Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Postcard tour: Baltimore, a place for brief but memorable visits
We attended a game in the stadium’s final season as part of a Flint Journal story about ballparks, and in the course of one afternoon we:
Sort of played catch with Cal Ripken Sr.
Watched Flint native Jim Abbott pitch seven strong innings.
Ate crab cakes in the press box.
Lounged around the Angels’ dugout
Witnessed a full-fledged press box tantrum
Sat in bleachers – in the upper deck.
All the detais are here. But as the postcard clearly shows, Memorial Stadium was a different-looking kind of ballpark, and a pretty awesome one, too.
The Mets spent just one more game than we did, splitting the first two games of the magical 1969 World Series in Baltimore. The Series never made a return trip, with the Mets completing the miracle in five games.
I have the one postcard of Memorial from that trip, but have managed to acquire more of the team’s new home, Oriole Park at Camden Yards, a bad name for a wonderful stadium.
We enjoyed an incredible hard hat tour of Camden Yards before the game at Memorial. Even then we could tell it was going to be a special place.
The Mets like going there, too, winning 11 of 17 interleague games, including a three-game sweep last season.
Two of the post cards are nice stadium and city shots, and one is an interior photo with team graphics that I was sent by the Orioles, who always added postcards and stickers to my annual request for a schedule.
The final one is my favorite, but not for the reasons you might suspect. Oh, the photo of the ballpark on the front is nice.
But check out the back:
The producers – identified as the Traub Company of Baltimore – have a fill-in-the-blank spot for the name of the ballpark, then a disclaimer: Fees for printing the trademarked name would increase the price of this card.
Seriously? And I don’t recall this postcard being sold in a special, less-expensive rack than the others. Why were these alleged savings not passed along to me, the consumer, who is even asked to complete the job by filling in the stadium name?
And despite being a photo of Baltimore produced by a Baltimore company, the cards proudly state they were printed in Canada.
Classic!
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Baseball Place No. 50: Sports Legends Museum; and Place No. 50A: Oriole Park at Camden Yards
And that's before there were plans for the Sports Legends Museum in Camden Station.
Josh Pahigian takes us the for spot No. 50 in his "101 Baseball Places to See Before You Strike Out."
The station sat empty from 1971 until renovated in 2005. We saw some of the artifacts when they were displayed at the Babe Ruth Museum, which is just a couple blocks away.
The stationis even closer, sitting perpendicular to the stadium's famous warehouseand just steps from the outfield.
Since the museum wasn't open in 1991, I must present an alternative.
Alternative place No. 50A: Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Like I said in the earlier post, the Orioles could not have been more gracious to us when we arrived for the Baltimore leg of our epic baseball rpad trip.
A staff member was assigned to give us a tour of the under-construction ballpark. We got to wear hard hats and everything.
The ballpark had not yet been properly named, even though it was popularly called "Camden Yards."
The spot for home plate was already designated.
The view of downtown was a very different from what fans saw from the upper deck at Memorial Stadium.
John got some great shots from the upper deck.
Check out the neat details on the seats.
The concourses were wide and open.
Camden Yards looked like it was going to be a spectacular ballpark, and I've love to get there again to see how it turned out.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Baseball Place No. 48: Ripken Center; Alternative Place No. 48A: Memorial Stadium
But I’m getting ahead of myself.
Josh Pahigian takes us to the Ripken Center in Aberdeen, Md. as spot No. 48 in his “101 Baseball Places to See Before You Strike Out.”
It sounds like a pretty glorious place. The legendary baseball family has a compound hosting a minor-league team, four scaled-down replicas of major-league parks, camps, clinics and a museum.
Never been there, but I did spend a wonderful evening at a park with the Ripkens.
Alternative place No. 48A) Memorial Stadium
Will, John and my brother John toured Camden Yards then enjoyed a game at Memorial.
Memorial Stadium, where the Mets played their first two World Series games, was in its final year.
The Orioles were incredibly accommodating, granting credentials to all four members of our party.
Naturally, we enjoyed this to the fullest, getting down to the field for batting practice. And as we know, I take photos of everything moving and not moving.
Memorial Stadium was in its final season.
Dwight Evans
Wally Joyner and Lance Parrish
So does my brother, who actually looked like a photojournalist in his khaki vest.
Cal Sr. was hitting fungos, with players tossing the balls back to him so he could again toss them up and smack another fly.
As John was shooting, he felt something bounce off his foot. A throw had gotten away from Cal Sr. and rolled to John.
“Son, can you throw that over here?” Cal Sr. said, ever the gentleman.
John picked it up and tossed it back. Eighteen years later I remain insanely jealous.
After shooting everyone and everything we moved up to the press box area for some snacks. The dining room was pretty small and very crowded. A staff member was standing behind a counter.
“Are those crab cakes?” Of course they were. We were in Baltimore. They seemed like the frozen variety, but I did not complain.
Memorial Stadium was such a realxed place that event the grounds crew was having fun and playing catch.
I moved into the press box for the game, which was great because Jim Abbott, a Flint native, was on the hill for the Angels. Seeing Abbott effortlessly transfer his glove from his hand to the end of his arm was simply amazing.
Press boxes aren’t always fun places. Basically there are a lot of openly surly people up there. I got a sense that the athletes don’t treat a lot of these guys all that well, and when you spend all that time in such an environment you tend to pass it on to whomever you come in contact with.
You need to know that there are semi-assigned seats. Some of the little desks bear the name of the news outlet, and others are just kind of claimed because the same people sit in them every game. Visiting media usually sit in the last couple rows.
So I had my seat in the last row and was enjoying my crab cakes -- seemed like the frozen kind, but they were free -- and about two innings into the game the staff ushered in a dad and his elementary school-aged son.
I think there were contest winners or something, and both were dressed in Orioles gear. The staffer scanned the box, saw a couple open seats in the first row and placed them there. Both seemed thrilled.
It wasn’t too much later when a late-arriving writer -- I didn’t catch who it was or who he worked for -- saw these two in his seat and went nuts. I don’t mean some grumbling, this guy was yelling.
The Orioles media relations guy told him to calm down and pointed him to a spot in the last row, next to me. The guy walked up and slammed -- and I mean slammed! -- his stuff down on the desk."Do you believe this?" he said, as if I would share in his outrage. Since he was all worked up and all, I was going to ask him if I could eat his crab cakes, but I thought better of it.
The Orioles media folks are first-rate, and handed me all kinds of information about the under-construction stadium.
But after a while I picked up my folders and headed out to explore the rest of the stadium and catch up with Will, John Munson and my bother. We settled down in the upper deck behind home plate. It seemed odd that the seats were metal bleachers.
Abbott pitched brilliantly, throwing seven shutout innings, striking out seven with five hits – one of them to Cal Jr. – and just one walk while his teammates scored five.
The Angels pen darn near wasted his effort, giving up a grand slam to Randy “Moose” Milligan, who started his career with three games with the 1987 Mets, before traded to the Pirates for Mackey Sasser.
It was a beautiful park on a beautiful night, looking out into the residential neighborhood beyond the field.