The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could move less well; now he was not coming up with the ball with that "perfect technique" Eddie Brannick had once admired, his body beautifully balanced, the ball directly in front of him. Now it was a movement full of desperate lunges. Fortunately he had his great arm, so even off-balance, he was throwing out runners, and each time he'd throw—though it had happened hundreds of prior times—the fans at the Polo Grounds, or elsewhere around the league, would gasp at the low blur that streaked across the diamond, dead on target. But he had more than a powerful arm. He had courage. And on he played, in pain and out.


On Travis "Stonewall" Jackson, from "Stonewall," in Greatest Giants of Them All (1967), p. 172 - Sports-related


The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could move less well; now he was not...

The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could move less well; now he was not...

The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could move less well; now he was not...

The impregnability of his stonewall defense rested on his ability to reach the ball, and then throw it. Now he could move less well; now he was not...