Got yourself involved with a baseball fanatic, and don't get what is the big deal? Baseball is a great game, but let me help you figure out how to figure it out. I've been there, scratching my head and asking stupid questions. This is what I've learned along the way. --The Girlfriend
Showing posts with label new to baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new to baseball. Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Nicky’s Guide to Her First MLB Game

I was out celebrating a birthday earlier this spring when talk turned to baseball with the Drummer Dude from Homer who is a big Detroit Tigers fan.  “Yeah I’m hoping to take Nicky to a game when we go back east this summer.  She’s never been to a MLB game.”  Nicky sitting across the table piped up, “What’s MLB?”   She was serious. 

My eyes lit up.  Nicky was a Girlfriend waiting to happen.

“Don’t worry, Nicky.  I got your back on this one.” I told her. 

So this guide is for her and anyone who isn’t into baseball and is going to their first game in a Major League Stadium. Follow these guidelines and you can have a fabulous time even if you don't know anything about baseball.

Rule #1:  Realize that going to a game at a Major League Park is not the same as watching baseball. Trust me. You can see the game better on TV. This is about going to the Park and having a tribal experience. MLB parks are much more devoted to the fan enjoyment these days than in the past. Soak it up. A baseball stadium can feel like a cathedral. Especially enjoy that moment when you first approach your first view of the field. It will take your breath away.

Rule #2: Get a program.  This does two things.  It gives you the roster for the teams so you can get to know the players and it also gives you a glossy magazine to read and look at during slow innings.

Rule #3:  Locate your scoreboard.  The scoreboard keeps track of the most important things for you— Runs, strikes, balls and outs,  who is batting, who is pitching, the batting order, statistics. There are usually some scoreboards are located around the park so all the fans can see them from their seats. Look at it every once in awhile. They often list fun trivia about the players and a bit of bio.  Makes it feel like you are rooting for your high school team. 

Rule #4:   Watch the Jumbotron.  Always play the games up there such as the boat races or the hat trick. Text your answer to the music trivia quiz.  Look for kiss cam or the dance cam.  Watch the blooper reel. Cheer for the guy who just turned 100 years old. Every park does it differently but every park does it.  
Rule #5:  Do the wave. Old timers and serious baseball fans barely lift their finger when the wave hits their section but ignore them. At my first Red Sox game at Fenway, we had a marginal seat in the bleachers behind a column, but the highlight of the game for me was participating in my first Wave.
Rule #6: It goes without saying that you need to be there in time to sing “The Star Spangled Banner” before the game starts and  “Take me Out to the Ball Game” or whatever they sing at Comerica during the 7th Inning Stretch.

Rule #7: At some point, take a walk all the way around the park but don’t do it until the 4th, 5th or 6th inning.   You  don’t want to blow your wad right at the beginning so save it when the game gets a little draggy and boring in the middle. It is fun to see the different perspectives of the field from the different section and check out what the stadium has to offer.  The Boyfriend and I once walked around AT&T Park in San Francisco and happened to be by the back wall looking at the water and watching the sunset, just as a Giants home run came sailing out of the park and into the water.  We got to see a kayaker pursue chase and fish the home run ball out of the water.  Now that’s a true San Francisco experience!
Rule #8:  Download out a baseball stadium app.   Now don’t spend your time with your nose in your phone. You should be looking around, not down. That being said, there are some fun apps to help you get more out of the experience.  MLB has one called At the Ball Park which gives you information about all the MLB stadiums.  For Comerica Park, I found that there’s a list of favorite tunes by Tiger Players you can purchase,  that standing on ballpark seats is prohibited,  and that Ford Field, home of the Detroit Lions, is just across the street.  You can Facebook a selfie of you and The Drummer Dude from the Park in front of those big cool Tigers out front. And, you can start a check-in list of which ball fields you have been to.  One down, my friend. 
Rule #9:   Don’t be an asshole.   (Not that you ever would, Nicky.  You are too nice for that.) But some folks need reminding.  Even if none of these rules help, and you are having a miserable time-- don’t badmouth the game, talk on your cell phone, complain that you are bored, or get too drunk or pick a fight with your companion.  People really love baseball and we Alaskans so rarely get a chance to get to a real live stadium. So don’t spoil it for the folks around you.  
Rule #10:  Wear your team colors.   If you got gear, put it on.  Get a baseball cap.  Heck, get a big puffy finger if you want.   It will help get you into the crowd “wah”.   I know you both are members of the Krewe of Gambrinus, so dig out your navy, white, and orange Mardi Gras beads.  (It’s okay, it is for baseball, not Mardi Gras so you can wear them out of season. )
Rule #11:   Wear sunscreen if it is a day game.  I forgot one sunny day in Seattle and I ended up with the most scarlet arm and left cheek in the city. We were sitting behind third base.

Rule #12:  I don’t know much about the Detroit Stadium and its location but make sure to catch the ambience outside and around the stadium.  Walk to the game if possible and stop in a sports bar along the way. Soak up the fan vibe and people watch as others walk to the game.  Check out the colorful characters that a game brings out.  Seattle has a great stadium for this guideline. We try to walk from downtown as the crowds start the migration. There’s a great tiny bar about a block from the Stadium call the Triangle  (Yup, two great bars in the world called the Triangle) and we always stop, order their Rainier special and watch people walking to the game.  The Boyfriend especially likes nodding to the rowdy Red Sox fans as they walk by in a sea of polite Mariner aficionados.

Rule #13:  Observe basic baseball etiquette.  Wait to leave or head back to your seat until between batters.  Don’t talk on the cell phone because you are bored.  Keep your peanut shell mess located beneath you and not in your neighbor’s space. Pass the hotdogs or the change down to the person in your row to whom it belongs. Don’t hold a big sign that blocks anyone’s view.

Rule #14:  Watch out for flying balls and bats.  The better your seat, the more likely you are in foul territory.  You are an athletic type, so feel free to jump for it. Drummer Dude seems like the type who would also dive for the ball.  Wimps like me look around me to see who brought their mitts and will provide protection. Remember, like in airplane exits, the nearest saviors may be located behind you.   Or you can reference my column on foul balls and sneak a cafeteria tray into your knapsack.

I am sure readers have other suggestions as well.  I'd love to hear them.

And yes, security is going to check your purse or bag before you go into the park, so be discreet about your tampons. Have an awesome time. Facebook us all a picture with those awesome Tigers!

Monday, March 31, 2014

It is Opening Day and the fat lady is warming up...

The Boyfriend and I were at Sullivan’s one day, a swank place with live music in the bar and sports on TV.  My attention turned to a sports analyst's dissection of a boxing match on the closest set, complete with animations,  electronic chalk and men spit-sprayin'-passionate about the sport.

"I think boxing is like opera," I said to Joe.  "There are some people who get it and love it and see all the little details in it that make them appreciate the skill. The rest of us just thinks it's  barbaric, stupid and incredibly painful to watch."

He looked at me and said, "That sounds like baseball. "

I think the Boyfriend is onto something.

Think about it. Opera has the great opera houses around the world. The Metropolitan in New York. The soaring Sidney Opera House and the Bolshoi in Moscow.  Baseball has its own domes of drama, Fenway,  Yankee Stadium, Wrigley Field. Miller Park. (You don't think that the sausages running around the bases in Milwaukee aren't yelling at each other in the language of Puccini and Wagner? The bratwurst huffing in German and the Italian sausage emoting in language of Isabella Rossellini? If we listen close enough, we might hear Chorizo sounding uncannily like Rolando Villazon, the famous Mexican tenor.)

Yogi Berra (quoted 90 percent of the time for half of the things he actually said) said "it ain't over 'til the fat lady sings." He is, of course, referring to the Nordic women of Wagner’s Ring Triology with their thick braids and metal breastplates.   But he could have easily been thinking about the protective gear of umpires, especially the old National League which
made them look like Helga with five o’clock shadow. Kommen Sie Heraus! You are outta here!

Operas feature folks with grand egos and are filled with drama.  You can even be a prima donna who is not particularly likable but as long as you can hit a high note and hold it until the rafter shakes and the audience is in tears, then all is forgiven.  Same in baseball. If you are good and can deliver, you still got fans. Think Barry Bonds and Manny Rameriez. Ty Cobb and  Alex Rodriguez.

Tickets are starting to be about the same price for both performances, though they don't let you bring nacho boats into the concert hall.  You do get to preorder your drinks for the intermission at the opera company in my town which I find very civilized, They put your glass of chardonnay out on a cloth covered table with your name written neatly on your receipt. And no one steals it because if you paid that much for a ticket, you can afford your own glass of $8 Chardonnay .  Though I imagine if baseball fans could only order beers between innings and only out in the lobby it would be a madhouse.  We would be back to the boxing match play by play.  I guess my analogy breaks down at some point.

In the old days, opera was really theater for everyone, including the commoners . Like in baseball,  the poorer folks were in the cheap seats shouting "you bum!"  at the big fat guy who really had no chance with the mezzo-soprano but was pouring his heart out anyway.   Audience participation was part of the fun.

Mozart, who wrote the Magic Flute and Don Giovanni, wrote his operas for the common people.  I have to think that if Mozart was alive and a baseball fan, he would be the resident  organist at Wrigley Field. Mozart died without seeing much success in his life, so I have to think he could relate to the Chicago Cubs. Requiem in Nine Innings. Take me out to the ball game and die a slow noisy death.

Because we know that in opera, (SPOILER ALERT) someone always dies.  In Tosca, there are firing squads, betrayal, knifings and a spectacular leap over the side of the castle wall at the end of the performance. Look at last year's season with the Mariners and tell me that all of those things didn't happen? (Well, maybe not the knifing.)  Someone always wins and someone always loses at a baseball game.  If you are a committed fan and your team loses, sometimes it feels like you are the one who fell on the knife, who drank the poison, who got shot through the heart by one you adored but who betrayed you.  And late in the season, you may be tempted to make Faustian deal with the devil to have at least one World Series Championship under your team's belt.

I guess these are acquired tastes that you absorb by being born onto an opera loving family or hanging out with passionate fans who tell you what you are obviously missing.  Baseball, like opera, when it is good, it is very, very good. It leaves you satisfied and contented with the satisfaction of seeing talented people perform a thing of beauty. When opera is bad, it is really, really bad.   When baseball is bad, well, there is always another game  (weather permitting. ) 

Oh, you ask, does The Boyfriend like opera as much as I do?  Barbaric, stupid and incredibly painful to listen to. I did not come up with those words myself.

It is Opening Day. Let the curtain rise and the games begin. Bravo!

Thursday, March 27, 2014

True to the Blue-- the Mariner Commercials


The Seattle Mariners promotional commercials are out for 2014.  "True to the Blue" is the theme and the commercials are a fun way to promote the home team.   Check them out at http://m.mlb.com/sea/video/topic/42606920/ and get your Blue on.

Monday, March 24, 2014

So what’s the hype about spring training?

A Report From Boston Red Sox Spring Training

--Submitted by The Sister Turned Red Sox Fanatic

My husband and I just returned from Boston Red Sox Spring Training at JetBlue Park in Ft. Myers, Florida, USA. I felt like I should add U.S.A because it totally felt like an other-world experience. Going to spring training at least once appears on (almost) every Red Sox fan’s “bucket list. So is it worth the hype? Absolutely.  And then some.  It’s magic!
 

Let me make one thing clear up front—going to spring training is only a tiny bit about baseball.  Actually, the seven games we saw in two weeks were probably some of the lamest baseball, I have ever seen.  The first four innings might offer a hint of what will happen in the season ahead as at least some of the big leaguers show up early in the game. The starting pitchers rotate in and out like divas. The infielders spend a lot of time man-hugging their buds from opposing teams. The outfielders turn their faces into the warm Florida rays like sunflowers until the crowd noises suggest that someone hit the ball and they snap back into action. The umpires strut just because that’s what they do. Their “protective equipment” is probably a bit snug after a winter of whatever. Instant replays this year in MLB will make them pay a bit more attention.  And no one spits.
By the fifth inning, sooner if the manager deems, Red Sox wannabes rotate into the game; the roster can go to complete unknowns in seconds. Lots of Bryces and Brooks and Bretts coming up, I see.   Then the chaos begins. I saw innings with 5 errors, six walks prior to the first out, rookies knocking over anyone near home plate on the slide in, and spectacular bobbles in the outfield. And the crowd, so not Fenway. 
Missing were the beer-soaked four-sport fans from Boston who bad- mouth the players and the managers because they can (so not Fenway). The vendors actually sell beer in the cheap seats (so not Fenway).  Fans from other teams with training facilities in Florida just come to the game because it’s fun (that is so like Fenway). Even Yankee fans were pretty tolerable, so not Fenway (ok, we all drank a lot of beer).
So what’s the hype?  Just approaching JetBlue Park amidst the fluttering flags declaring “Fenway South”, the oversize banner proclaiming the Boston Red Sox as champions of the universe (took some literary liberty there) and a replica of the Ted Williams statue at Fenway were emotionally overwhelming. You aren’t even in the park yet and you are bleeding Red Sox proud!  When you enter the park, you are struck by the eerie familiarity of the Green Monster and the Pesky Pole. Sitting in a game at Spring Training drinking a beer when it’s 85 degrees makes you believe that despite arguably the longest winter in history, that summer will come again and with it the promise that all things are possible (or possible again in the case of the Red Sox). Hearing the familiar “play ball!” and the national anthem, and Sweet Caroline, and “Get Your Beer Here!” made me very emotional (ok, I sobbed). 
Generations of Red Sox fans from newborns in “B” emblazed onesies to wizened retirees (half of New England retires in Florida) offer a collective embrace of the new season. The intimacy of the park with only 11,000 seats encourages spontaneous conversation and free flowing opinions about “their chances” this year. Lots of high fives are exchanged as well as occasional bemoaning about who deserted the Red Sox for more money. There is predictably, enthusiastic cheering when the scoreboard shows the Yankees losing to anyone. So as the experience is so not Fenway, it is so Fenway. It is such a wonderful illustration of the paradox that is baseball in New England.  As fans we want everthing to be different but we don’t want anything to change. 
Yes, spring training is definitely worth the hype!