Showing posts with label Phillies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phillies. Show all posts

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Philadelphia

On an Accidental Vacation & Nazis
Citizen's Bank Park, 2021

Saturday, July 3, 2021
San Diego Padres vs. Philadelphia Phillies
Citizen Bank Park
MLB, National League
Philadelphia, PA
4:00 PM  


Outside the Game:
The Nation's birthday was upon us, and for the first time in two years, I was contemplating what to do with it. Memorial Day was a little too early in the recovery to be a factor except more time off at home, but fully vaccinated, I was looking to take the opportunity to go out into the world again.

My problem in this case was that I hadn't made any plans ahead of time because I didn't know what the state of the world was going to be. So I was limited in my reach and how much I was willing to spend. The best idea on short notice that I could come up with was to run down to Philly for July 4th. Except that the price for a hotel and an Amtrak train were through the roof and the weather forecast was not great, and I vacillated all morning on pulling the trigger on the train ticket until the last minute. With an hour to spare before having to leave and grab a Lyft to the train station, I made the purchase. I packed and repacked twice, and then set off to the station, getting there with about fifteen minutes before the train was due to leave. 

I was greeted with the news that all NJ Transit trains were being delayed, but I could hardly care as grabbed a quick breakfast and slogged all the way to the other end of the station to get to my Amtrak train, arriving just before it pulled into the station. Once on the train, it took forever to find a seat, eventually getting one next to an overweight woman to begrudgingly put her leg down off the second seat she was occupying. I settled in for the ride. Of course, the WIFI didn't work, and the seat was right by a constantly opening door, so I couldn't do anything except just sit there for the hour or so to reach Philly.

When confirming my hotel reservation in the morning, the lady I spoke to said I could easily walk to the hotel from the train station, and with only my rucksack, I decided to risk it. Except that the sun decided to come out and bake me for the entire straight-line walk to the environs of City Hall. After a couple of false starts, I found my hotel and checked in with the same woman from before manning the counter. I strongly questioned her choice about walking.

I dumped all my stuff in my room and lay down for a little bit in the AC to get reacclimatized to the world and then headed out with my game bag and camera. I took a quick walk east to the historic district and nearly immediately saw a Ben Franklin doing an interview on the green in front of Independence Hall. I thought that was symbolic of something or other.

After a little bit of wandering, I had to grab another Lyft to the stadium. My driver was making some extra money driving while in school for air traffic control, which prompted an interesting discussion on the ride to the park that was unsuccessfully distracting me from the dark, encroaching clouds in the sky. My student driver dutifully disgorged me at the ballpark, and I walked up to the ticket window and had a pleasant transaction purchasing a ticket that I was assured was under cover on the first base side.

With my newly purchased ticket in hand, it began to rain. Faboo. I had about a half hour before the gates opened, so I walked around and took some pictures and walked out to the SEPTA station just to see where it was and grab a ticket, as I intended to take it for the first time after the game. As I came back to the gates as they were about to open, the rain picked up. The security people who came through the line told me I couldn't take my drawstring bag into the stadium. I asked if a clear bag was acceptable (it was), and then put the drawstring bag inside the clear dry bag that it was previously holding, and that apparently was good enough. Security!

A long, long time later, the game ended, and I wandered out to the inexplicable night to ride SEPTA for the first time. Having bought my ticket before the game, I skipped the scrum at the ticket machines and went straight to grab a train that was about to leave.

Now, you have certain troubles when you name your transit system something that close to "SEPTIC" to begin with, but the experience did not start off impressive, and it went downhill. The trains, facilities, and stations were all old and seemingly falling apart. I was in a car filled with Philly stereotypes, but they were all amicably drunk and not dangerous, so I tried to take it all in stride.

A group of 20-30 exited at the City Hall station by my hotel, and we all at various parts found some exits closed. Which, late at night, I guess is sort of acceptable. But as we travelled on, we found that literally all of the exits were closed. There was actually no way out of the station. We all started moving as a pack at this point, perhaps instinctively reverting to herb instincts to survive. After doubling back, we saw someone coming through a transfer station. This poor drunk was immediately badgered by questions from a couple dozen people asking if he came from an open entrance. We all jumped the transfer turnstiles and eventually found the one open exit, which had me quite grumpily heading back to the hotel.

Once there, I asked the person at the desk what the hell was up. She was stone faced, and the equally somber security guard told me that it probably had to do with the fact that a group of neo-Nazis had just blown through City Hall before being chased back to their van by a mob (I mean, what did they think was going to happen?), and the police were probably locking down the area.

Philly. Don't ever fucking change.

I bought some snacks, went back up to my room, packed up, and passed the Hell out.


The Stadium & Fans: 

Home to Center, Citizen's Bank Park

Citizen's Bank Park also hadn't changed all that much from my last trip there, and as this was post-COVID restrictions, I'm not sure what they had going on for that. I had a good deal of time to wander around because of the rain delays, and there didn't appear to be too many noticeable facelifts.

I'll say this for the Philly fans: They hung in there. There definitely was a certain amount of fans that bailed in the rain, but it was still an impressive turnout for a game with a bad weather prognosis, and they stayed for the whole ordeal. The Phanatic kept the crowd going through it all. (I wonder if it is waterproof in there?)

The weather in Philly remains weird. When it was raining, it was otherwise pleasant out, with a nice breeze and reasonable temperatures. When the rain stopped, it was unbearably hot and bright. I don't know how they manage it.


At the Game with Oogie:

This is an accurate representation of most of the game.

The rain really started to come down as soon as I was inside. I took a couple of pictures before heading out to the center field concessions. In the uncovered area, there was still one line at one of the cheesesteak places, and if locals were willing to stand in this weather to get a steak here, it must be the place to go. I endured the elements under an umbrella long enough to order and retreat to somewhere with cover to eat my slightly moist gains (wiz with).

It was then wandering around for a while occupying my time as it was clear we were going to start with a rain delay. I eventually bought a bunch more food and headed out to my seat, which was--as promised--under cover. Everyone not sitting in my row or further back was piled up on the promenade. The original start time came and went with no change, though after an hour, the sky eventually cleared and the rain stopped, though another hour would pass before the game started two hours late. (Another rain delay would be in the cards for later.)

I was the only person in my row, again. Half of my row was under cover, and the other half wasn't, so I assume the season ticket holders didn't show up for the rainy game. Sitting in front of me was an older couple. The husband was a big baseball fan and his wife was along for the ride. I spent a good amount of time talking to them throughout all the delays. Right behind me were a couple of teenaged girls who kept talking about babysitting until they abandoned the game at the second rain delay. A couple of older guys were sitting next to them. One of them liked my Jomboy "Baseball Is Fun" hat I was wearing.

After the second rain delay in the fourth, a lot of people came up from the lower seats to claim covered seats. There was one guy a little older than me who went next to the couple in front of me, and he joined our little group for the rest of the game. We all rode it out to the bitter end, and I said my goodbyes after finishing my scorecard and heading out to the rainy night.


The Game:

First pitch, Padres vs. Phillies

The glam swag Padres were coming into town to play the currently woeful Phillies (Blown Saves a Specialty), but things didn't go to script on this rainy, long afternoon, beginning with starting the game, which featured a two hour rain delay before the scheduled 4:05 PM start.

When the game got started, the Padres began the game on the pre-approved storyline, jumping out to a quick two-run lead on the back of a Tatis Jr. single and Machado homer. Philadelphia went in order in the first, leaving the Padres with a 2-0 lead. San Diego threatened again in the second with two men on thanks to walks, but on the basepaths they stayed. The Phillies tied it up in the bottom of the second with two solo shots, and even followed up with a double before they got put out for the inning. Both sides got tired and wet and went in order in the third.

The fourth saw a Padres single erased on a double-play and Phillies stranding a walk, but only after another lengthy rain delay on the last batter of the inning. The soggy teams both went in order in the fifth, and San Diego went in order in the sixth, while the Phillies found new life. A one-out triple was brought in on a sacrifice fly, and then a single, stolen base, and a double brought in another run, giving them their first lead of the night at 4-2.

The seventh saw the Padres go in order despite a single, thanks to a double-play. Philadelphia lead off with a single, and a two-out double nearly scored him, but he was called out at home. The increasingly lackluster San Diego went in order again in the eighth, while the Phillies stranded two walks. In the top of the ninth, the heart of the Padres order went in order, to the absolute surprise of the Philadelphia faithful who had assumed a blown save as a matter of course in the season, with the Phillies winning 4-2.


The Scorecard:

Padres vs. Phillies, 7/3/21. Phillies win, 4-2

In keeping with my tradition of re-introductions this year, I bought the Phillies' home scorecard, a $1, four-page cardstock pamphlet. The layout was clean and generous, with a lot of space to score and write notes, which would be particularly important this evening.

There were fourteen spaces for player lines with replacements, and ten columns for innings. The player lines end with at bats, runs, hits, and RBIs, while the inning columns end with runs and hits. There is a section for hitting totals for each team, next to the six pitching lines, tabulating the standard innings pitched, huts, runs, earned runs, walks, and strike outs. The bottom third of the card is taken up by ads.

There were not many unusual scoring plays, but there were quite a number of plays of literal note. We begin with the rain delay before the start of the game, then in the top of the first, there was a note that the first hit of the game was originally ruled an E6 then changed. The top of the second featured a pop out to the catcher that was noted to be an attempted bunt. The bottom of the fourth recorded the second rain delay. The remaining play of interest was the bottom of the seventh, which was originally scored as a successful run from first on a deep double, but was then changed on review to  a caught stealing 9-2 at home. Also of note was that the first and third innings for the Phillies were an exact copy of each other, with the top of the order going strikeout, strikeout, and F-9. Truly a stat that exists but doesn't matter, but interesting nevertheless.


The Accommodations:

Residence Inn, City Hall, Philadelphia

As mentioned, I was at the Residence Inn City Hall, and despite my several adventures, it wasn't a bad little place. I was in a nice room with a kitchen. The king-sized bed was across from a desk and dresser combo, which in turn was next to the small kitchen, next to the small bathroom with a tub that I truly wish I had more time to try out.

Outside of external circumstances, it was quite convenient, and I definitely got my money out of the bed that night.



On Ringing the Bell

Oh, right. That thing.

Sunday, July 4, 2021
Philadelphia, PA


Outside the Game:

I didn't sleep well even though I was exhausted. I think it was some allergy thing with my eye. I was up early to go down and get "breakfast" which was a thoroughly disappointing brown bag with a piece of fruit, yoghurt, granola bar, and muffin. I even had to buy my own drink.

I grumpily took them back up to my room, ate, and napped until just before 9 AM. I packed up and checked out, leaving my bag at the counter until my train later.

I marched over to the historic district again at the dawn of July 4th and deposited myself on the tiny line at the Liberty Bell, and made my first visit since grammar school. As I had a decent camera around my neck, I somehow became the picture guy for everyone, taking pictures for a number of families that wanted photos with the Bell. I eventually extricated myself and headed out through the Visitor's Center to walk up to the Constitution Museum, which didn't even exist the last time I was here. I was told by a helpful employee that the museum was free for the day, but not open until 10 AM. Thus duly informed, I wandered around some re-enactors setting up for the day and tried to see if there were any tickets left for Independence Hall, but they were all out.

After some more walking around, it turned out all the museums weren't opening until 10 AM, so I went back to the Constitution Museum. After a multimedia presentation, I wandered around the rather well-done museum, getting distracted in the statue hall, where they recreated the famous painting of the signing of the Constitution in statuary form.

When I was done wandering around there, I decided to head out to the Franklin Museum, but some heavy construction and the fact that I hadn't been there in nearly 40 years caused some navigation problems. A handwritten sign finally directed me to the correct entrance, and I was disappointed to find the puppet-heavy museum of my youth had received an upgrade in the intervening decades without consulting me. To be fair, the new museum was fun and interactive, but I still somehow felt betrayed.

I took the short walk to Betsy Ross' house. This one was very similar to what I remembered, but there's only so much you can change in a historic house. There was an exhibit in the basement kitchen on colonial cooking, and I had made all the recipes there. Thanks, Townsends!

Walking around the streets, there was a tobacco shop selling cigar boxes, so I picked up a couple, with the added perk of  being able to play with the store owner's dog for a little while. I kept walking around, stopping at Franklin's grave (covered in pennies), Penn's Landing, and then blowing through Carpenter's Hall and the Second National Bank portrait gallery.

Two people held in equal esteem in Philly

I was starting to get tired, and it was getting about the time to catch my train back, so I walked back to the hotel, grabbed my bag, and hailed a Lyft to the station after a half-hearted effort at mass transit. (Being locked in after a neo-Nazi raid the night before had left me circumspect of success.)  A young guy picked me up and had me to the train station in no time.

I was immediately greeted by the fact that my train was delayed an hour and a half. I immediately tried to get on the train currently at the station, but there were no tickets left. The Amtrak attendant did get me on the train after mine, which was an hour later, but still on time and scheduled to depart earlier. Somehow, that train came and went before my original train did, even though they were on the same track, so that worked out, somehow. I grabbed some food and killed time until it was time to board, getting on a train that at least had working WIFI and my own seat. I took a little nap and caught up on my notes before pulling into Newark.

Yet another Lyft had me back home to start some laundry and order takeout before the explosions started to rock the night sky.


The Accommodations:
Back home, thankfully, in Jersey City

Click here to see all the photos from this trip.

Stand-Alone Trip, 2021

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Atlanta

On Travel
Rental car
Another damn Accent
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Atlanta, GA


Outside the Game:
With one weekend left in the regular season and the Braves being nowhere near post-season contention, this was the last weekend for me to see the first season of the Braves new field, SunTrust Park. At the start of the month, I took this Friday off work, and prepared to head for one of the worst places in America for the weekend.

Spending all day playing defense at work, I left right at 6 PM to catch my flight. There was a little bit of a subway delay, but nothing major, and I was able to get to the train to Newark International Bald Eagle God Bless America Airport and take a nap on the way there. Surprisingly, I zoomed through security and bought a sandwich for the plane ride. Not surprisingly, my plane was delayed by wind coming in.

We boarded about when we were originally scheduled to take off, and with my ruck sack for the weekend, I didn't have any concerns about when I got on. I got to my seat, and I had the row to myself. The guy behind me had the plague, however, and spent the flight coughing and wheezing the entire time. I had remembered to download the United app before I got on the plane this time and watched a number of sitcoms episodes for the duration of the flight, throwing in a nap to shake it up.

The flight landed about on time, and of course I was at the terminal where I had to walk the entire damn length of the airport to get to the rental cars. I got through the line and picked up my white Honda Accent fairly quickly, but it took forever and a day to check out of the rental facility due to people manning the gates who had absolutely no concerns about how fast they were getting people through.

Thankfully, I picked a hotel right by the airport, and once my GPs got working, I pulled into the hotel just about midnight. I got settled in at the hotel, broke out my new travel slippers for their test run, and showered up. My bed was lopsided, but that was the least of my problems, as it would turn out. I settled in for the night and called it a day.


The Accommodations: 
Days Inn College Park
Days Inn College Park

DO NOT STAY AT THE DAYS INN AIRPORT IN COLLEGE PARK. In case you missed that: DO NOT STAY AT THE DAYS INN AIRPORT IN COLLEGE PARK.

It isn't that the hotel is awful. Sure, it has a security guard in the parking lot, but you can't hold that against them. My room was clean enough. I had a nice king-sized bed with a desk and end table across from a lounge chair by the vanity that led into the equally clean bathroom.

Now, the bed was lopsided, but that also can happen. The reason you shouldn't stay here is because IT IS LITERALLY AT THE END OF THE RUNWAY. The planes that take off from Atlanta airport (and there is at least one an hour even in the middle of the night) LITERALLY TAKE OFF OVER THIS HOTEL AT RATHER LOW ALTITUDES. It is extremely loud, and everything shakes. I have no idea how this place stays in business. It is impossible to sleep here.



On a Really Nice Stadium for Satan in Hell
SunTrust Park
SunTrust Park, 2017
Friday, September 22, 2017
Philadelphia Phillies vs. Atlanta Braves
SunTrust Park
MLB, National League
Atlanta, GA
7:35 PM


Outside the Game: 
 Needless to say, I didn't sleep well. (By the way, DO NOT STAY AT THE DAYS INN AIRPORT IN COLLEGE PARK.) I suppose it wasn't much of a surprise when it turned out their breakfast buffet sucked as well. I ate a little and then went back to my room for a nap, before showering and fleeing the hotel.

I drove to the new stadium, which was in a new commercial development they called “The Battery” (get it?). I figured there would be tours, so I found the ticket booth and grabbed a spot in the next one, which was leaving shortly. Carl, the civil engineer, took us around the park for an hour or so, including the super-expensive places, such as the $500K season-ticket home plate club, and off-limits areas such as the press box. It was a nice tour, enhanced with his engineering commentary on the stadium construction, but diminished a little by that one family who always took too long taking full family photographs at every stop and slowing everything down.

SunTrust Park
Rich people place

After the tour, I went into The Battery proper and stopped for lunch at a WahlBurger. After a bit more walking around in the shops and restaurants, I made the short drive to my new (and hopefully not runway-adjacent) hotel. And I mean short drive. I was there in under a minute, straight up the road from the stadium.

After checking in, I took a much-needed nap, and then unpacked, grabbed a shower, and took off for the game with my game bag. The hotel had a shuttle to the stadium, and since it was still blindingly hot out, I decided to take that instead of the middling walk. There was one other family with me on the shuttle, which dropped us off near the main entrance of the stadium. Having been on the tour before, I told them to head to the back entrance where the line was going to be shorter. While they debated, I went there, and the line was much shorter, though there was a drum line playing nearby, so you had to suffer through that. Once the gates opened, I was in pretty quickly and off to the races.

After the game, the crowd spilled out into The Battery plazas, and since it was much cooler out, I decided to take the walk back to the hotel instead of trying to grab a cab or deal with calling the hotel shuttle. Outside of dealing with some closed-off intersections, it was a straight shot back, and one that a large crowd of people was taking. As we passed the far-reaching parking lots and came up on the hotels, the crowd starting peeling away until I got to my hotel, which was the last in the strip.

I went up to my room and had a soak in the tub before heading to bed relatively early to make up for the night before.


The Stadium & Fans:
Home to center, SunTrust Park
Home plate to center field, SunTrust Park

SunTrust Field is the new home for the Braves, replacing the not-that-old Turner Field. An entire development, called The Battery, was built up around it, with shops, restaurants, etc. to make the park a destination before and after the game. And as much as I hate saying anything nice about the Braves, it is really nice.

The ballpark itself in the central feature of The Battery. The main facade faces out from The Battery towards downtown, and the entire park is surrounded by sidewalks and juts into various other buildings integrated into the area. Outside the right field Chophouse Gate is the Georgia Power Pavilion, a large green area that has a stage and video screen at one end for pre- and post-game events. There is a signed walkway next to it connecting with The Yard House restaurant across the plaza. There is a giant championship fountain plaza showing all the team's championships next to a stairway area that is used as a stage for bands before and after the game. Fox News even has a small pavilion for pre- and post-game shows. The clubhouse store is next to the right field gate. A wall of ticket booths run down the wall of the stadium to the executive offices and Fist Base gate, with a statue of long-time manager Bobby Cox. The club entrance is by home plate, and what comes closest to a main entrance is the third base gate, with Phil Niekro statue and fan brick walk. The left field gate has a statue of Warren Spahn, and then the walkway leads to stairs that opens back out onto the Georgia Power Pavilion.

Inside, large promenades run around every level, circling the park on the ground level and running outfield to outfield on the upper decks. There are four levels of seating. The lower deck box seats are separated into the really expensive seats by the field and dugouts and the less expensive lower deck box seats by a small walkway through the entire area. A second deck overhangs the first and at its top has the luxury boxes. The dual-tiered upper deck has the cheap seats, and like the middle deck, only runs from the left field corner to the right field corner. Seating wraps the outfield except for the batter's eye, right underneath the giant digital main scoreboard, with the Home Depot Clubhouse right next to it. The right field corner is dominated by the Chop House restaurant and its seating, as well as the special party room "Under the Chop" that is at field level with a grated wall to see out. A secondary digital scoreboard is at the top of left field, with the skyline in the backdrop of the outfield.

The two main activity areas are behind home plate and in center field. Skills games and a zip line are in the kids’ activity area in center, and behind home plate is the palatial Monument Garden, with the history of all the Atlanta teams and its players over the years, with the centerpiece being a statue of Hank Aaron in front of constantly looped video of his career highlights next to all of the Braves Hall of Fame players. There is also a POW/MIA seat, dedications to broadcasters near the press box, plaques for all the previous Braves stadiums, and giant bobble-heads of Braves greats that get moved regularly throughout the park. The retired numbers are also in the park by the left field foul pole, and the championship banners all hang in right.

All the extras and special areas are almost too much to list. The top of right field is the Xfinity Lounge, and the top of left field has the Coca Cola Patio. The Hank Aaron Terrace is in the mid-level of the park and the increasingly exclusive Delta Lounge and the SunTrust Club are behind home plate.

Disgustingly racist Chief Knock-A-Homa has been retired, and there is no new mascot, though the tomahawk chop and drum is sadly still in effect, to the great spiritual detriment to all involved. The new drum is in a fenced-off area in center. Each arm stroke of that chop is a spiritual wheel bringing them closer to Hell. The crowd was healthy for a meaningless late-season game. Big-time major league entertainment filled between the innings, including t-shirt air guns, the Home Depot Tool Race, and The Freeze. Fans love this particular race, which features fans trying to “Beat The Freeze” (a former college track star in a ridiculous suit) around a race on the warning track where The Freeze spots them half the field. It was fun and all, but the people were way too into it. Not much to do in Atlanta, I guess.

What was nice was when the game was over, it didn't really end there. The park let out into the plazas outside the park, where there were games and bands and all the restaurants, so it seems that the planning in this case worked out for them. Good for planning. Are you listening, Wilpons?


At the Game with Oogie:
Scoring
Scoring in Hell

Any trip into an Atlanta stadium is a visit to hell for me, and SunTrust field was no exception. As an extra special twist of the knife, the giveaway this evening was a small version of the Bobby Cox statue outside the stadium. He is a man that I can hate, but I cannot disrespect. Even if he was never able to close the deal on World Series victories. I'm done. I swear, I'm done.

Anyway. I walked around the stadium again, but having had the tour earlier in the day, it was more a recap than a new experience. I spent some more time getting better pictures in the Monument Garden and doing other photography coverage. Perhaps with the giveaway, they had a big turnout that night, so even with a full house, it didn't get overly congested in the park.

Grub
Chicken fingers and souvenir soda

I eventually settled on some chicken fingers and a souvenir soda for dinner. When I went over to the condiments station, I nearly lost my grip on reality. In addition to your ketchups and your mustards, there was an entire shelf of powders based on snack food, like Cheez Doodles and Doritos and the like. We have offended god. We have gone too far. CHEETOS DUST IS NOT AN ACCEPTABLE CONDIMENT.

Condiments
We have offended god

Shaken but still moving, I eventually settled down to my seat in the lower deck just past first base. There was an inoffensive family to my right, Dodgers fans (for some reason) behind me, and a nice old lady to my left. She was interested that I was scoring (which she considered "old fashioned,” like me) and was a very nice person all around. However, when she started in on the tomahawk chop, I very much wanted to rip her arm off and beat her with it.


The Game:
First pitch, Phillies vs. Braves
First pitch, Phillies vs. Braves

It was the last weekend of the season, and the visiting Philadelphia Phillies and the Atlanta Braves were playing out the string to see who would be slightly better than the bottom-dwelling Marlins. It was essentially over in the first, and the home team went out happy, but with another contest between the Phillies and the Braves, the only real winners would be if both teams and the stadium blew up.

The Phillies only managed a leadoff walk in the top of the first that was promptly erased on a double-play. Atlanta, however, came out swinging. A leadoff double was followed by a single, a double, another single, and then a two-run homer to right to total up five runs in the bottom of the first. Philadelphia went in order in the second, and the Braves kept going with a leadoff walk that came in after another walk and a single, to extend the lead to 6-0. Both sides went down in order in the third.

The Phillies showed some life in the third with a leadoff double, a single, and a sacrifice fly bringing in a run to kill the shutout, 6-1, and Atlanta only had a hit batsman on base in the bottom of the frame. Philadelphia went in order in the fifth, and the Braves only managed a single. The Phillies got on their scoring ways again in the top of the sixth with a leadoff single, a walk, a fly out to right, and a single getting another run across to close it to 6-2, while Atlanta got another solitary single.

Philadelphia had a sole, one-out double in the seventh, while the Braves also had one hit: a homer to dead center to make it 7-2. The Phillies got a ton of baserunners in the top of the eighth, but nothing across, and Atlanta just had a single and a walk in the bottom. Philadelphia took their last licks and started with a strikeout, got a walk, then struck out and grounded to second to end the game with a 7-3 Atlanta victory.


The Scorecard: 
Phillies vs. Braves, 09-27-17. Braves win, 7-3.
Phillies vs. Braves, 09/27/17. Braves win, 7-3.

 The scorecard was part of the truly immense "Braves Magazine," Second Edition. The scorecard looked to be a hold-over from the old park, as once again it was a single page of cardstock, with only one side devoted to the scorecard and the other devoted to a Coke ad, just because. It was all neatly organized on good paper stock and a white background for plenty of note space, but the player lines were crunched up as before. Although they added dotted lines for replacements, it was still a short, long box, and it especially got dicey with replacements for pitchers and pinch hitters, but the scoring boxes, while small, lacked a pre-printed diamond, so it was adequate for the task.

This end-of-season game between two also-rans was pretty conventional, scoring-wise, and only had one play of note in the bottom of the fourth, where a grounder to short was originally judged too late to clip the runner at first, but it was over-turned on a successful review by the Phillies to a 6-3 putout.


The Accommodations:
Country Inn & Suites
Country Inn & Suites

I was staying at the Country Inn & Suites literally down the road from the new "Battery" complex. A clutch of hotels sprang up across all price ranges, hoping to service the new stadium. Time will tell if that was a wise investment or not.

My new room in the new hotel was predictably nice. I had a king-sized bed, end table, and lounge chair on one side of the room, and a dresser, TV, and desk on the other. Since my room was a corner room, by windows came together in the corner in an odd arrangement I hadn't seen before.

The bathroom was right off the entrance to the room. It was also clean and new, with a room-long vanity across from the toilet and the tub, that got some good use during the trip.

Also, it wasn't at the end of an airport runway, so I was able to get good rest to make up for my first night in Atlanta.



On New Acquaintances
Rick
Rick sans Morty
Saturday, September 23, 2017
Atlanta, GA


Outside the Game:
I took a lazy morning the next day, getting up just to grab some breakfast and then have another lie down before getting up the gumption to shower and head out into the world.

Killing a day in Atlanta is not easy, but it is possible. I drove downtown and found a parking garage pretty close to everywhere I wanted to go. The first stop, of course, was the CNN Center, and, more specifically, the Cartoon Network store. There was a Rick and Morty statue on a bench outside the store, which was a good sign. I went in and paid too much for a lot of Rick and Morty and Teen Titans stuff before grabbing lunch at the Arby's in the food court.

The next stop was a walk over to the Georgia Aquarium, which is actually one the nicest aquariums I've been to. There are lots of big glass walls and experience areas. I even went to the indoors dolphin show, which was literally filled with people. In the upper area of the packed house, there were an empty row of seats. as soon as you sat down, you found out why: you couldn't see anything. I retreated to an empty seat the next row up and got bored trying to warm people not to sit in the row with small children because they ignored me, sat down, and then moved.

Aquarium
Wonderment

Eventually right before the show started, a dirty hippie came in and sat in one of the last seats in that row. And he stank to high heaven, pun intended. Not from the ganja or anything, but this guy hadn't washed in at least a month. People fled to get away from him, but the staff wouldn't do anything about it, so all of us in his vicinity watched the dolphin show covering our noses. I wonder if the dolphins smelled him or not.

Dolphins
Frolicking

I went through the rest of the aquarium and then headed out into the Georgia afternoon. The next inevitable stop was the Coke Museum across the way from the aquarium, because you almost have to. They have updated it since I was there last, but the classics are still there. There is still no mention of the word "cocaine" anywhere in the place, and they still have the Coke products from around the world section, where you can try the worst-tasting soda in the world, the now-discontinued "Beverly." They have a place where you can make your own Coke ad, but lack the common sense not to give you access to the racist imagery they used in the past, which let me put together a "Coca-Cola Tribute to Thinly Veiled Racism.” I don't think it will win their contest they had. They also have a communal activity puzzle to open the door to the safe that holds the secret formula. I have to wonder these days if anyone cares. They certainly can reverse engineer it at this point, no matter what the wacky scientists in the movie they showed would have you believe.

Coca-Cola Museum
Oppressive corporatism

After having my fill both literally and figuratively of corporate back-patting, I took a little walk through Olympic Centennial Park on my way back to the car. I drove back to the hotel and had a soak and a nap. My WIFI stopped working, so I had to call their tech support for them to reboot the router for my floor. So that was fun.

SunTrust Park
SunTrust by night

I decided to walk down to the Battery again to eat at one of the restaurants there. I decided to go to the C Elliot steakhouse across the plaza from the ballpark. I was one of the few patrons, as the game was still going on next door, so I sat at the bar. I had some Asian whiskey, steak tartar starter, and I was talked into getting a "Eureka cut" steak for my main course.

Just as my steak arrived, two guys sat down next to me at the bar. It was a British guy and his American associate, and the British guy was one of those outsized personalities that takes over a room. He started ordering for his sidekick, and then we got to talking. They were both there on business and were going to the Sunday game the next day. They seemed to be involved in the music industry in some way, but they were already buzzed, so it was hard to keep up with them. He kept calling everyone "Boss." In a way that guys at a bar only can, we started drinking and eating as we went. And they were drinkers. By the end of it, I was pretty well up. Having a really early start the next day, I eventually took my leave of them and walked unsteadily back to the hotel to pack up and hit the hay.


The Accommodations: 
 I was at the Country Inn and Suites again, but I didn't spend much time there at all, except to sleep.



On Going Home
Sunday, September 24, 2017
Jersey City, NJ


Outside the Game:
So mostly hung over and having to get up early, I got some breakfast at the buffet when it opened at 6, finished packing, and checked out. Along the short drive to the airport, I got some gas to top off the tank, and dropped of my rental car without much incident.

Going through security was an exercise in stupidity that I eventually survived. The flight, at least, boarded on time. I didn't get my own row, but I was next to some 20-year-old kid who didn't look up from his phone the entire flight. Or at least, I think so, because I napped for most of it, and he was still on his phone when I woke up.

We landed on time, and I got a cab home with no incident. I spent the rest of the day doing laundry and packing up and wondering what the hell went wrong on work on Friday that was waiting to ambush me tomorrow.

The Accommodations:
Jersey City, sweet Jersey City


https://www.flickr.com/photos/baseballoogie/sets/72157686765030060 

2017 Stand-Alone Trip

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Queens

On Unfortunate Circumstances

Citi Field
Not Shea Stadium, 2016
Saturday, April 10, 2016
Philadelphia Phillies vs. New York Metropolitans
Not Shea Stadium
Major League Baseball, National League
Queens, NY
1:05 PM


Outside the Game: 
Another year, another season. After all the Spring Training baseball and the disappointment from the end of last season, I thought I might be a little dulled to the hype this year, but it was not the case. I was up bright and early, walked down to the Hoboken PATH station, and was on my way for another "Opening Weekend."

There were a lot more fans this year on the early trains with me. We got to the park, and there was a small festival set up outside. I took some outside shots and got in line to go in.

Crowd
The retreating annoyed

The way back was annoyed fans just trying to get home after a short and disappointing game. The trip wasn't eventful, and I just grabbed a cab back to the elevator instead of walking through a Saturday evening in Hoboken.


The Stadium & Fans: 
Center to home, Citi Field
Center field to home plate, Not Shea Stadium

Not Shea is Not Shea is Not Shea. There were some minor changes to the park. Caesar’s apparently lost the naming rights to the club area, which is now given to Foxwoods. The pennant flags from last year now fly on the flagpoles. And the Pepsi Porch is now the Coca-Cola Porch. Presumably, they finally cleaned the Pepsi sign when they took it down, but you never can tell.

Mascot
Mr. Met greets you, peasant

There was a big crowd (about one person too big if you ask me, but more on that in a minute) for the Opening Weekend. There was a choir and a “bark at the park” event they had before the start of the game. Sadly, no doggos in my section. Mr. Met and his regrettable wife were, of course, in attendance.


At the Game with Oogie:
Grub
First Shack of the year

This is where things get... problematic. It was "Opening Weekend," or whatever that works out to these days, so it was a packed house. I got seats on the third base side in the Foxwood Bronze club area.

So, there were a group of guys to my right. And another group of guys to my left. I was not affiliated with either, which would become important. Of course, on the group to my left, the biggest fatass in the world was right next to me in a huge-assed winter coat. Now, I had my drink in my beverage holder. The holders run to the left of your seat, and the guy to my right had his drink in the holder next to mine before fatass showed up.

Already crammed in thanks to his immense bulk, he wanted me to move my drink to the next holder over. I told him that wasn't my holder and that the other guy had a drink there and I couldn't take it. To give him the biggest benefit of the doubt, maybe fatass thought I was with the other group and was busting his balls. But he then, of course, reached over me and put his drink in the empty container, and made a big show of reaching over to get it. He then "got comfortable" and flowed over to my seat. I then moved his fat and tucked him back into his seat.

This was as close as I've gotten to a fight since old Yankee stadium. Eventually the other people to my left came back, and maybe fatass felt less brave if he thought I was with him, so it was sullen passive aggression for the rest of the game.

I, of course, got a burger from Shake Shack, and an order of meatballs from the Rao's stand to round it out.


The Game: 
First pitch, Phillies vs. Metropolitans
First pitch, Phillies vs. Metropolitans
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An early-season matchup between the defending NL-champ Metropolitans with the Dark Knight on the hill and the bottom-dwelling Phillies had certain expectations going in, and they were not met. And this was perhaps ready to set my expectations for the entire season.

For one thing, the Metropolitan offense did not show up. They were no-hit through four and had only two base runners (the second being a walk) through five. But the Phillies fared little better. They had a single in the first and a walk in the second, and went in order in the fourth and fifth. However, they manufactured a run in the third, which began with a leadoff single. Another single got the lead runner to third, and a deep sacrifice fly to left got in the run, making it 1-0, Phils.

Everyone woke up in the sixth, however. The Phillies got a one-out single and then the next batter crushed one to right, making it 3-0, Phillies. But in the bottom of the inning, the Metropolitans had a two-out rally of their own, with a double to left that made it to third on a passed ball. The extra base was superfluous, as Cespedes cranked one out to left to make it 3-2, Phillies through six.

Everyone went in order in the seventh, but the Phillies started up again in the eighth. A leadoff single got bunted over to second, and a one-out walk made it first and second. A short single loaded the bases, and a sacrifice fly to right brought in the run before a grounder to third ended the half at 4-2, Phillies. The Metropolitans, for their part, went in order. A walk and a double put another insurance run in for the Phillies in the ninth, and the punchless Mets got only a leadoff single in the ninth to end the inglorious defeat at 5-2.


The Scorecard: 
Phillies vs. Metropolitans, 04-10-16. Phillies win, 5-2.Phillies vs. Metropolitans, 04-10-16. Phillies win, 5-2.
Phillies vs. Metropolitans, 04/10/16. Phillies win, 5-2.

Although I bought a program, I used the BBWA scoreboard and three colors to score the game. There was one challenge call by the Metropolitans in top of the eighth on a throw behind the runner at second on the sacrifice fly to right. The challenge upheld the safe call. Outside of an unusual amount of sacrifices for a contemporary major-league game, that was all there was to it in this quick game.


The Accommodations: 
Sweet home, Jersey City



2016 Stand-Alone Trip

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Lakeland


On Tigers and Tummy Rubs

Joker Marchant Stadium
Joker Marchant Stadium, 2015
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Philadelphia Phillies vs. Detroit Tigers
Grapefruit League (Spring Training)
Joker Marchant Stadium
Lakeland, FL
1:05 PM



Outside the Game: 
I awoke to find myself not the only person on two legs in the house this morning. The youngest child had fallen ill, so both father and son were at home as I dragged myself downstairs. After five minutes of re-establishing myself in the canine pack with scratches and pets, I was off to the game an hour hence.

I stopped along the way for breakfast and then went to the park, which was heavily entrenched in a residential area. I parked in an extensive tarmac next to the park (the entire parcel of land used to be a flight training school) and got out to do my business before going inside.
On the way out, not fully baked to a crisp thanks to the merciful shade, I worked my way through the congestion and out to the highway for an uneventful drive back to my friends' house.

I again arrived just before dinner, and I again grabbed a quick shower before the eating festivities. We watched some TV, but after the kids went to bed, I found myself on the stairs with Josie, the 15-year old Beagle doll, with the task of giving her scritchies for the rest of the evening. She would eventually roll over and lie down on my leg and arm to the point that I couldn't leave if I wanted to. Eventually, she started to make what I thought was an angry noise, but I was informed was actually her happy noise. So, I like to think that I got out of a little bit of Purgatory time by making an old dog happy for an evening.

Exhausted from my efforts, everyone turned in around 10:30 PM, and I, at least, slept like a log.


While your first guess might be "Batman Villain Store" after a quick look at the name for Joker Marchant Stadium, it is in fact named for local luminary Marcus "Joker" Marchant. "Tigertown" had its origins as a World War II army air corps training facility, and plaques around the stadium grounds talk about the war usage of the repurposed buildings still standing. A number of these old hangars and officer quarters are now (baseball) training facilities and clubhouses.

The ballpark itself is done up in the Spanish colonial style that is so prevalent in Florida. Palm trees stand guard in front of arched gallerias that house the ticket booths, entrances, and stores accessible from the outside of the park. The practice fields for the teams, named for Tigers' luminaries, are in the back of the compound, just beyond right field.

The left field entrance opens early on game days for those with special tickets, which just provides access to the left field picnic hill so you can watch batting practice. There's also a small selection of concessions opened in the area before the closed gate to the rest of the park.

Joker Marchant follows a standard minor-league stadium arrangement, with all of the entrances opening out onto a large outside promenade that circles the park and the grandstand, while a smaller walkway in the seating area splits the lower from upper seating sections and connects up with the promenade at the end of the grandstand and through ramps at regular intervals that extend up into the seating bowl. Behind first base is a large colonnaded plaza with a big grouping of carts, stores, and services.

The main grandstand runs about from dugout to dugout behind home plate. A lower level of box seats is right by the field, and the upper level is regular stadium seating, broken up by stairwells. The top of the grandstand has some cover from a small overhang, and the top of the seating bowl holds some luxury boxes, the Flying Tigers Club, and the press box. There are bleachers down the left field line ending in the picnic hill in left-center, and the Tigers Spring Training and minor-league offices sit down the right field line, above a VIP seating area on the outfield wall. The digital scoreboard sits in right center, above the single-level outfield wall covered in local ads. Palm trees and blue sky are all you can see past the center field wall. A number of memorial and dedication plaques are in the right field plaza area.

The game was nearly full and the crowd was into it more than just the autographs that they swarmed to get before and after the game. Paws sadly doesn't make the trip south (probably to avoid heat stroke in the furry costume), so the humans run the limited between-inning activities, which are the standard minor-league contest, races, and other games.


At the Game with Oogie:
Grub
Hot dog and souvenir soda

It was another super-hot one this Thursday afternoon, and luck was finally with me as far as seating went. Either by accident, intuition, or otherwise mistake--I honestly don't remember at this point)--I picked a seat right behind home plate, and as such, I was under cover and in the shade, if unavoidably behind the foul ball netting. It was a small price to pay that day for a bit of respite from the sun.

I started early, since I got a batting practice ticket and was out in the early-admission left-field picnic hill area long before the game to watch some BP. This let me use the facilities and starting to down an outrageous amount of fluids to keep me hydrated. After watching batting practice for a while, I stayed in whatever shade I could find until the rest of the park opened up, and then I was out and about and taking pictures.
Somewhere during my endeavors, one of the staff asked why I was taking so many pictures, and I told him about my trips and that I might be doing a review of the stadium, which he seemed to take with great gravity.

With all the heat, I only grabbed a hot dog with a souvenir soda for lunch, although I loaded up on many more beverages for the duration of the game, because even in the shade, Florida was starting to get to me.

My seat was up the grandstand behind home plate and offered a very nice, if netted, view of the stadium. I parked in my seat relatively early and closed my eyes for a bit before the start of the game. The stadium was quite crowded, but there was no one directly around me (probably season ticket holders who don't come to every game) except for a gaggle of college-aged bros two rows ahead of me.


The Game:
First pitch, Phillies vs. Tigers
First pitch, Phillies vs. Tigers

This meaningless Spring Training game had the Philadelphia Phillies facing the Detroit Tigers. Nearly all the scoring was packed into two efficient innings, which was of little comfort to the home kitties, who lost out in the end.

The Phillies went in order in the top of the first despite a one-out double, thanks to a failed steal attempt of third. Detroit, however, jumped out to an early lead thanks to a two-out homer to center. They threatened more with a single and a two-base error by the left fielder, but they were stranded by a final fly out to the same left fielder. Philadelphia went in order in the second, while the Tigers grabbed another run on two singles and a sacrifice fly, extending the lead to 2-0. The Phillies went in order again it the third, while Detroit managed just a walk in the bottom frame.

Both sides went in order in the fourth. Philadelphia decided to get all their scoring done in one inning, as they piled on six runs in a bat-around fifth thanks to three singles, a triple, a single, a walk, an error by the first baseman, and one other single, grabbing a 6-2 lead. The Tigers just had a two-out double in the bottom of the fifth, and the Phillies did exactly the same in the top of the sixth. Detroit went in order in that half inning.

In the top of the seventh, Philadelphia scattered an error and a walk, while the Tigers settled down into a scoring frame. After a leadoff single, two fielders’ choices grabbed two quick outs, but two walks and three singles quickly led to three runs, closing the gap to 6-5. The Phillies went in order in the eighth, while Detroit scattered two singles. Philadelphia again went in order in the ninth, while the Tigers started off their last licks with a single, then grounded into a double play, hit another single, and grounded out to second to secure the Phillie's useless 6-5 victory.


The Scorecard:
Phillies vs. Tigers, 03-12-15. Phillies "win," 6-5.Phillies vs. Tigers, 03-12-15. Phillies "win," 6-5.
Phillies vs. Tigers, 03/12/15. Phillies "win," 6-5.

The scorecard was the centerfold of the $5, full-color, magazine program. The scorecard took up the entire spread, with about 75% of the space used for the scorecard and the remaining space for strip ads. The semi-gloss magazine paper made it hard to write in pencil, and the red colored pencil was almost transparent. There was undesignated space for each batting line to have a replacement (that I had to draw out), and each batting line ended in summary stats, and each innings column ended with summary date. The scoring squares were white, but small and a little cramped. Pitching lines were under the batting lines, and full-team summaries were to the right of the pitching lines for both teams.

There were a couple of oddball plays in this one. In the top of the first, a one-out double was caught stealing 1-6 when the runner was caught daydreaming off second. There was a weird two-base error in the bottom of the first, as the left fielder mangled the ball over the wall on a bounce, leading to an E7 ground rule double.

The ceremonial changing of the guard happened between the fifth and the seventh for the Phillies and nearly all in the transition to the seventh for the Tigers, except for swapping out the DH in the second. All players except the Phillies' DH were rotated out at some point. The Tigers used eight pitchers, at the rate of nearly one and inning, with only started Verlander going more than one.



The Accommodations: 
I was in the guest room for one more glorious evening. It was easy to get used to essentially a really nice AirBnB that I didn't have to pay for.



2015 Grapefruit League