Boston Herald

SENIORS MAKE FINAL MEMORY

Last Thanksgivi­ng game unforgetta­ble

- Twitter: @GerryCalla­han

The alarm will go off even earlier than usual tomorrow, but somehow it won’t be so tough to get up and out of bed. You couldn’t sleep any later if you tried. You’ll be awake half the night and into the morning, staring at the ceiling and anxiously looking ahead to the big game.

The last football game of your life.

You will go to bed tonight with butterflie­s in your stomach, and they will have babies while you sleep and do a number on you in the morning. You’ll look outside and see the rain, but you really won’t mind. It could be the last time you ever play in the mud. It should be fun. You’ll try to eat some breakfast, but then the car horn will sound. It’s your ride. Grab the bag. Time to go.

At home, they will wish you luck for the last time. Your older brother will yell at you to kick some butt today. You knew that was coming. His team lost a tough one on Thanksgivi­ng Day, and he never will forget it.

When you get to the locker room, there will be a different kind of tension in the air. The music will be a little softer, the small talk a little quieter. You’ll put on the pads a little slower because you might never do it again. There were days when you thought you’d never miss this dirty, smelly, sweaty locker room, but tomorrow definitely will not be one of those days. You’ll do a lot of things in the next few years, go to college, get married, have kids, start a life, but you’ll never do this again. You’ll never buckle up your chinstrap, look across the huddle at your best friend and just go out and play hard together. Now you know: You’ll miss it a lot.

You are a senior in high school, and a couple of your teammates hope to play next year in college. They hope this is just a step, the first chapter in a long, glorious football career. There was a time when you had the same goal, the dream, but now, deep down inside, you’re pretty sure it never will happen. This is it, the end of the line. Tomorrow will be your famous final scene on a football field, Thanksgivi­ng Day, and for the boys under the pads and helmets, there never will be anything like it.

Tomorrow it’s just you and your buddies playing for your families, your school, your girlfriend­s and your hometown. You have played nine or 10 games this season, but you never saw a crowd like the one you will see tomorrow morning. All the college kids are home. Everyone has the day off. Nothing else is going on. Just this. Your game. Your day. They will be lined up in the end zones and watching from atop the nearby hill and squeezing into the stands on both sides of the field. When you run from the locker room to the field before the game, you will see the line at the ticket booth, a line that stretches back three or four generation­s.

In that line, you will see the guys who played here in the years ahead of you. Some of them played here before you were born, maybe even before your father was born. Who knows? Maybe you’ll see the kid who wore your number before you did.

Remember how you looked up to him a couple of years ago, how you only wanted to someday play like him? Tomorrow he will be looking out at you, cheering for you. Tomorrow, finally, you’ll be playing like him. And take a look along the sideline. Maybe a young kid is going to be looking up at you. Maybe he hopes to wear your number next year. And next year you’ll be in the stands, with your buddies and your memories of this day, the last time you wore the pads. You’ll see him out there. You’ll cheer. You’ll know just how he feels.

Everything will look a little different, a little clearer and brighter, like the first time you walked into Fenway Park. The grass will be greener, the uniforms cleaner. It will be like watching a movie, and you’re in it. It won’t even feel like a football game until the first time you run down on a kickoff and smash heads with a kid from the next town. It’ll feel like you are standing in the center of the universe, with all eyes upon you, as if nothing more vital is happening anywhere in the world.

When he calls you all together for his pregame speech, your coach will let it all hang out. As his speeches go, this will be the heavy artillery. He’ll remind you that everyone is watching. He’ll say this is the one game they will remember forever. He’ll choke back tears, and at least for now, you won’t wonder if they are real. You’ll eat it up. You’ll feel like you can carry the gym on your back as you explode out of the locker room and onto the field.

The game will fly by as if someone has his hand on the fast-forward button. You’ll take a couple good hits and give a few back, but nothing will hurt. Not on this day. The game will go back and forth and down to the wire, like they always do on Thanksgivi­ng Day. Your team will pull it out at the end, but as you walk off the field, you won’t remember much of anything. It’ll be an exhilarati­ng blur. You’ll hug your teammates, shake a lot of hands and pull off the pads and the uniform for the last time. You’ll head home for Thanksgivi­ng dinner, a little sore, a little tired, a little older.

You’ll make plans with your buddies for later tomorrow night, knowing things never will be the same. You’ll never get the feeling back you had out there on the field. Next year, you will sleep a little later. You’ll get in line and buy a ticket and watch the game from the hill.

You’ll look for your old number, and you’ll feel pretty good if the kid can play at all.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY NANCY LANE ?? ONE FOR THE AGES: One last battle with your teammates in front of family and friends will be something you’ll remember forever.
STAFF PHOTO BY NANCY LANE ONE FOR THE AGES: One last battle with your teammates in front of family and friends will be something you’ll remember forever.
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