I found the name the way you find most things worth finding…in a cardboard box. An estate sale on a Sunday afternoon in that particular Southern California light that makes everything seem slightly more meaningful and xanax-induced than it probably is. The other browsers moved through the garage with their paper cups of coffee and their practiced expressions of cultivated indifference, that specific mask serious collectors wear to hide the fever boiling underneath. I was elbow-deep in some dead person’s earthly possessions when I found it.
Jack Snow, Wide Receiver, Los Angeles Rams.

The card had been folded in half and then unfolded, which sounds like the same thing as never having been folded but is absolutely, definitively not. The crease ran straight down the middle of ‘ol Jack’s face like a surveyor’s line, like a property dispute, dividing him into two slightly misaligned halves that had been pressed back together and told to act normal. His gaze was aimed at a parking lot, a large-bosomed blonde, or whatever anonymous pre-suburban infrastructure and spiritual vacancy that happened to occupy the middle distance.
“You find something?” The woman running the sale appeared at my elbow the way estate sale women always appear — suddenly, silently, with the preternatural instinct of someone who has watched a thousand strangers rifle through the accumulated weight of someone else’s life.
“Maybe,” I said.
“Cards are a dollar each or six for five.”
“Sure,” I said, and she dissolved back into the furniture the way she’d come.
Here is what I knew about Jack Snow:
He came out of Notre Dame in 1965, a first-round pick, which is the kind of beginning that carries inside it the implicit promise of an eternal ending which did not come. Instead there were eleven seasons. Eleven years of serious, professional, underappreciated work performed in front of crowds who were mostly watching for something else, waiting for something louder, rooting for someone whose name they’d remember driving home on the freeway with the radio on. His best year was 1967. Fifty-two catches. 1,097 yards. Imagine Roman Gabriel (Roman Gabriel, the name itself like something a screenwriter invented) back there dropping back and flinging bombs to the fleet-footed Golden Domer.
The card is on my desk right now. I keep meaning to put it somewhere — in a sleeve, in a binder, in the flat plastic purgatory where cards wait to become part of a system. I haven’t done it. The man in the photograph is looking at something I cannot see. He has been looking at it since 1976, which means he has been looking at it for damn near as long as I’ve been alive, longer than most of the things I know how to name have existed. Someone pointed a camera at his face and said: this is the moment. Not that moment, not the one before or after, but this one, here, now. Out of all the moments that had ever happened or would ever happen, out of the infinite series of instants that makes up a life, they chose that one and pressed the shutter and it was done.


















