Love, Life and APBA Baseball

Monday, March 26, 2012

Two Games

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I played two games recently in my APBA replay of the 1981 baseball season that, while probably insignificant in the overall season, really s...
Monday, March 19, 2012

The APBA Closet

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I have a walk-in closet that was once home to a bundle of clothes and scores of shoes. It was like every closet. It did what it was supposed...
Saturday, March 10, 2012

1981 Season Update: May 15

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Here’s a quick update on the progress of my 1981 APBA baseball season replay. I’ve reached May 15 and I’m less than a month away from the ac...
Saturday, March 3, 2012

25 Years Later

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There are parallels in life that are unexplainable, yet seem to balance the harsh and bitter with things that are a bit easier to accept. An...
Wednesday, February 29, 2012

I Felt a Draft

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Hours after the completion of my first fantasy baseball draft, I analyzed my team and realized the group of players I chose could win — in a...
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Saturday, February 25, 2012

It's Just a Fantasy

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It’s seven hours before I embark on my first attempt at drafting a fantasy baseball team and I’m obsessing over the fear of making the late-...
Monday, February 20, 2012

Love on an Overpass

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INTERSTATE 55, EXIT 109 — Tony proclaimed his love in two-foot tall letters painted across the northbound I-55 overpass about 10 miles south...
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About Me

Kenneth Heard
Jonesboro, Ark.
After working more than 35 years as a newspaper reporter, including nearly two decades as the northeast Arkansas bureau correspondent for the Arkanss Democrat-Gazette, Kenneth Heard now has a new vocation. He was laid off at the Democrat-Gazette in October 2017 and, in the era of journalistic economic demise, he found work at a local newspaper. Heard is not known for his brains. He later changed jobs, working as the communications director for a county prosecutor. During his tenure with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, he covered the 1998 Westside Middle School shootings; the West Memphis 3 murders, trial and subsequent release of the three defendants; was the weather reporter covering tornadoes, floods, drought and wildfires; and other mayhem. He has also taught English and journalism at two universities, been a television reporter and photographer, a golf course greenskeeper, a cable television installer and salesman, a junkyard worker, a repo man, a hotel desk clerk, a security guard, a lolligagger and a romantic dreamer. He has been rolling some form of APBA games since 1977 and will probably be buried clutching the iconic red and white dice of the game.
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