college. Gehrig was permitted to play during his second year, though. He often hit the ball so far that people walking in the streets near the baseball field were in danger of being hit. VOICE ONE: The New York Yankees major league baseball organization came to the rescue. The Yankees offered Lou three-thousand-five-hundred dollars to finish the Nineteen-Twenty-Three baseball season. That was a great deal of money in those days. Gehrig happily accepted the offer. His parents were sad that he was leaving Columbia. Yet his decision ended their financial problems. VOICE TWO: VOICE ONE: Lou Gehrig began to play first base for the Yankees regularly in early June of Nineteen-Twenty-Five. He played well that day and for the two weeks that followed. Then Gehrig was hit in the head by a throw to second base. He should have left the game. But he refused to. He thought that if he left, he never again would have a chance to play regularly. VOICE TWO: Gehrig, however, almost did not play. His mother had to have an operation. He felt he should be with her. Missus Gehrig and the Yankees' manager urged him to play in the World Series. His mother recovered. More major threats to Gehrig's record of continuous games played took place in Nineteen-Twenty-Nine. His back, legs and hands were injured. He was hit on the head by a throw one day as he tried to reach home plate. Another Yankee player said, "Every time he played, it hurt him." VOICE ONE: Lou Gehrig now was becoming one of the greatest players in baseball history. He hit three home runs in the World Series of Nineteen-Thirty-Two. His batting average was five-twenty-nine. The manager of an opposing team, the Chicago Cubs, said of Gehrig, "I did not think a player could be that good." VOICE TWO: As time went on, Gehrig played in game after game. He appeared not to have thought about his record number of continuous games played until a newspaper reporter talked to him about it. An accident during a special game played in Virginia almost broke the record. Gehrig was taken to a hospital after being hit in the head with a pitch. He played the next day, though. He just wore a bigger hat so people could not see his injury. VOICE ONE: Gehrig finished that season with a batting average of almost three-hundred. He scored one-hundred-fifteen runs. He batted in almost as many runs. But the Lou Gehrig of that year was not the Lou Gehrig of earlier years. He walked and ran like an old man. He had trouble with easy catches and throws. Yet his manager commented, "Everybody is asking what is wrong with Gehrig. I wish I had more players on this club doing as poorly as he is doing." VOICE TWO: Lou Gehrig had played in two-thousand-one-hundred-thirty games without missing any that his team played. Gehrig observed his thirty-sixth birthday on June Nineteenth. That same day, doctors told him he had a deadly disease that attacks the muscles in the body. The disease is called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Today, it is known as Lou Gehrig's Disease. VOICE ONE: On July Fourth, Nineteen-Thirty-Nine, more than sixty-thousand people went to Yankee Stadium to honor one of America's greatest baseball players. Gehrig told the crowd he still felt he was lucky. His words echoed throughout the stadium. "I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the Earth. I might have been given a bad break, but I've got an awful lot to live for. Thank you." |

