Tagged: futures game
All-Star Game: Day 5
This was it! The big game. This was the game fans in Southern California had been waiting for since it was announced. The 81st Annual All-Star Game was going to be taking place and I would be there (with my lovely wife in tow).
The Home Plate Gate would open up at 2:00pm for the scheduled 5:00pm start time and we got to Anaheim at 12:45.
By the time we parked and walked to the gates there were lines forming underneath each of the big hats outside the ballpark.
We
spotted Chris and Warren (with their guests/families) at the front of
one of the lines and they let us slide into line along with them. Thanks, guys. We chatted for a while to pass the time and noticed we’d be receiving another giveaway upon entering the stadium. For the Futures Game and the Home Run Derby we got ticket-holding lanyards. Today it looked like–yep–we’d be getting a drawstring backpack. Nice!
I made sure Michelle made it in safely and then ran off to start the afternoon of snagging, knowing she’d catch up to me soon. I
originally intended to start the day near the American League dugout
but when I ran out of through a Field Level tunnel I realized batting
practice was already underway! Yikes–I quickly
sprinted up the steps and all the way around the park to the right field
seats to try to grab a commemorative 2010 All-Star baseball. I’d
seen pictures of the baseballs and I said a little prayer during my run
out to the seats that they’d be in use during batting practice. Once I arrived I knew the crowds would get pretty large very quickly. I hoped to get on the board as soon as possible.
I spent minutes (that seemed like
hours) tracking the occasional home run and hovering over the stray
baseball that made it to the outfield. Among the players shagging in the outfield was Jered Weaver, new ace of the Angels staff, and a late add to the All-Star team. I
wasn’t the only one asking him for a ball as he fielded one eighteen
feet below the first row of seats… but I did have a glove on and I did
say, “Please.”
Whatever works.
I was psyched! It was a beautiful, red-and-blue-stitched, All-Star ball. It had a scuff on one side and a grass stain below the logo but I didn’t care. It was mine–and it had been thrown by an Angels player and I couldn’t have been happier to snag it.
I celebrated the snag internally and kept my sights on each player as they hit in the cage. Conveniently,
Angel Stadium put up the name of each star that was hitting as he took
his hacks in the cage so I knew exactly who launched all the baseballs
that I couldn’t quite get to… I mean, with all the power in the AL
lineup (and quite a few lefties hitting) I had my share of chances to
snag a batted ball. I’d seen BP regular Devin
catch two homers on the fly: one when the seats were still relatively
empty and another once the crowd had grown. Soon, there was little room to run.
BP wasn’t as packed as the Home Run Derby the day before but it sure was tough to maneuver up in that pavilion.
I played the staircase separating Section 238 from Section 239 as the American League hitters continued their portion of BP.
This was my view:
Beautiful! Though, more specifically, this was really my view:
People all around. A lot of people let their guard down when a righty stepped into the cage. I knew better–especially when a certain righty named Alex Rodriguez was smacking the ball all over the field.
A-Rod went deep. And he went deep to right field… and the ball was heading my way. I knew it wasn’t going to be an easy catch. There
were fans all around me and the ball had a pretty high arc to it,
giving people time to get underneath it… I moved down a few steps, saw
the ball slicing toward my general vicinity, moved to my right into a
row of seats, and then I saw the hands, arms, and gloves closing in. In
my peripheral vision I saw limbs closing in on the ball and, keeping my
eye on it I realized that I had probably moved down one step too far. Literally a dozen fans were reaching in, wanting that A-Rod blast for themselves. I
kept my eye on the ball as it fell and at the last moment I leaped up as
high as I could, outreaching the fans to my left and right…
SMACK!
I couldn’t see it but I knew I had the ball. I felt it hit the pocket of my glove as five gloves smashed into my extended arm. I came down from my jump and crouched down just enough to regain my balancing, pulling my glove in toward my chest. I looked down, opened up my Mizuno and saw the pearl nestled safely inside. Whew…
The ball was just a standard Selig baseball, which wasn’t great, but it was in near perfect condition. There was just one tiny mark on it, where A-Rod’s bat smacked it. I
got a few congratulatory compliments from nearby fans (including Devin)
and then, proud of my catch, I held up the ball triumphantly. The best moment though, came twenty seconds later when I heard a voice behind me: “I guess I got here at the right time.”
I turned around and saw Michelle standing in the row right behind me. She’d arrived at the tunnel above the right field seats just in time to see me make the catch. It felt great knowing that she saw it and was proud that I’d managed such a difficult (and highly contested) snag. It was a a pretty cool feeling! She chatted with me for a minute and then decided to get out of the July sun–I’d meet up with her after BP.
When the AL finished hitting there was a gap of very little action on the field. Did you notice the stage set out in center field in the panorama above? Well, it was there so the teams could be photographed.
I just noticed this now… but Andy Pettitte and David Ortiz are wearing those shoes I tried on at FanFest. Hmm.
The National Leaguers came out to the field to take their photo right after the AL was done.
A
lot of fans retreated to the shade of the concourse but I took the
opportunity to make my way into the front row of the pavilion, knowing
that with the growing crowds, my best bet to snag another commemorative
would be a toss up from a player.
A group of teenagers were on my left
and a pair of teenagers were on my right when BP resumed with the
National League players taking their cuts. The kids on my left were friendly and the kids on my right were not. When I had been standing at the front row for a couple of minutes one of the boys on my right asked if I could move. I asked him why and he said I was in their seats. I said, “Which ones are yours?”
“Fourteen and fifteen.”
I told him that I would, in that case, stand in the space directly in front of thirteen. He told me that his whole family had seats nine through sixteen. I told him that I would move when they arrived. He grumbled something to his friend.
A short while later I saw Matt Capps
long-tossing right below me with some other player who was stationed
over by the right field line. People to my left and right were asking for the ball. I said, to the kids on my left, “He’s warming up… you have to wait until he’s finished.” I knew what I was talking about–and when Capps finished (and his throws were getting shorter) I yelled out, “Hey, Matt! My name’s Matt, too, and I’d love to get a ball from you, sir!” Capps looked up, checked the baseball in his hand, then looked right up at me and tossed the ball straight up.
I reached out to snag it, extending both hands (it’s fundamentals, kids), and then I felt pressure on my right forearm. One of the kids on my right was trying for the ball. The kid to my left reached out with his glove but I was easily going to out reach him. Then, disaster. The
person to my left gripped my arm and pushed it down with a lot of
force… ordinarily not a big deal since I wear my glove on my left hand. However, there was so much force behind the push that it shifted my frame a few inches down and to the right.
I watched the ball sail inches over my glove and past my left shoulder into the row behind me. I desperately tried to grab it from the second row but it bounced away from me and a fan in the second row ended up with it.
I was furious. I knew what had happened… I spun to the teens on my right and stared at the two of them. Frustrated, I said, “OK, which one of you guys pushed me?” They both looked down at the railing in front of them.
I asked again and, again, they stared straight down. I turned my attention back to the field and said, “That’s not cool, guys. You can’t just grab a guy’s arm like that.” I was pretty pissed… but I was even more determined to snag another ball at that point.
Like, if they had accidentally bumped me, OK, I’d be all right with it. But this was intentional snag sabotage. Not cool at all.
The kid nearest to me got out his
phone, texted someone, and two minutes later a taller person showed up
right behind these kids (an older cousin, I found out), and asked me to
move from his family’s seats. I asked what ticket he had. He showed it to me. He had seat nine… remember, I was in the space directly in front of thirteen. I told him he should tell the kids on my left to move out of his seat then.
Long story short, the older cousin ended up leaving because he understood the situation. He had no more right to that seat during BP than I did. And he knew his younger cousin was a whiner (and told him so). And
I would snag my third ball on the day from Hong-Chih Kuo shortly after
that by asking him in Korean for it (thanks, Zack Hample). When I caught it, I saw it was commemorative and then showed it to the kids on my right.
“Wow, a special All-Star baseball, cool!” Then
I left the row, telling the kids on my left that they should crowd over
toward that pair of kids to the right if they wanted to… they did,
happily.
Next, I made my way down to the Field
Level seats, snuck as near to the NL dugout as I could, and watched the
players run in from the field. I saw one baseball get tossed but not anywhere near me. However,
fan-friendly Heath Bell walked to the bucket of baseballs and ended up
tossing roughly a dozen into the crowd including two to the Club Level
and two to the upper deck. Sadly, none came to me, but it was still pretty cool to witness, well, that type of coolness from Heath in person.
I met up with Michelle after that and only then got a sense of how truly crowded the stadium would be. The concourses were FULL of fans–and the seats were filling up throughout the stadium. We grabbed food and found our seats. The same seats we’d had for each of the All-Star events… this was out first time going anywhere near them:
It turned out that they were in the sun. Bleh.
I didn’t crop this photo so you could see all the fans that had already arrived. Also, down in the bottom-right corner you can see a line of people holding a giant American flag for the opening ceremony.
We
found comparable seats on the shaded (third base) side of the stadium
and took in the opening ceremonies after saying hello to a friend of
ours who also was at the game with his dad. I took this photo as we walked behind home plate:
Here’s where we sat for the first few innings:
The ceremony was great. Very
classy, and included a moment of silence for Bob Sheppard and George
Steinbrenner as well as an introduction of each of the thirty “All-Stars
Among Us.” And one of the cast members from GLEE sang the anthem–but they were having sound issues within the stadium. Did it sound all right on TV? There had been sound issues on Sunday and Monday, too.
I was totally thrilled to be watching an All-Star Game! We were far from the action but the environment was great!
Confetti! It was electric in Angel Stadium, with fans from all over the world cheering on their favorite teams and players. Although, the confetti seemed to halt Ubaldo’s warm up throws for a few minutes…
The two starters, Jimenez and David Price, began the game fantastically, each pitching two shutout innings. We had a great view of who would be coming into the game for each team:
The game was tense throughout. I could tell early on that the game would be a pretty low-scoring affair. Each team’s pitchers would dominate the game… and it helped that Ryan Braun made an outstanding catch in the middle innings. And, did you know that Cliff Lee only threw six pitches to retire the side in order in the fourth?
Before the fifth inning started I told Michelle, “I think this is the inning where we [the AL] score. Sure enough, the AL scored a run without a hit in the fifth. Evan
Longoria, video game extraordinaire, lead off with a walk, then Kuo
made a throwing error on Joe Mauer’s dribbler and Robinson Cano hit a
sacrifice fly to cash in Longoria. Unfortunately, that would be the American League’s only run of the game. The
only National League offense to speak of came in the seventh when Matt
Thornton allowed a bases-clearing double to Brian McCann. To his credit, Marlon Byrd kept the inning alive with a walk while McCann was on deck.
Michelle and I had moved to our actual seats by this point… they were now shaded. It was just before Byrd’s at bat that I began questioning Joe Girardi’s management choices. I would have let Phil Hughes face Byrd, then, if needed, brought in Thornton. Oh, well. The
NL scored three runs–that was all they needed and, though the AL tried
to rally in the ninth, Byrd made a great play to get David Ortiz at
second base. Why wasn’t A-Rod in the game to run for Ortiz? Or, why didn’t A-Rod hit for somebody? Oh, well… again.
For the ninth, we were down on the Field Level, hoping for an AL comeback. I left Michelle for the last half of the inning and I managed to get in a great position for a toss at the end of the game.
John Buck stepped up to the plate…
And Ian Kinsler smacked a ball into the right-center field gap that hung up just a bit too long.
And when the NL wrapped it up I was right above the dugout, first row, and I did everything I could to get a player to toss a ball up… but no one did. Jonathan Broxton was interviewed while the final out ball rested in his glove.
He kept it (I figured he would) and that was it for toss-up possibilities. It was okay though. I had really enjoyed the game.
It was exciting, quick (just under three hours), and fun. Michelle met up with me on the concourse as the crowds cleared out. She’s really starting to like baseball at this point, which is pretty darn cool. We talked about all the great stuff we’d seen in the past few days as we headed out the gates. Before we went to the car though, we got a picture together out in front of the ballpark:
I’m holding up the Weaver baseball there. But here’s a better shot of all three of my snags from the ASG:
Oh, and I asked Michelle to take one more photo before we left the stadium…
I guess you could say I was a bit excited. I knew I’d probably never get to have
such an intense and all-encompassing All-Star experience ever again, so we lingered at the
Sponsor Zone for a bit and watch the crowds leave the park. My
feet were aching, I was tired, but it was hard to leave the party,
knowing the city of Anaheim wouldn’t see anything like it for quite
sometime.
Luckily, the Angels would be home from a
road trip on Thursday and I had received free tickets to that game… I’d
get to come back (to a less crowded stadium) pretty soon.
Futures and Celebrity Softball: Day 3
After a couple of days of gazing at baseball memorabilia and being indoors it was great to be heading to the stadium again in perfect summer weather.
After Michelle and I parked the car we noticed a stage being set up outdoors near The Grove (which shares a parking lot with Angel Stadium). I would find out later that there would be a couple of VIP parties there on Monday and Tuesday night for the All-Star folks and their guests.
We passed by an Oakley sunglasses stand on the way to the gates… I actually really liked these sunglasses but I’m not the $150 sunglasses type. Cool though.
Michelle and I were a little stunned by their promotional vehicle:
We got up by Home Plate Gate and looked across the parking lot to see the Sponsor Zone. Michelle went to check it out while I stood in line and talked with Warren (who’s left comments on here as yankeehater626) and his dad, pictured below.
The Futures Game would be starting at 3:00 and the gates would be opening at 1:00. We’d arrived at about 12:20 and there were very few people around. It would stay like that for a while.
I ran in at 1:00, eager to snag a ball. I knew that the Futures Game (and each All-Star themed game) would have commemorative baseballs in use. I was hoping they’d be used in BP, too.
I sprinted in and looked down one of the tunnels… I didn’t need to sprint any further:
BP wasn’t happening. It was team photo time. I would find out later (a little too late) that the World team hit before the gates had opened. Luckily, the US would begin batting practice shortly after the photo session. I was very near the dugout at one point prior to BP and saw the clubhouse attendants opening brand new boxes of baseballs to be used during batting practice.
This was an amazingly good sign… but were they commemorative? I couldn’t tell even though I zoomed all the way in with my viewfinder… the logos were all facing down.
I headed over toward third base as the US team did their stretching. And the pitchers were throwing a bit, too.
You might have noticed the World Cup game on the big screen… the final game was being played on this day–a lot of the players and fans were pretty interested in it. I heard later that Spain won… great.
I had brought the rosters for each team–which meant I was basically the only person in the stadium that knew who all these guys were. I was feeling good about my chances to snag at least one baseball.
Unfortunately, none of the pitchers threw their baseballs to the crowd. Most of them tucked them into pockets and gloves. This, I thought, was a great sign. Even minor league pitchers don’t care about keeping a regular ROMLB… I was pretty sure they were using commemorative Futures Game baseballs.
I headed toward the foul pole in left field as BP got underway. When Minnesota prospect Anthony Slama fielded a ball I asked him for it… using his first name… and saying please. He gave me a nod–and threw the ball back to the bucket. Dang.
Later, Slama was joined by Ben Revere (also from the Minnesota Twins’ organization) and Yankee catching prospect, Austin Romine. The trio was grouped about fifty feet from the wall but each time one of them fielded a ball I tried to get them to toss it to me. I still hadn’t seen any players throw balls into the crowd. After a few minutes, Slama tossed a ball to a kid about twenty feet from me. I figured that the baseballs were getting a bit dirty/stained and would now be getting cycled out of the mix. I was right. I’d seen a couple home runs hit to the stands, and one of two baseballs had been tossed into the crowd… but I’d been inside the stadium for forty-five minutes and was sitting on zero baseballs.
Romine fielded another baseball in left and I called out for it: “Hey, Austin! Right over here!” My arms were getting tired. I’d been waving them since BP had started, trying to get one of the players to toss one. Romine looked over at me. I stood up on my toes and repeated the request,
snapping my glove open and closed. He asked Revere something… then pivoted and threw a laser toward me. It was a perfect strike. THWAP! Right into my glove… I immediately turned the ball over in my hand. Here’s what I saw:
YES! What a snazzy logo! All-Star Sunday was officially a success in my book. I hope Austin Romine goes on to have a long, successful career. I didn’t number this ball (or any ball I snagged during the All-Star stuff) because I had the following plan for the festivities:
Futures: Not counting them–these guys are minor leaguers
HRD: Not counting them–it’s not a game between teams–it’s eight players against each other
All-Star Game: counting them–Major League players and it counts: home field advantage
Those were my guidelines for tallying the balls for my collection.
I took the photo above a moment after the snag… you can see the players in the field. And I had been standing where the guy in the blue shirt is standing.
I moved over to the dugout again after that and BP ended fairly quickly after I’d moved. A lot of the players stayed on the field to do infield practice.
While that was going on I noticed a ball that had gotten away from a fielder and had settled on the grass near the home plate end of the dugout along the third base line. I saw US team coach, Tony Franklin, walking over to get it and I yelled out, “Hey, Tony, could you throw that ball over here, please?” As he walked toward the ball he smiled at me and then, when he got the ball, he lobbed it into my waiting glove. It was another Futures Game ball. I yelled a hearty thank you to Mr. Franklin and then headed over to the first base/visitor dugout.
As I mentioned, the World team had hit prior to fans being let into the ballpark, but they still had infield practice.
As the World guys did that, the US team signed autographs on the third base line. In one of the free Topps giveaway packs I’d received at FanFest I had gotten a Pedro Ciriaco card–who? Right. He was the only guy on either roster who’s baseball card I owned. So, after infield practice, when the World team guys started signing autographs, I sought out Arizona Diamondbacks outfield prospect. Luckily, I got him on the card I’d just received a day before. There was one other autograph I really wanted on the day–Ryne Sandberg. Mr. Sandberg was one of the coaches for the World and I had brought a 1992 All-Star card of his, a card I’d had since I was nine years old.
I found him on the far side of the dugout, mentioned it, and he gladly signed it for me. I was a little surprised at how easy it was to get his autograph. I mean, the man is a Hall of Famer… my guess is that nobody really knew who he was.
Thanks, Ryno!
And, hey, check out the bases they were using for the game:
There were a couple of pitchers hanging out in the World dugout as other players were signing down the line… one of them was near a bucket that had (or formerly had) baseballs in it. I looked at my roster, identified young Blue Jays prospect Henderson Alvarez, and asked him in Spanish if he could throw me a ball. As it turns out, there was one baseball left in the bucket–and it was a commemorative (albeit very worn) ball. He flipped it up to me for my third baseball on the day!
This whole time, Michelle had been hanging out in the shade, reading, and enjoying the summer breeze. After the autographs, I found her and we got some food as the opening ceremonies were taking place.
We grabbed seats in the outfield for the first couple of innings. I tried for a third out ball a couple of times, but to no avail.
We had to/got to move closer to the action when we noticed:
Pepsi Max!!! No, not really. Bees! They were swarming near the last section of the Club Level, just over the LF tunnel. Speaking of the tunnel… I saw Lou Seal nearby… he made his way into the bullpen:
And I saw a bunch of mascots hanging out in the tunnel for something…
As it turns out, they would all be participating in the Steal Third promotion later on. Basically, a kid gets a chance to run down the line and steal a base… usually their path is not impeded. But on this day, well, there were mascots to contend with.
A lot of people cleared out of the bee area… we ended up with this view for the middle innings:
I’ll be totally honest. At this point in time I have no idea who these players are… hmm. I just really liked these photos.
Later on, we moved… over to the other side of the stadium:
As you can tell, there were a ton of empty seats. We really just sat wherever we wanted all afternoon. At one point later in the game we headed upstairs to the View Level for one reason: to get a panoramic photo of the stadium with the All-Star cut in the grass:
Awesome!
The vibe was super-mellow. Most fans didn’t care too much about the game. It was great… Michelle and I walked all over without anyone wanting to check our tickets. And nobody knew much about any of the players… so the only real cheers came when Hang Conger or Mike Trout did something. They’re both Angels prospects. And Conger ended up as the game’s MVP since he hit a three-run homer to right field. It barely cleared the wall but it gave the US team all the offense it would need. I mean, they scored plenty of runs, but the World team only scored one. It wasn’t exactly a riveting contest. Final score: World 1, US 9. Wow.
For the final inning or so, I was right behind the World team’s dugout:
It was pretty cool… and after the game ended Michelle and witnessed a mascot dance party going on in right field while the Legends and Celebrity Softball game got set up.
If you’re wondering about all the mascot photos, well, I guess I just like ’em. See, in Anaheim there isn’t a real mascot. Sure, the Rally Monkey appears digitally–but there’s never a big, crazy character running around and interacting with fans. So, I relished the overabundance of mascot-ness. Woo!
OK, flashforward to the softball game introductions. The National League team had the likes of Guy Fieri, Mario Lopez, Jennie Finch, Mike Piazza, Dave Winfield, and Ozzie Smith:
And the American League team had players like James Denton, MC Hammer, Rollie Fingers, Fred Lynn, Tim Salmon (the crowd favorite), and Bo Jackson:
I found out late in the action that commemorative softballs were being used… cool! I didn’t snag one though, even though I tried after the game. Oh, well.
I’m not even going to try to recap the details of the game. It was all sorts of crazy. Home runs were hit:
Bo (“knows fancy footwear”) Jackson pushed people, Tim Salmon played second base, Chuck Finley gave up a homer to Jennie Finch:
And it was the first-ever home run hit by a female at the celebrity game!
It was actually a lot more fun to watch the celebrity game in person than it is to watch it on TV. You get to hear and see all kinds of stuff the TV crowd misses out on.
The AL won by four or five runs… and each team chose a player to do a mini home run derby as a bonus for the fans. It ended up being Mike Piazza against Tim Salmon. Each guy got five pitches/swings. Piazza hit one homer… Salmon, he was a perfect five for five! He’d also hit a home run during the game and afterward he jokingly asked, via a host’s microphone, “Angel fans, does that count as 300?” We all cheered for him… Salmon retired with 299 career home runs.
Anyway, as the HRD of softball land ended, Salmon almost hit one out of the park–for real. Like, not over the temporary softball fence… over the real fence… impressive.
Well, as Mike Piazza headed into the dugout he tossed his batting gloves into the crowd and wouldn’t you know it? I snagged one of them:
It’s REALLY comfortable!
The teams posed for a picture:
And then the night ended with a fireworks display! Nice surprise, Angel Stadium.
We left the stadium at about 8:45, checked out the Sponsor Zone for a minute:
And then we walked to the car… we’d both had a ton of fun.
It was a mellow Futures Game, a crazy and silly Celebrity Game, and I’d snagged a batting glove, gotten two autographs, and ended up with three baseballs, all commemorative:
AND–I had decided to spend a few hours at FanFest the next morning before heading to the Home Run Derby! Whoa…