Braves:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 76â78
That was the proof ! The Dodgers won the pennant! History had been changed, and it was all because of me .
âI did it!â I shouted.
âDid what ?â my mother called from downstairs. âCome down and tell us whatâs going on, Joey.â
For once in my life, I had done exactly what I set out to do. I had traveled back in time and changed the historical record, just as I had intended.
I pulled The Baseball Encyclopedia off my bookshelf and flipped to the section where it says who won the pennant every year. It said the same thing that I read online. The Dodgers won the 1951 pennant.
Even paperbound books had been changed! How could that be? It didnât matter. I didnât care. It happened. Thatâs all that counted. And it was because of me .
What a rush! I felt such a feeling of euphoria, a feeling of power. I ran downstairs to tell my mom and Uncle Wilbur the good news.
âI did it!â I shouted even before I got to the first floor. âI changed history! I am all-powerful! Bow down before me!â
âCalm down,â my mother said. âHow did you change history, Joey?â
âI wiped Bobby Thomsonâs Shot Heard Round the World right out of the record books!â I boasted. âNow itâs like it never happened.â
âBobby who?â Mom asked. âWhat are you talking about?â
âSee!â I said. âThat proves it! You donât even know about it anymore. But you knew about it yesterday, before I left.â
âYouâre talking crazy, Joey,â my mother said.
âThe boy is loco,â said Uncle Wilbur.
âYou need something to eat,â my mom told me. âCome on, wash your hands. Iâm about to put food on the table.â
I stopped. Wait a minute. A thought had crossedmy mind. If Thomson didnât hit the Shot Heard Round the World, and Branca didnât throw the pitch that became the Shot Heard Round the World . . .
âHow did the game end?â I asked.
âBeats me,â said my mother. âI donât even know what game youâre talking about. Come eat.â
I looked to Uncle Wilbur. He wasnât a diehard baseball fanatic, but he followed the game. Surely he would know what happened. Heâd been a young man back then.
âDo you know what happened in the last game of 1951?â I asked him.
âHow should I know?â Uncle Wilbur told me. âThat was over sixty years ago. It was just another game.â
âBut youâve heard of Ralph Branca and Bobby Thomson, havenât you?â I asked.
âNope,â he replied.
âWhat about Willie Mays?â I asked.
âWillie who?â said my mother.
âWait. What?â I asked. âYou mean to say youâve never heard of Willie Mays?â
âWasnât he that guy who used to make infomercials for OxiClean or something?â asked my mom.
âThat was Billy Mays!â I shouted. âWillie Mays is one of the most famous baseball players in history! How could you not know that name? Even people who donât follow baseball know about Willie Mays.â
âNever heard of the guy,â said Uncle Wilbur.
I couldnât believe it.
âWait a minute, are you putting me on?â I asked, looking back and forth between the two of them. My mother has been known to play pranks on me from time to time, but my uncle does not joke.
âAre you feeling all right, Joey?â my mother asked. âMaybe you have a temperature.â
Maybe I did. I felt myself sweating. She put her hand on my forehead.
âIâll be right back,â I said. Then I dashed back upstairs.
âWhat happened to Willie Mays?â I mumbled to myself as I typed his name on my keyboard.
Willie Robertson. Willie Nelson. Willie Geist. Willie McBrides . . .
There was no Wikipedia entry for Willie Mays! How could that
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