Showing posts with label Richmond Flying Squirrels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richmond Flying Squirrels. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Hartford

On the New "Kid" on the Block
Dunkin' Donuts Park
Dunkin' Donuts Park, 2017
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Richmond Flying Squirrels (San Francisco Giants) vs.
Hartford Yard Goats (Colorado Rockies)
Dunkin' Donuts Park
Eastern League (AA)
Hartford, CT
7:10 PM


Outside the Game:
This day did not start off auspiciously. It was in the 90s and humid, and my aunt passed away after a several-months battle with lung cancer. So, not a great beginning.

I did my laundry and called up the box office to order tickets for the game. I got a very enthusiastic salesman who convinced me I should get a ticket in the Hartford Corner as it would have access to the club level, and since it was only $17, why not? I booked a night at a hotel right across the street from the stadium, as I didn't feel like driving home that night and might as well take it easy.

It was going to be my first time taking a road trip in my new leased car. As mentioned, it was already an odd day, and I grabbed my overnight bag and my baseball bag and called an Uber to take me to my car. Upon reaching my car, I realized I did not have my car key with me. This is because it was a very bulky key, and I didn't enjoy carrying it around unless I had to. This would be the incident that inspired me to carry it around all the time anyway. Because I had to take an Uber back to my apartment to get my key, and then another Uber to get me back to my car. And then I was finally away.

The drive was only about two hours, but I was running into a lot of congestion by the Tappan Zee Bridge. And then when I got to the bridge, I found out that they took EZ Pass only, and the other option was to just drive through and be tolled by mail for an extra cost. This would be the final straw to get me to buy my own EZ Pass, so a lot of things were getting solved on this trip, if nothing else.

I stopped for a quick lunch in Connecticut, and then completed my drive to my hotel. It was some tricky turning around to get to the hotel, which was at the junction of three main roads, but I eventually got to the entrance to find a lot of the hotel, especially the garage was under construction. This was compounded by signs in the garage saying that said construction was being halted because of workers comp violations by the hotel and construction company. So this was all fine.

I checked in and dropped off my bag before heading across the street to the park to take my pictures and stop in at the shop. I picked up my ticket on the way out, and walked back to the hotel to see no less than three police cars arresting some guy on the road to the hotel. This greatly increased my esteem further for Hartford as an up-and-coming city.

I went back to the hotel for a little lay down before heading back over to the stadium right before the gates were due to open. I went to the special club entrance, and I was one of the first people inside when the go sign was given.

Fireworks
Rocket's red glare

After the game, I walked back across the street to the hotel as the fireworks were finishing. I went up to my room and saw the last of it from my window before finishing off my scorecard, having a soak in the tub, and hitting the hay for the evening.


The Stadium & Fans:
Home to center, Dunkin' Donuts Park
Home plate to center field, Dunkin' Donuts Park

Dunkin' Donuts Park was the subject of many a scandal before it was finished. Started at the end of 2015, it was scheduled to host the newly relocated New Britain Rock Cats in Hartford as the newly named "Yard Goats." Construction delays and over-runs made false that goal, and the Yard Goats were forced to graze on tin cans as a road warrior team for the entire of the 2016, finishing in an impressive third place in the Eastern League. As 2016 closed, the league said the franchise would be taken away if they didn't start playing home games the next season, so the city fired the old developer, and a new one managed to get the stadium open in time for the 2017 season.

So what of Dunkin' Donuts Park? It is located downtown, just at the junction of 44, 84, and 91, so convenient to get to, but not exactly in the greatest location, although downtown does frame the view over the outfield wall. The landscaping outside the park was still being finished up early in the season, but the outside facade was all complete, and the naming rights for the two other entrances beside the main entrance plaza by home plate had already been sold off to local Hartford business. A team store runs across one outside wall of the park, ending in the ticket booths by the main entrance.

As per standard for minor league parks these days, the entrances all empty onto a main concourse above the seating level. A single section of seats descends from the concourse from left field around home plate to right field. In the outfield, a single small section of seats hang behind the outfield wall for the length of the outfield, while the seats in right are in the shade underneath the overhanging club seats. There is a second level of club seating that runs from third base, behind home plate, and all the way out to right-center field. Right behind home plate on the second level is the Yard Goat Club, with private bar and concessions, festooned with Hartford baseball memorabilia, and glass doors marking off the club seats right over home plate. A row of luxury boxes goes down each base line, but the right field upper deck ends in the right field corner with the Hartford Corner seats at the junction of right field, and then a row of seats on the top of the right field wall runs the length of the outfield to center field. The press box is wedged under the Hartford Club at the top of the seats behind home plate.

Other special seating areas include the Dunkin' Dugout seats in the left field corner, The Budweiser Corner in a special separate party area about center field, and the Kids Fun Zone in left-center field. The main entrance to the park has the starting lineup for the day in pictures, and the area of the concourse behind home plate and blocked from view has the history of Hartford's professional sports teams, past and present. Most of the concessions (including the inevitable Dunkin Donuts shop) are on the main concourse behind home plate and around the park.

Center field is a striking "green monster" type wall that incorporates the batter's eye into the wall, with the Budweiser party area poking from the top and two retired numbers on the wall. The giant main scoreboard rises from right-center, and is completely digital, although surrounded by print ads from various sponsors, and, of course, topped with a giant cup of Dunkin Donuts coffee that steams when the Yard Goats hits a home run. All-in-all, it is a great new park, though perhaps not quite worth all the wait.

Mascots
Not-so-lonely goats

Mascots Chompers and Chew Chew are around for the entire game in their brand-new costumes. The locals seem to be interested in the new team, as the stadium was packed with fans for this early-season Saturday game. Most of the between-innings entertainment is about what you'd expect in the mid-minors with races, and contests and the like. There was, as to be expected, a Dunkin Donuts race between a coffee, an iced coffee, and a donut.

After the game there was a ball-toss and fireworks, though I was heading back to the hotel at this point.


At the Game with Oogie:
Scoring
Twilight scoring, click to see all the photos

At the advice of the guy at the stadium, I was in the "Hartford Corner" seats, which gave me club access. In fact, I was the first person in the club room when the gates opened, even before the club area was supposedly open for business. I just went straight into an elevator with some employees, and I got there a few minutes before it was "really" opened.

Grub
Pulled pork mac & cheese

I did my walking around and picture taking, eventually grabbing a pulled pork, mac & cheese, and cornbread bowl (because how can you not) and then later a foot-long brat on a bread bun with a soda.

Grub
Foot-long brat, just because

My seats were in the right field corner, the aforementioned "Hartford Corner." The seats in the right field overhang were great seats and not that far from home plate. My particular seat was an odd one, in that it was at the top of a stairway, and there was an extra railing separating a small section of stairway in front of my seat from the rest of the stairway, for some reason. I can only assume it was a special stairway just for the person in that seat.

Stairway
Whatever this was.

Anyway, also in the Hartford Corner with me were guys who were on an adult baseball team together. The mostly kept to themselves, shouting loud in-jokes and ordering each other to get more beer and food.


The Game:
First pitch, Flying Squirrels vs. Yard Goats
First pitch, Flying Squirrels vs. Yard Goats

This Eastern League matchup was early enough in the season that I had no idea what to expect as the visiting Richmond Flying Squirrels faced off against the Hartford Yard Goats in their new home.

The scoring started immediately, as in the top of the first with two outs, Richmond rattled off a single, walk, double, and triple in order to quickly bring in three runs for the early 3-0 lead. In their half, the Yard Goats got a one-out double, but he was stranded after a bizarre fielder's choice (more below) and a strikeout. The Flying Squirrels kept going in the second with a one-out single followed by a homer to dead center, bringing in two more for a 5-0 difference. Hartford got some back in the bottom of the inning with back-to-back, one-out singles that left it first and third, and a suicide squeeze sacrifice bunt that was so good everyone was safe. A run came in before a pickoff and strikeout ended the scoring, with the home team behind now 5-1. Richmond only had a walk in the top of the third, and the Yard Goats went in order in their half.

The Flying Squirrels scattered a walk and single in the fourth to no effect, while Hartford started off with a single, a walk, and a single to bring in a run. A strikeout on a hit and run turned into a double steal to bring in the runner from third, tightening the visitors’' lead to 5-3. Richmond went in order in the fifth, while the Yard Goats cracked a two-out homer to center to cut the lead to 5-4.

And then, the game kind of stopped, or at least the scoring did. The Flying Squirrels only had a double in the sixth, while Hartford went in order the next two innings, and Richmond only had a walk to show for the seventh themselves. The Flying Squirrels went in order the last two innings, with Hartford tossing out one single in each inning to finalize Richmond's 5-4 victory.


The Scorecard:
Flying Squirrels vs. Yard Goats, 04-29-17. Flying Squirrels win, 5-4.
Flying Squirrels vs. Yard Goats, 04/29/17. Flying Squirrels win, 5-4.

The scorecard was a paper photocopy given out with the rosters and the free mini-tabloid program. There were three lines for each replacement and a small diamond in each box to chart the progress around the bases.  All in all, it was a functional enough scorecard, if a little cramped.

For the most part, there were any exceptional plays from a scoring standpoint, but there were a few that needed clarification. The bottom of the first featured a good-ole CS 1-5-6-1-3t that need a rather extended note to explain it away. On a grounder to the pitcher, he threw it to the third baseman to get the runner already on second. The lead runner retreated to second, but the trailing runner made it to second already behind him. The trailing runner broke for first, and was eventually put out 6-1-3t. Simple, really.

Not content with that, the bottom of the second featured an E1 that needed a note. The batter attempted a suicide squeeze sacrifice bunt with runners on third and second. It worked in bringing in the run, and everyone was safe. The pitcher then attempted to pick off the sacrifice bunter at first and threw it away, moving the runners from first and second up to second and third.

Finally, in the bottom of the fourth, there were runners at first and third with no outs. There was a hit-and-run attempt with the runner on first with two strikes, which turned into a double steal with a strikeout. The throw went to second, and the runner from third broke for home. Both were safe, in technically the only steal of home I've witnessed in person.


The Accommodations:
Radisson Hartford
Radisson Hartford

For my one-night stay, I was at the Radisson Hartford, which was literally right across the street from the stadium, and was, in fact, housing the opposing team. While actively being under construction, it was still in pretty good shape, with a fancy lobby that had obviously been redone already.

My room was nice enough. A small hallway led to my bathroom on the right and then on to the main bedroom with a king-sized bed and overstuffed chair across from a dresser and TV and a desk.

Even though there was a family reunion and a wedding in the hotel, it was quiet and I got sleep, so that was all I really cared about for such a short visit.



On Going Home, Quietly
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Jersey City, NJ


Outside the Game: 
I got relatively early and checked out. It was an uneventful ride home at just about two hours. I parked the car in Hoboken, and I was a short walk back to my apartment in the Heights for an afternoon nap and preparing for work the next day.


The Accommodations:
Jersey City, sweet, Jersey City



2017 Stand-Alone Trip

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Richmond

On Finishing Up Strong, if Damp

The Diamond, 2015
Sunday, July 5, 2015
Akron RubberDucks (Cleveland Indians) vs.
Richmond Flying Squirrels (San Francisco Giants)
The Diamond
Eastern League (AA)
Richmond, VA
6:05 PM


Outside the Game: 
Having done the drive the night before, all I had was local driving around Richmond to do for the short remainder of the trip. I had a lazy morning at the hotel, sleeping in before rolling out to catch the end of the extended weekend breakfast buffet, before sullenly retreating to my room for a nap to make sure the sleep all got properly set in my head.

I eventually got the energy to shower up and head out to the stadium to buy my ticket and take my photos of the outside of the park. As early afternoon rolled around, I finally got the gumption to get out and start exploring Richmond. I parked in a lot in the historic center of down town, and my first stop was the "Confederate White House," converted into the Museum of the Confederacy. I was pinching my nose and hoping for the best on the way in, but it was a frankly even-handed review of the events of the way and kept mostly to the straight history of the location. There didn't seem to be a trace of any lost-causim or trash of that ilk. I exited through the gift shop and spent the remainder of the afternoon walking around the historic downtown, visiting the George Washington and Civil Rights monuments, as well as the Old Virginia Executive Mansion.

Confederate White House
Confederate White House

It was eventually time to get over to the game, so I drove to the stadium and parked up and got in line. On the way out, I damply got into my car and went back to the hotel to shower up, do some final packing, check in for my flight, and collapse at the end of another long trip.


The Stadium & Fans: 
Home to center, The Diamond
Home plate to center field, The Diamond

Despite a generic name, The Diamond is one of the few minor-league parks that either isn’t in one of the modern, cookie-cutter designs or a historic park built up around its quirks. From the outside, the giant concrete structure looks more like a college football stadium than ballpark. Free-standing pillbox ticket booths are by the main entrance at home plate, which is split between regular and season ticket entrances. The outside of the park is extensively decorated, with floral arrangements, pennants, a giant inflatable mascot, posters of all the other mascots, a miniature golf course behind right field (surely a first for me), and small signs for “Squirrels Fun Facts” that circle the park.

All the entrances go up a stairway onto the main concrete promenade that goes around the park from left field to right field behind the plate. The single row of seats extends down in blocks from the main walkway the length of the grandstand, roughly from just beyond first base to just beyond third base. At the top of the lower seating bowl are the luxury boxes and the press box. An entire upper deck is on top, accessed by large, sloping ramps from the lower level. It has a narrow walkway around the outside of the grandstand with ramps leading in, and a small walkway at the base of the stands, with the seats rising up from there. A large cantilevered roof runs out over the upper deck, above a row of banner advertisements. Left field ends in a patio deck with picnic tables, and the right field walkway just ends right before the bullpens, looking out over the mini golf course outside.

A large, pole-fixed netting system keeps the fans protected from foul balls. Looking out, a two-tier outfield wall is covered in local ads except for the batters’ eye in center. A large digital scoreboard sits in left-center in front of the backdrop of treetops and sky that frames the field. The park has a lot of little spaces and tributes crammed in every corner. There is an outfield wall banner for Jackie Robinson’s retired number, signed posters from the starting lineups of every team of every year along the walls, a POW-MIA seat, player posters on the ramps, the inevitable “Road to the Show” plaques, VCU Baseball Championship banners, mascot banners, a small fast pitch tucked in a corner in addition to the larger kids area on the lower level, and a Wall of Fame.

Mascot
Nutzy

On paper, the Flying Squirrels have no less than five mascots: Parker the Rally Pig, Zinger the nut, Nutzy the Flying Squirrel, Captain ARRR VA the pirate, and Victor the Viking. Only Nutzy and the Captain made big appearances for this game (with Zinger showing up for one race event), with Nutzy sporting garish July 4th clothes, but the Captain maintained his traditional pirate clothes. The park gets immediate points for having an organ player, a much-missed dying tradition in baseball. And they even had a lot of unusual contests and giveaways, including a hula-hoop race, a tug of war, giant glove boxing, and a guy riding a giant flamingo to give away hot dogs (a’la the Crazy Hot Dog Vendor in Reading).

Mascot
The sacrifice is pleasing.

The crowd on the day after July 4th was quite extensive, even if dampened by the intermittent rain. They were into the game beyond the other entertainments, even if a lot of them were just concerned whether the rain was going to cancel the post-game fireworks (which it did).


At the Game with Oogie: 
Scoring
Damp scoring

While waiting in the crowded line to get in, I was just in front of an older couple who were season ticket holders, and the husband even came equipped with a flag-themed Nutsy giveaway from a previous July 4th. And here was the danger of capital "t" capital "s," The South. The couple were giving me the rundown about the fight between the city council and the team owners, as the city fathers promised the team a new stadium and then didn't deliver, and the last team left, and now they are playing the same game of chicken with the Flying Squirrels, and the sad baseball fans were bemoaning what they expected to be the similar outcome. And we're fine until there. However, the husband kept going and saying that all the city council wanted to do was to give money to "the blacks" and buy their votes; they would never do anything for "white folks," like getting the new stadium built.

And while that was pretty breath-taking, I guess I was sort of happy that the word didn't start with an "n," which was progress of a type. After that, I politely nodded and smiled, and then lost them as soon as the gates opened. You think we've progressed, and then you find out that maybe we haven't.

Grub
Regular hot dog and souvenir soda

I went around and did my photography, and whatever you say about The Diamond, it definitely isn’t a cookie-cutter stadium. With all my walking around, I started off with a hot dog and a souvenir soda, but eventually threw a pulled pork hot dog on top of that, because pulled pork hot dog.

Grub
Pulled pork hot dog: Recommended by 5 of 5 cardiologists

My seat was in the third row just at the end of the home plate dugout. The stadium at least started pretty packed, and there were families all around me who were probably season ticket holders. They were all mostly watching their kids or keeping out of the rain, depending on when it was.

The one moment of glory I had in the game was that I won the program autograph contest. This was less hard than usual because they mistakenly left the sticky tab they put in the program to show the player where to sign, so I had grabbed that free program to find out why it was like that. And I found the answer pretty easily. So that was perhaps my easiest contest win ever.


The Game: 
First pitch, RubberDucks vs. Flying Squirrels
First pitch, RubberDucks vs. Flying Squirrels

The Akron RubberDucks and Richmond Flying Squirrels were both in the Western Division of the Eastern League and clawing for a playoff spot until late in the season. This turned out to be a pitcher's duel in a damp afternoon that was ultimately decided on a stolen base.

Akron only had a walk to show for the top of the first, but the Flying Squirrels came out swinging, with a leadoff homer to right. Little did we know that would be the last scoring for this half of the game. Both sides went in order in the second, and the RubberDucks got a batter as far as third in the top of the third with a couple of walks, a steal, and an error, but no further, while Richmond went in order in their half.

In the top of the fourth, Akron scattered and stranded a pair of singles, while the Flying Squirrels did the same, plus a walk, in the bottom of the frame. The RubberDucks got two walks in the top of the fifth, but just into the second half of the game, Richmond managed to score again with a leadoff walk that stole second and was driven in by a one-out single to extend the tenuous lead to 2-0. Akron went in order in the top of the sixth, while the Flying Squirrels somehow came up with bupkis after starting their half with a walk and a double.

The RubberDucks got a walk and a lot of ground outs in the top of the seventh, while Richmond went in order. Akron finally got on the board in the eighth with a two-out homer to left and was threatening more with a back-to-back single and a walk before a reliever got a strikeout to end the inning. The Flying Squirrels just had a single in the bottom half of the eighth. But it concluded quickly, as Akron went in order in the top of the ninth to settle the 2-1 Richmond victory.


The Scorecard: 
RubberDucks vs. Flying Squirrels, 07-05-15. Flying Squirrels win, 2-1.
RubberDucks vs. Flying Squirrels, 07/05/15. Flying Squirrels win, 2-1.

The scorecard was part of the free mini-tabloid full-color magazine program. The scorecard was the centerfold of the program, taking up about 3/4th of the space, with ads taking up the remainder at the bottom. There was decent enough space for player lines and replacements on empty scoring boxes, with the pitching lines underneath, but the glossy magazine paper made it nearly impossible to write with pencil, and it was especially unsuited for the rainy weather that day, and there was a color background behind the scoring boxes, which made it more difficult to write and erase legibly.

The damp game didn't have particular scoring plays of note, and thankfully went along at a clippy pace.


The Accommodations: 
I was at the Best Western at the airport again. Not a lot to report there.



On the Pleasantness of a Boring Day

Airport
Richmond Airport
Monday, July 6, 2015
Jersey City, NJ


Outside the Game: 
This was a pleasantly uneventful day all around. I woke up on time in the morning, grabbed breakfast, showered, and finished packing. I checked out of the hotel, drove the short distance to the airport, turned in the rental car, and went through security at the terminal. I grabbed a snack and went to my gate, where my flight boarded on time, and took off on time.

After two hours--most of which I napped through--we landed at Newark, and I took a cab back to my apartment, where I did my laundry and got my stuff in order for the rest of the afternoon.

After having nightmares the weather and delays and all the rest, it was nice to have a strictly boring morning and end up right back at my apartment.


The Accommodations: 

2015 Virginia