Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The Dude Abideth No More

If you assume, as most people do, that Lenny Dykstra used steroids, then the fact that all those muscles and pounds seemed to vanish as quickly as they appeared, was hardly a mystery. Sadly, a decade-and-a-half later, watching the former Phillie shed what little remains of his self-respect and reputation is no less unsurprising, no less disturbing. By now you're familiar with Dykstra's descent to Lindsay Lohan-like levels of self-destruction. When the bells tolled at midnight, the luxurious lifestyle he'd assembled after his playing career - the $18.5 million mansion, the $400,000 Mayback roadster, the Gulfstream jet - all turned back into pumpkins. At 48, he's lost his marriage, his fortune, his dignity. He's been indicted for allegedly stealing and selling items from his bankrupt estate. He's apparently abused and cheated those who worked for him and with him. He's been forced to hock the memorabilia he amassed in a sensational career. A limousine driver who ferried him around Manhattan for little compensation and considerable headaches tells a story of how Dykstra, unshaven, unwashed, in the same clothes he'd been wearing for three days, had to sleep in an all-night Kinko's and borrow $15 for a sandwich and two cans of Red Bull that he immediately mixed with vodka and gulped down. As an All Star-caliber ballplayer, Dykstra's talents hid the faults. And like the talents, the faults were enormous, San Andreas-like. He was rude, crude, coarse and completely self-absorbed, traits you'd see displayed - often simultaneously -- if you watched him for more than five seconds. Walking from the clubhouse to the dugout, say, he'd unleash streams of tobacco juice on whatever the floor surface happened to be, curse like a sailor and ignore anyone who dared try to enter his ego-inflated bubble. At the height of his success, he treated the world as if it were created to serve him - and he treated it badly. He berated waiters, casino dealers, emergency-room nurses, gardeners, the women he met on the road. And yet, on those rare occasions when you got beneath the surface with him, there was something impishly appealing about Dykstra. He liked playing the role he created. "The Dude" was a dedicated but dumb baseball lifer with California sensibilities and not much sense. It was all an act, of course. He was smart, much smarter than he let on, much smarter than those of us who snickered at his behavior and thought we knew him. Back in the mid-'90s, when I was the Inquirer's Phillies beat writer, I liked Dykstra. I was the reporter for what he called "the big-dog" paper and, solely because of its circulation numbers, he sometimes made time for me when he'd blow off others. In other words, he used me. But I'd like to think I used him too. His quirkiness made good copy. Ride with him in his 12-cylinder Mercedes, visit him at his restored Devon home ("Dude, you've got to see the bathroom!"), cover his "Tonight Show" appearance and you invariably walked away with some great stories - only some of which were suitable for a family newspaper. He liked the character I'd portray in my stories. And he consumed those stories voraciously. Years later, Dykstra would quote me, verbatim, a line I'd written about him. He knew such favorable publicity didn't hurt in his quest for that fat new contract he wanted and eventually got. He also knew I had an MVP vote. I wish I'd been honest, brave and smart enough to portray the real Dykstra back then, the one whose life, we all sensed then, was headed for the same kind of ugly smashup he and Darren Daulton had with that Main Line tree after John Kruk's bachelor party. Instead, I focused on the quirks and the talents, overlooking or ignoring the faults and shortcomings. Maybe the closest I ever got to revealing the real Dykstra came in a 1994 story on his childhood. Talking to his parents, it became clear that whatever it was that made him a great ballplayer might also have contained the seeds of his self-destruction. "There are lots of kids - bigger kids, stronger kids - who love the game and are successful early," I wrote then. "Yet most of them never pick up a bat after high school. Something more, something inside Dykstra created the fierce drive that has turned him into a wealthy baseball superstar. And unless his parents are mistaken, that secret lies in his childhood, too. "It probably began, they said, when the older kids in his Garden Grove, Calif., neighborhood wouldn't let him play because he was too small; when coaches looked at that undersized, skinny, towheaded youngster and told him he had no future in baseball; when opposing players mocked him, and when, as the only freshman on Garden Grove High School's baseball team, he was forced by teammates to pick up their dirty socks and sweaty athletic supporters from the locker-room floor." A recent photo of Dykstra leaving a New York courthouse revealed a great deal. Graying, his tie slightly askew, his hair and clothes slightly disheveled, a long strand of red licorice dangling from his lips, he looked like the spoiled, troubled kid that, at his core, he's really always been. I like Lenny Dyskstra. Even now. But it's difficult to envision his redemption. Once he was one of baseball's greatest spotlight players. Now he's trapped in the unremitting glare we direct at fallen stars. You can only hope he'll manage to slip into the shadows before the light goes out for good.

43 comments

The Dude Abideth No More

POSTED: Thursday, May 12, 2011, 10:57 AM
Lenny Dykstra

Which coach/manager is the sharpest?
Doug Collins
Peter Laviolette
Charlie Manuel
Andy Reid

If you assume, as most people do, that Lenny Dykstra used steroids, then the fact that all those muscles and pounds seemed to vanish as quickly as they appeared, was hardly a mystery. Sadly, a decade-and-a-half later, watching the former Phillie shed what little remains of his self-respect and reputation is no less unsurprising, no less disturbing.

By now you're familiar with Dykstra's descent to Lindsay Lohan-like levels of self-destruction. When the bells tolled at midnight, the luxurious lifestyle he'd assembled after his playing career – the $18.5 million mansion, the $400,000 Maybach roadster, the Gulfstream jet – all turned back into pumpkins. At 48, he's lost his marriage, his fortune, his dignity.

He's been indicted for allegedly stealing and selling items from his bankrupt estate. He's apparently abused and cheated those who worked for him and with him. He's been forced to hock the memorabilia he amassed in a sensational career. A limousine driver who ferried him around Manhattan for little compensation and considerable headaches tells a story of how Dykstra, unshaven, unwashed, in the same clothes he'd been wearing for three days, had to sleep in an all-night Kinko's and borrow $15 for a sandwich and two cans of Red Bull that he immediately mixed with vodka and gulped down.

As an All Star-caliber ballplayer, Dykstra's talents hid the faults. And like the talents, the faults were enormous, San Andreas-like. He was rude, crude, coarse and completely self-absorbed, traits you'd see displayed – often simultaneously - if you watched him for more than five seconds. Walking from the clubhouse to the dugout, say, he'd unleash streams of tobacco juice on whatever the floor surface happened to be, curse like a sailor and ignore anyone who dared try to enter his ego-inflated bubble. At the height of his success, he treated the world as if it were created to serve him – and he treated it badly. He berated waiters, casino dealers, emergency-room nurses, gardeners, the women he met on the road.

And yet, on those rare occasions when you got beneath the surface with him, there was something impishly appealing about Dykstra. He liked playing the role he created. "The Dude" was a dedicated but dumb baseball lifer with California sensibilities and not much sense. It was all an act, of course. He was smart, much smarter than he let on, much smarter than those of us who snickered at his behavior and thought we knew him.

Back in the mid-'90s, when I was the Inquirer's Phillies beat writer, I liked Dykstra. I was the reporter for what he called "the big-dog" paper and, solely because of its circulation numbers, he sometimes made time for me when he'd blow off others. In other words, he used me. But I'd like to think I used him too. His quirkiness made good copy. Ride with him in his 12-cylinder Mercedes, visit him at his restored Devon home ("Dude, you've got to see the bathroom!"), cover his "Tonight Show" appearance and you invariably walked away with some great stories – only some of which were suitable for a family newspaper. He liked the character I'd portray in my stories. And he consumed those stories voraciously. Years later, Dykstra would quote me, verbatim, a line I'd written about him. He knew such favorable publicity didn't hurt in his quest for that fat new contract he wanted and eventually got. He also knew I had an MVP vote.

I wish I'd been honest, brave and smart enough to portray the real Dykstra back then, the one whose life, we all sensed then, was headed for the same kind of ugly smashup he and Darren Daulton had with that Main Line tree after John Kruk's bachelor party. Instead, I focused on the quirks and the talents, overlooking or ignoring the faults and shortcomings.

Maybe the closest I ever got to revealing the real Dykstra came in a 1994 story on his childhood. Talking to his parents, it became clear that whatever it was that made him a great ballplayer might also have contained the seeds of his self-destruction.

"There are lots of kids - bigger kids, stronger kids - who love the game and are successful early," I wrote then. "Yet most of them never pick up a bat after high school. Something more, something inside Dykstra created the fierce drive that has turned him into a wealthy baseball superstar. And unless his parents are mistaken, that secret lies in his childhood, too.

"It probably began, they said, when the older kids in his Garden Grove, Calif., neighborhood wouldn't let him play because he was too small; when coaches looked at that undersized, skinny, towheaded youngster and told him he had no future in baseball; when opposing players mocked him, and when, as the only freshman on Garden Grove High School's baseball team, he was forced by teammates to pick up their dirty socks and sweaty athletic supporters from the locker-room floor."

A recent photo of Dykstra leaving a New York courthouse revealed a great deal. Graying, his tie slightly askew, his hair and clothes slightly disheveled, a long strand of red licorice dangling from his lips, he looked like the spoiled, troubled kid that, at his core, he's really always been.

I like Lenny Dyskstra. Even now. But it's difficult to envision his redemption. Once he was one of baseball's greatest spotlight players. Now he's trapped in the unremitting glare we direct at fallen stars. You can only hope he'll manage to slip into the shadows before the light goes out for good.

43 comments
Comments  (43)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:58 PM, 05/12/2011
    That was a good article! Too often writers don't write the truth.It is easier to dump on Dykstra now, but thank you anyway. As a fan, I loved him. He carried us against the Braves in the playoffs. Juiced up? Sure and I still loved it.
    I met him once in a Devon pub shooting bumper pool. He was friendly but unlikable. Arrogant.
    hawk18
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:36 PM, 05/12/2011
    Nothing better than watching an absolute scumbag get what they deserve.Hey Lenny, here's hoping your fall into the Abyss is enjoyable for everyone of the unfortunate people you screwed over in your life. Enjoy prison, hope they throw away the key
    klew
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:09 PM, 05/12/2011
    Very similar persona to Pete Rose. Arrogant, crude, consumed w/ himself, believing himself above reproach, oblivious to accountability or the possibilty of personal error.

    Enjoyed the article, Fitz. Hate to see the star player fall from the sky, but this guy is really going to crash & burn.
    wordsword
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:15 PM, 05/12/2011
    Richie Allen: It's been several years and I don't have it in front of me, but the definitive book on the study of a baseball icon is "Cobb-A Biography" by Al Stump. I can assure you that Ty Cobb did not die a gentleman. Yes, he did express remorse for making so many enemies in a lifetime of baseball, but in the same way he played the game on the diamond, he lived out his life up to the end. His own daughter would have nothing to do with him, even at the end. If I remember correct, no one from baseball attended his funeral. He lived until the early 1960's but in his own mind he was still fighting the Civil War against the damn yankees. That said, he is one of my all time favorites for the way he played the game. Dykstra is a lot like Rose in that ultimately their own arrogance brought them down. He will always be remembered here for 1993. But the Philly fan wants their player to be hardnosed like Cobb without the baggage. Players like Clarke, Bowa and Utley will always be loved for their hard nosed play, but even so, they will always be remembered for wearing the team Jersey with integrity, something Lenny was lacking in.
    DelawareRiverRat
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:38 PM, 05/12/2011
    ""It probably began, they said, when the older kids in his Garden Grove, Calif., neighborhood wouldn't let him play because he was too small; when coaches looked at that undersized, skinny, towheaded youngster and told him he had no future in baseball; when opposing players mocked him, and when, as the only freshman on Garden Grove High School's baseball team, he was forced by teammates to pick up their dirty socks and sweaty athletic supporters from the locker-room floor."

    A magical story of the underdog and his drive. But he's a freshman on the team, so he might have as good of a chance as any, especially if he could find a way to grow. Every winner and loser alike has been doubted at some time or other in his life.

    It probably began well before that.
    HeelYes
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:00 AM, 05/13/2011
    I had good friend (may he RIP) who was a professional bookie until about age 40, when he entered AA and became sober. For 20 years, until he died, staying sober was his life, although he was still a character straight out of Guys and Dolls. I met him when he'd been sober a few years, and one thing he taught me was that whenever you see behavior like this, 99% of the time alcoholism is there. And isn't it obvious w/ Dykstra? The vodka in the Red Bull? Fitzpatrick can't report the obvious? The guy has a disease he's probably had since he was a freshman on that high school team and no one wants to talk about it?
    FrankGruber
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:32 AM, 05/13/2011
    Sportwriters and fans are not doing these guys any favors by putting them on a pedestal. We begin warping them when they're stars in little league, and the ones who stay stars the longest can get warped the most. Even the big bucks can be more of a curse than a blessing for guys who never had to grow up. I hope Howard and Utley, Rollins, Victorino, Ruiz, Hamels, Madson, etc. are watching Oswalt, Lee, and Doc, who seem to be real grownups.
    altoonaaslan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:47 AM, 05/13/2011
    I liked Dykstra once. I thought all his mannerisms and tics were 'cool' even though I never wanted to emulate them- the thick wad of chaw tied together with a string of bubble gum in is cheek.. the filthy, sloppy uniforms.. yelling at umpires and getting into a fistfight with Dodgers catcher Rick Dempsey... yep, I thought Dykstra was the coolest guy in the world and all because he could hit a baseball. Of course I was in my teens then so I cut myself some slack. Now I can see Dykstra as a vile, despicable scumbag.. And I and reflect on that night in May 1991 when that piece of garbage almost took his life and Darren Daulton because he felt like driving drunk.. and on and on.. And now I hope my former hero spends the rest of his life in prison
    Ashburn072
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:06 AM, 05/13/2011
    I've heard too many stories about Dykstra to cut him squeeze. Not one story, not one, portrayed him as anything less than an A-hole. Did he have any kids? Wonder how they feel about Dad? Maybe some brave writer will one day write the truth about another favorite local athlete - that Johnny Marzano. Lots of rumours about Johnny Marz and white powder too.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:22 PM, 05/13/2011
    Frank, as Dykstra's enabler, you are not without some major guilt here. In trying to use him, you were riding a tiger. As the Chinese say, those who try that usually end up inside.
    orange rhino
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:58 PM, 05/13/2011
    Good piece. Thanks for writing it.
    HTownInTheHouse
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:18 PM, 05/13/2011
    ditto to "DelawareRiverRat"
    rscott5913


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About this blog
Frank Fitzpatrick has worked in the Inquirer Sports Department since 1980. He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2001 and has won numerous state and national awards. He is the author of several books including the recently published, "The Lion in Autumn: A Season with Joe Paterno and Penn State Football." He and his wife live in West Chester, Pa., and they are the parents of four children.

E-mail Frank here or follow him on Twitter. Reach Frank at ffitzpatrick@phillynews.com.

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