April 2009
4/25/09 Mets vs. Nationals
Today is my first official game at Shea Stadium Citi Field. So we arrive 30 minutes early. I head over towards the Jackie Robinson Rotunda to make sure it is the earliest gate.
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It is and I look for my ticket. I look for it in my pockets, but it isn’t there! I look everywhere around me. Oh crap, where is my ticket. If I don’t have it, we printed out another copy, but someone could pick up the dropped ticket and somehow get ahead of me. This isn’t good. But way off in the distance, I see an object.
It is near the light post in the center of the parking lot. It seems too big, but I went RIGHT through that area. I walk/run over there. I pick it up and it is the size of a ticket. I open it up and whwala! It is the ticket for section 123. It’s not there anymore, but it was just in front of the pole in the parking lot.
After I scan it, I run up the escalators. When I get a look at the field, there is nobody there. There are B.P. cages, but the only action is a Met running around the outfield warning track. I put on my Mets cap and go over there. I think it is John Maine, a quite little farm boy.
I am not sure, so I do what I did with Aaron Laffey back at Yankee Stadium. I just hold up my pen, and he makes a throw it to me motion. I don’t ever have the baseballs out, so I take one out and toss it to him. He gladly signs it for my 1st autograph today.
Since there are B.P. cages I ask a nearby guard what is happening with B.P. today:
“Only the Nationals are taking B.P. today.”
I wait happily in the empty outfield seats for the Nationals to start.
But after some coaches come out and go to the bullpen, the entire Nationals roster comes out of the dugout. I can see Adam Dunn, Austin Kearns, Manny Acta, Marquis Grissom, Ryan Zimmerman, all of them.
There is also a bucket of balls there.
Austin Kearns is right there so I ask him for one and he gladly walks over, picks one up, and tosses me my 1st ball of the day. Not that hard considering that I am the only person behind the dugout.
That’s him with his hands in his pockets.
Then I get some competition, an 8-year-old kid or so and his dad. He gets one ball easily and gets some more later on (you’ll see).
Soon two coaches start throwing. One of them is Marquis Grissom, a former Expo, and another coach I don’t know. I plop a seat in the first row and wait for them to finish. Marquis Grissom ends up with the ball so I don’t even ask, not to attract attention to myself. We make eye contact, I open and close my glove, and he winds-up and throws the ball straight to me, my 2nd ball so far.
Look at this cool wipe:
Then a random player walked over to the bucket. The dad and his kid ask him for a ball and he starts to walk away.
“Wait, can I have a ball also?” He sees my Nationals hat and Inaugural Season Nationals shirt, smiles, and walks over and gladly tosses me my 3rd ball. According to a coach, it was Ryan Zimmerman (you’ll see again).
You can see on this ball the *Official* Training Ball print and the ‘Practice’ print. The Nationals were only using these balls.
All the players go out to the line to start throwing, but Marquis and Manny remain. The dad asks for Manny’s autograph, and gets it, so I ask him for an autograph also. I toss him both baseballs, and he returns them to me, signed, for my 2nd autograph today.
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Jim Riggleman kept taking balls from the bucket, now on the mound, and hitting them towards the players, for warm-up balls. They pile up, so I head over there. The closest person over there is Pat Listach:
“Could I have that ball?” I ask him.
“How many you got?”
“What?” I am not sure what he said since he is about 50 feet away.
“How many do you got?” (The got sounded like want).
I think he was joking around when I thought I heard him say ‘want’.
“Oh, one,” thinking that he said want.
“Your lying to me.”
“What?”
“I saw you at the dugout. I say you get multiple balls from the players. You lied to me and you got that uh, uh Nationals hat.” He said the last part while pointing to me hat.
“Sorry, I didn’t know what you meant.”
“You got like 6.”
“No, I did not get 6 baseballs.” I replied.
“I saw you get some from players and also one from Ryan Zimmerman.”
“Ryan Zimmerman didn’t toss me a ball, I saw him without his jacket.”
“Well it was him,” he said and then he starts signing. I figure what the heck and ask him. “You want me to sign all 6?” He joked. I just have him sign one baseball not to push it for my 3rd autograph today.
I then go over and see Randy St. Claire with some baseballs.
“Balls are for pitchers,” he says after I ask him for a ball.
A bit after he said that, a ball is hit on the line to Shairon Martis. I happen to be right there, and he is recognizable, so I ask him for the ball. He inspects the ball and tosses me my 4th ball today. Did I mention that all the balls I have gotten so far have been training balls? I need one more for my 50th ball on the season…
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After the pitchers finish, I go to the outfield for home runs. There is a ball that is hit to the wall. It is about 5 feet out. Glove trick anyone?
The wall is much bigger than I thought. I lower my glove about 10 feet, a little more than halfway down, when bullpen coach Randy Knorr comes to pick it up. I shout leave it there, but he flips it high up. I’m still holding my glove trick in my left hand, and sort of sitting down, so I jump up and lean over and bare hand it with my right hand. That was a good way to get my 5th ball today and my….50th on the season! This is a very clean ball for sitting on dirt and at this pace; I’ll get 300 by the seasons end.
Then it becomes dead. No balls are hit into the seats. There are too many people. There is too high a wall to lower the glove trick in time. About 15 players are out in left field, so they pick up every ball. It’s too hot. I just give up. I go over to the dugout. I ask the players as they walk in for something. They all say no. Finally when the whole team comes in, I get an autograph. Kip Wells comes in, so I call out his name. He looks up, I hold out my pen, and I toss him both the baseballs and my pen, both of which he signs and returns for my 4th autograph today.
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That is pretty much it. The bucket of baseballs is being emptied, but guess who is doing that? Pat Listach!
So I wait for the pre-game warm up balls. Nick Johnson, who looks like any guy that accidentally jumped onto the field wearing a Nationals uniform, is the first one to start and finish. When he ends up with the ball, I call his name. He doesn’t look up. He just keeps walking until he is on the first step. Only then does he finally look up and toss me his pre-game warm up ball for my 6th ball today.
See the ball? There was absolutely no competition. I just laid back and nobody tried to get it. Citi Field seems laid back.
Now I want a commemorative baseball. All the baseballs the Nationals have used, besides Nick Johnson’s, have been training balls. UGH! I try for third out balls on the Nationals side. Finally, after the third, I stop. Why?
A ball was hit to #16, who catches it for the third out. He walks towards the dugout and stops at the very top to put on his shin guards or something. I see that the player is Josh Willingham after waiting for a long time. Finally, he looks up, smiles and finally tosses me the ball, my 7th ball. While getting the ball, an adult lunges for it, and lands on me, but by which time the ball is in my glove. I fell O.K. and it was worth it for a commemorative baseball.
At around the 6th inning, I go over to the inner aisle of the Nationals dugout. I see Manny Acta at the top step of the dugout during the half-inning. I ask Manny Acta for something at the end of the game, to which he will give me at the end of the game.
At the end of the game, by which time I am in the front row, I say “Manny”. He turns around, sees me, and gets ready to toss it to me. I nod to show that I am ready. He tosses me it, and I catch it easily. I take the pen off that is clipping them together and look at the line-up cards for today’s game, signed by both Manny Acta and Jerry Manuel.
Jerry Manuel signed by him. Notice Sheffield on it? Nice and printed.
Manny Acta signed by him. Everything hand-written. I don’t know why the star is next to Kip Wells’ name.
I am not counting these in my autograph collection because it would make things a little difficult. They are signed by the managers, but in what order? I have also gotten one or two previous line-up cards, which I don’t think I counted, so since it would screw some stuff up, I don’t count them. Now bought autographs, I count. I know you may say that that is cheating, but I had already bought a bunch of autographs, I’d say around 400 of my collection. Now that significantly takes away from my lifetime total, but it is still 1,500 MLB Autographs. Now, I am still counting them in my lifetime total, but I have a thing where I enter each autograph I get and information about it, so I can look back and see which autographs I bought and which I got from now on. Remember, I still have gotten about 1,500 MLB Autographs on my own, and plus I usually get two for my brother. I know some people may call that cheating, but it would be too difficult. I went through my collection and counted each and everysingle autograph and the year before that I wrote the names of players on little slips and put them underneath the balls in holders. It would be a huge pain to resort through each autograph and find out which is bought and which isn’t, but if you pick out a ball from my collection I can tell you which it is.
Well back to the game. The two players on base, one at-bat, and one on-deck come into the dugout. Nothing from Johnson. Nothing from Dunn. Nothing from Zimmerman. Then Anderson Hernandez comes in. I ask his for his batting gloves by making the hand symbol (un-strapping your wrists). He takes off his wristband and throws it to me, easily, my 1st G-U item of the day, and the MLB season.
Now all the bullpen pitchers come in from the bullpen. When they get close, I see two baseballs on Knorr’s bag. I ask him for them, but nothing. After they disappear two baseballs are thrown from underneath. I reach out and get the first one for my 8th baseball today. A wristband, a ball, and the line-up cards? That is why you stay after the game, or for the Kids Run the Bases.
The next game that I will be going to will be May 2nd at Yankee Stadium and the next games after that will be May 5th and 7th. Most likely a sell-out on the 5th, but I don’t care.
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Stats:
4 MLB Autographs Today
8 MLB Balls Today
46 MLB Autographs in This Season
49 Total Autographs in This Season
53 MLB Balls in This Season
69 Total Balls in This Season
5 BP, 1 Pre-Game, 1 During, 1 After
8 Thrown
Attendence: 39,960 people
Competition Factor: 319,680
6.625 balls / 1 game
8 Consecutive games with 1 MLB Autograph
8 Consecutive games with 3 MLB Baseballs
3 Consecutive games with 5 MLB Baseballs
I’ll leave you with some pictures of Citi Field:
4/21/09 Yankees vs. A’s
Thank you AccuWeather! You predicted numerous thunderstorms throughout the day in the Bronx! You were…not correct.
Because of AccuWeather, we arrived 1 hour after the gates opened, about 20 minutes into BP or so. Because of rain, we thought there would be no BP. So I have to rush into fair territory. AccuWeather should be called SometimesAccuWeather.
I didn’t even have time to take out my stuff so I take a seat and take out my glove and Yankees hat. But an usher comes and sends me back to foul territory. Which usher might you ask? The usher from Saturday who took the ball from me. What a wonderful day so far!
It is sort of O.K. though. I talk with the usher in the foul pole aisle, and he lets me go into that aisle. And then after a while Phil Coke starts fielding other than just a ball boy. They talk with for a bit, and I think Phil is showing him some throwing mechanics. Then they start throwing. When they finish throwing I call Phil out, and he gets ready, and fires the ball at me. It is low and to the side, like the Dave Eiland ball in Baltimore, but I reach down in time and get it easily with no pain, my 1st ball today.
Then a couple minutes later, Johnny Damon goes out and starts fielding balls from 75 feet away. The coach hits them one after another, and he fires them back.
Johnny Damon is the nicest Yankee I know (possibly Mariano also). If you ask him for something like an autograph or a baseball and he says later, he means it. If the whole team can’t sign for you, and Johnny Damon can’t either, then they are telling the truth. So after a bit I call out Johnny and ask him for the next ball. He looks around and shrugs his shoulders.
“The next ball.” I yell. He nods.
He gets a couple more baseballs, but they are too far away. He gets a close ball, and then he tosses the ball towards me from 75 feet away. Towards. The ball sails over my head and into the 3rd row. When I move back, I see it go down into the second row, so I grab it and claim it for my 2nd ball.
That’s a long way.
There’s a close call also. A ball is hit to foul territory. I rush over there as quick as I can, but it is snatched inches away from my finger tips. I don’t like when that happens. But soon after that, the A’s start throwing.
I position myself near the corner spot because I saw a ball off in the distance. I can’t tell who picks up the ball, so I don’t ask. Then I move over to where some of the A’s are throwing and walking in. Santiago? No. Brett? Nope. Curt Young? Nope. Finally a former Yankee finishes up.
“Dan.”
He twirls around looking for who called him. “Mr. Giese could I have that ball?” He sees me and gladly tosses me the ball.
But a kid next to me tries to get it, but I get it, my 3rd ball today and 43rd on the season.
Remember that usher from earlier and yesterday? He is gone now. Fair territory. I move back over there near to some players who are running and stretching. I look at my sheet to see who is who. I see #53 Travis Cahill, #53 Josh Outman, and #49 Brett Anderson.
Two balls are hit, almost consecutively, near them. One is caught by a player who is unidentified and the other is caught by Josh Outman. I call Josh’s name and he does a twirling crow hop and tosses me my 4th ball.
Nothing else really happens to me for the rest of B.P. I see Nomar doing exercises near the wall, and we think he is going to sign, but nope. One thing about Nomar, if he is starting and doing pre-game stretching with the rest of the line-up, he ALWAYS signs in the same spot, about right in a straight line from when he was running. Remember that…
I also see 3 players standing around near left-center. I see Dan Giese, Sean Gallagher, and someone I don’t know. I hold up a pen, but they don’t sign. Sean said:
“After.”
Liar!
(unknown), Gallagher, Giese
At the end of B.P., I do see someone signing, but there is also a ball in the bullpen. Do I choose the ball in the bullpen or the person signing? Which one do I choose…
When I get to the player, I see his signature. It is #40, Andrew Bailey. He signs one for me, my 1st autograph today. I try to get him to sign another ball.
“Mr. Bailey could you sign this one for my brother?” Since I used his name he obliges.
“Alright, two more.” I am the first.
I head back to the bullpen, and the ball is still there. An usher comes over to me, and he’s not the bad one. I tell him that there’s a ball in the bullpen and that I’ll head to my seats, on field level, after it is gone. He lets me. Finally a sensible usher in the outfield.
Two ball boys come into the bullpen. They skip the ball and ignore my calls and head into the bullpen glass doors. When they come out, they take the ball and toss it into the bleacher. I thank that usher and go on my way. This usher is the nice one:
I make my way back towards my section by cutting through the rows because it is fun. But, I see the usher. Not the good one, the bad. I turn my head off to the concourse and head up the steps. He sees me. He yells at me and sends me back to where I was going anyway. Because of the empty seats, I was thinking about going back there tonight. Not going back there tonight.
Here is the good usher:
Picking up his stuff.
And this is the usher you should avoid. I talked with some of the other ushers, and they had no problem with me there. So avoid this one:
I head to my convenient seat and when the starting pitcher starts warming up, I go to the first row. I ask the pitching coach, Curt Young, for a ball. He nods and holds up a finger to indicate soon. Dana Eveland warms up with the bullpen catcher while Kurt Suzuki warms up with the bullpen coach Rob Romanick. When they get close, I call Rob out. He tosses the ball on the ground, and after a bit, Curt Young picks up that ball and tosses it to me, my 5th ball.
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In the 2nd inning after some really fast in-seat service, I tour the stadium. Here are some photos:
A really good view from the elevator.
A nice H-Definition Screen in the Great Hall
A mis-leading sign on the main level.
The view from the highest, farthest corner in right field.
The Facade. MUCH better than the same view from Citi Field.
In the 7th inning I try for some stubs. I don’t need Legends because as from Zack’s blog, I’ll need a wristband also. So I just need seats behind the dugouts to get there attentions. After asking for some stubs from people who are in the perfect section, I get a stub. I get it on the first try. Good asking.
It is mainly for an ump ball, so I stand at the inner corner to follow him to the exit. But too many Yankees are screaming, so Home Plate Ump Brian Gorman can’t hear me from 7 rows back. No ball. How about the people coming from the bullpens? Nope, nothing. I got 5 balls today, and spent 60 minutes getting out of the garage. That’s 12 minutes for each ball. Yay!
- 1 MLB Autograph Today
- 5 MLB Balls Today
- 42 MLB Autographs in this Season
- 45 Total Autographs in this Season
- 45 MLB Balls in this Season
- 61 Total Balls in this Season
- 4 BP and 1 Pre-Game
- 5 Thrown
- Attendance: 42,065
- Competition Factor: 210,325
- 6.43 Ball/1 Game
- 7 Consecutive Games With 1 Autograph
- 7 Consecutive Games With 3 Balls
4/18/09 Yankees vs. Indians
Today, since it’s the weekend and a 3:40 game, we arrived 40 minutes before the gates open. I decide to take the long route and look at all the gates. Here are some shots:
The long wall between Gates 6 and 8. I head towards Gate 6 I think, and I see Zack Hample and a huge crowd there. I talk to him for 10 minutes or so and then head back over to Gate 2.
A very empty Gate 4 about 10 minutes before gate opening. Look in the background.
What’s that? They had trouble opening the gate at Gate 2. It kept jamming. It would close fine, but then it would jam when it got there. Gate 2 is not a very well crowded gate. There are 5 scanners, and there were 25 people there in total, but then security made everyone into one line. That’s o.k.; I was about 3rd or 4th.
Anyway, I head inside and go to my seat. The BP cages are set up, but nothing is happening. My seats are in the perfect place. In the area behind our section, there is a gate, a bathroom, multiple concessions, we have in seat service, and the pitchers warm-up right in front of us. So I go to get a Johnny Rockets because they gave out free shakes today, but they aren’t open yet. They say to be back in 10 minutes, but of course that ten minutes disappear when two Indians start throwing.
I put on my Indians cap, and walk down into the corner spot between the bleachers and the field. One of them has an injured arm, and I think that the other is the bullpen catcher Brian Wallace. They start moving in, so when they keep walking closer, but they stop throwing…
“Can I have that ball?”
The guy with the injured arm circles his arm once and then throws the ball over to me. It bounces twice, and then the usher grabs it. I said right before it came near us “I got it,” but the usher got it anyway. But it is o.k. because he hands the ball, my 1st ball, right over to me. My first ball 3 hours before game time, cool.
That I think is Wallace on the left.
Then the Yankees start taking some lazy swings. I was over by right field, so I run back. When I get there, there are about 3 balls in the corner. A guy, who I think is one of the older Yankees ball boys, picks up the balls. I ask him for the ball, and he flips it up to me, my 2nd ball today. It is only about 165 minutes before game time, and I already have 2 balls!
Then, when the Yankees have slowed down hitting for a bit, an usher goes down the aisle about 3 aisles away from me. There is about 20 people in the outfield, but *POOF* there is now about 6. I talked with an usher near me. I do have to admit, the ushers here are much nicer. This usher said that the usher over there was checking people’s tickets and taking their names. If they were caught again, they would be ejected.
Wow.
So then the Yankees start heating up again. The Yankees are hitting balls, so I move over into a spot. I hope he doesn’t kick a kid out. Another ball rolls to the wall, and that ball is almost in the spot where my previous ball was. A guy, who I think, no wait, I know is A.J. Burnett walks over to pick it up. I ask him for the ball and he flips up to me my 3rd ball today. I just got my New Yankee Stadium average in less than 40 minutes.
And check out this cool marking?
How did that get there?
After A.J. leaves, someone takes his place. That someone? Melky Cabrera.
Originally, Melky starts fielding one ball after another off the wall. I am asking him for the baseball, and all the while wondering how so many balls are hit to near the same spot repeatedly. Only then in the distance do I see a coach hitting those balls. Oh.
When he finishes, some people call Melky over to sign, and he signs for them. I go over there figuring Melky is a good autograph, so I get Melky on two (oh, so now you sign two?) baseballs for my 1st autograph today.
It’s about 1:40 and here is an observation: the Yankees aren’t hitting any baseballs into the left field stands. All the meanwhile I can see Zack running around and making high jumps in right field. Since nothing is coming my way, and there aren’t really anybody near to the corner to just run over there for any old baseball, so I walk over to the bullpen. I see Carl Willis, who is a good ignorer, and Aaron Laffey. I also see a baseball.
See it?
They are talking about pitching mechanics, so when they finish I ask:
“Aaron can I have that ball over there?” while pointing to the ball. He gladly walks over. I have my hand under the railing and he is about to hand it to me.
“But wait this ball won’t fit under.”
He thinks for a second and then says “Over.” I back up and he tosses it over, and I catch it easily, my 4th ball today.
A couple steps away from me are two Indians ball boys who are playing catch. They have been shagging and playing catch on and off for the last couple minutes, so when a ball rolls to the wall I ask for “a ball for an Indians’ fan?” He looks at my hat, laughs, and tosses me my 5th ball. Wow. 5 balls and the Indians haven’t even thrown! 5 balls before the visiting team bats.
This is almost as good as Camden. But now the Indians come out to throw. Also at this time, I see a familiar face that was kicked out of right field. Same side of the field, hope we don’t get in each other’s way.
Rafael Perez is again throwing a ball against a wall. Same spot also. So I go to the same spot as before and I ask him for the ball. When he finishes he doesn’t toss me the ball. He tosses it in an arc, and the ball lands in the second row, wedge in an ultra-padded seat. A man is sitting right behind the seat, but I scurry over there and get it for my 6th ball today.
Small type of ball Rafael Perez used in back-to-back days.
Then when some of the pitchers finish, Carl Pavano is standing around with some other pitchers. He comes over to sign, so I get him on one, for my 2nd MLB autograph today, my 1946th MLB autograph of all-time, and my 2356th total autograph of all time.
Since only Rafael Perez is throwing, I go back to fair territory.
Can you spot Zack in the picture?
Masa Kobayashi is running up and down the outfield wall, and a ball rolls to the wall. Masa walks over to pick it up. I ask him for the ball (in English), but as fate would have it, Zack saw that and got over there. He asked him in Spanish. Masa looked at me and then him. I was a kid wearing an Indians hat and I asked first, but Zack asked in Japanese and is wearing an Indians hat and shirt. Mass decides to toss me the ball, my 7th ball today.
This is REALLY beaten up for just the 3rd game at the New Yankee Stadium.
Another ball rolls over there, so I move to a different spot, but still close to the wall. I ask Cliff Lee for the ball, but he must’ve seen my pen. He takes the ball, and kicks it into the 4th row. He kicked it. Then another ball rolls over there. It was just in front of the Canon sign.
I ask Zach Jackson, who I sometimes mistake for Carl Pavano, if I could have that ball.
He finishes talking and picks up his glove. There is a ball in that. Is that my ball? Nope. Two more balls roll to the wall to make it three. Is ball number 1 my ball? Nope. What about ball number 2? Nope. He takes the ball I asked for, walks about 10 feet over, and under-hands me my 8th ball.
I kinda space out, but a couple asks me to take their picture. I snap back in. And I take their photo. I stay there and I talk to them for a bit, but it is interrupted by a “HEADS UP”. I look up in time and see a ball barely in the sun-light. If I had to say, it was about 150 feet away. I lost it but I stick my glove out randomly. I don’t know what made me put my glove in that direction, but I did. I barely have it out; it is not even fully extended, before my arm is yanked down. I look at the outer wall of my pocket and don’t see a ball. I am thinking that I dropped it, but I turn my glove over and open it to find my 9th ball sitting there happily. After I see the ball in my glove, there is a bunch of applause and then I get a lot of “Nice Catch” through the rest of BP.
I tried rotating it, it wouldn’t work.
Then an usher, the one who was asking for tickets approaches me. He said that I should give a ball to a kid, who couldn’t be more than 7, in the front row. I see that he has a glove on, a plus, but I tell the usher that I will help him get one. I go over to the kid and say:
“Did you get a ball yet?” I ask him.
“Nope,” he replies.
“Well I’ll help you out.” I let him use my Indians hat and get the player’s attention. The usher is two rows behind me. Some balls roll to the corner, so I position him in the front row and when a player comes to get the ball, I help him get it. After I get the kid the ball and walk back over, a guy approaches me. He says that an usher, probably the one I just did a favor for, told him that I average 6 balls a game here. I tell him that that is not true, and that it is only 3 a game. But he asks me if I could give a ball to his wife up there. I tell him that I like to keep each ball I get, and he is ok about it. He doesn’t badger me. That is good.
So after that, another ball rolls to the wall. Standing right next to each other are Vinnie Chulk and Cliff Lee. They look very similar, except Vinnie has bushier eyebrows. So I ask Vinnie for a ball and he walks backwards and throws me my 10th ball. 10!!! DOUBLE DIGITS!
Wow. It took 1/3 of my games are double digits.
Down part…
Remember that usher? He walks over to me. He points to an older man sitting far back, without a glove. He says that I should give him that ball. I say I would prefer not, but he takes the ball out of my mitt and walks over and hands him the ball.
“But he caught it, it should be his,” the glove-less man said on my behalf.
“He caught it for you, right?” The usher lied.
I told the truth saying I didn’t and the old man gives me the ball back.
Older man=good
Usher=BAD
Did I mention that that usher kept asking me for a ball?
I dislike that usher.
I want to file a complaint.
I want him gone.
Anyway, BP Ends soon after, and I have to leave for a Bar-Mitzah, so I watch an inning (the only good inning) and then head outside to be picked up and driven there. That it a very good day.
Here are some shots of the scoreboard:
That thing is a door that opened in the scoreboard. Must have a nice view.
Yes 14 runs. FOURTEEN. In the second inning. I had the joy of hearing it while stuck in traffic on the highway.
Look at that score! It took about 2 hours and 30 minutes to get from the 3rd inning to the 9th inning. I was at the Bar Mitzvah by then.
That’s double digits at Yankee Stadium for the 3rd game ever there. I wonder how it will be for the 6th game ever there…
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4/16/09 Yankees vs. Indians
Opening Day at the New Yankee Stadium! Will I go? Yes. Will I arrive before gates open? Yes. Will I see a huge line 45 minutes before the gates open? Yes. Oh well, 2 out of 3 is not bad. When I arrived there, there was 1 line, with 6 people on it
. I started another line and was first on line.
When I get there, I see David Cone walk up and throw something into the trash. I go over and shake his hand and he walks on. This reminds me of Carlos Marmol. Then I see Jim Kaat get out of a car. He had a cool MLB Network patch on, but I didn’t know him. My mom identified him as Jim Kaat, so I got a picture with him.
Gate 2 is like the Press Gate. We also see Freddy “Sez” outside, and I get a photo with him. Apparently, he didn’t have a ticket. The guards just let him in.
At the front of the line, I hear the supervisor basically telling them that the ticket takers’ jobs are to make sure there are no matters at the Scan-Tron, and say
“Welcome to Yankee Stadium.”
So when I rush inside, I am greeted by 4 different people saying “Welcome to Yankee Stadium.” When I get out to the field, I see two people running. One of them is a player and one of them I think is a coach. I don’t know them, so I don’t get their autographs. But then another guy comes out and runs laps right in front of me. I don’t know his name, but I hold up my pen (while wearing an Indians hat) and he says:
“After I’m finished running the laps.”
Sure enough a couple laps later, he finishes and walks over and signs two baseballs for me for my 1st autograph today. After I look at the signature, I realize it’s Aaron Laffey.
Last night, I looked up some information and found out that a majority of players would be batting right handed for both teams. The Yankees come out to swing. They have about 4 players take 1 round of batting practice, and then they stop! I was shocked. The Indians started throwing, so I went over there. I see Rafael Betancourt, but he gives me no balls. Rafael Perez starts throwing a ball against a wall, so I ask him for a ball. He tosses me the ball, but a fan next to me, knocks the ball to the ground while trying to get it. Rafael walks over, picks up the ball, and places it in my mitt for my 1st ball today. I have gotten about 6 balls by people placing the balls in my mitt.
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After all the Indians finish throwing, I head over to fair territory. A ball rolls to the wall, and a guy, who is a trainer, gets the ball. He looks at me and throws it straight at me, but this guy next to me reaches out and grabs the ball. The trainer says “Sir, that ball was for him.” Then the guy tries to give it to me, but I refuse. He tosses the ball towards me, but I don’t try to catch it. I don’t want them given to me; I want it to be gotten by myself. I just walk away and try to get more balls.
Towards the end of BP, 3 balls are hit near the corner. A coach with a bat walks
over and pick them up. I say “Indians fan, Indians fan!” while holding my hat. There are about 6 little kids around me screaming, but they are dressed in Yankees gear. He tosses me the ball, my 2nd ball, and tosses the rest in.
I think he is Dan Williams?
Although I only got 1 autograph, it seemed like no other Indians signed autographs.
I relax and watch the ceremonies. But near the end of the ceremonies, I walk over to the Indians’ Bullpen. I walk over there in time to see the planes fly over head and the confetti blast up, some of which I get.
Look at all that confetti.
I also get to see Cliff Lee warm up. During Cliff Lee warming up, I ask Chuck Hernandez for the Bullpen Line-Up card at the end of the game. He says the bullpen has no line-up card. But after I talk to him a bit, he tosses a ball over the 10 foot high fence unexpectedly, and I get it, my 3rd ball. No one else tries to get it.
That is Chuck on the right with his hand raised up.
Play Ball!
During the game, my dad and I head towards the Yankees Museum. They have long escalators, and from the arches in the stadium, you can see that there is a huge tarp on the field. And on the aerial shot earlier, there was no grass. Here are some pictures from the Yankees museum, it is not that big.
Autograph Wall
Thurman Munson’s locker. I know the person who has his last shin guards.
Nice Graig Nettles autograph.
Well, while upstairs, we see David Wells is on the T.V. He is sitting in the bleachers. I was heading over there anyways…
When I get over there, I cut over a couple of rows and move into the same section as David Wells, and two rows in front of him. There is this huge line all the way up the aisle to get his autograph. He will sign at the half-inning.
At the half-inning, I walk over there, but there is a clot along the only aisle. I stand there, conveniently next to David Wells. After a bit of waiting, the guard says to just reach in and get him, so I reach in, and he signs two new baseballs for my 2nd autograph today, my 1944th MLB autograph of All-Time and my 2,352nd Total Autograph of All-Time.
So after I sit in the bleachers for a bit, I head back to our normal seats. Posada’s shot in the 5th landed in the exact spot where the Yankees wanted. The only people in there were Yankees employees. Had it landed in the bullpen, the players could have absentmindedly thrown it up. But this landed where no one was. Good job Posada.
At around the 8th, I go over to one of the Legends exits into field level. I ask anyone wearing suits for their ticket stubs. I only get one from a suit-wearing guy, but it was worse seats than mine. I see Freddy come over, and my dad comes over. My dad buys Freddy’s opening day sign, and I get Freddy to sign it, my 3rd total autograph today.. I got the Freddy “Sez” sign from the first game at the New Yankee Stadium.
I go the row right behind the Legends behind the dugout to try and get the players’ attention for balls. I get some off their attentions, but they don’t have balls. Well, when we leave, we see Ronan Tynan out there talking to some people. I ask him for a picture and then an autograph on a ticket, which he signs for my 4th total autograph today and my 2,354th total autograph of All-Time.
Nice haul for opening day. 3 baseballs at a sold out Yankee Stadium on opening day is easy. Sorry it was short, but if I can do that on opening day, I wonder what I could do on another day, like another Indians games…
- 2 MLB Autographs today
- 4 Total Autographs today
- 1944 MLB Autographs All-Time
- 2352 Total Autographs All-Time
- 3 MLB Baseballs today
- 30 MLB Baseballs in this Season
- 46 MLB Baseballs in this Season
- 49 MLB Autographs in this Season
- 52 Total Autographs in this Season
- 2 Thrown, 1 Hand-to-Hand
- 2 BP, 1 Pre-Game
- 6 Ball/1 Game average
- Attendence: 48,271 people
- Competition Factor: 144,813
- 5 Straight Games with at least 1 autograph
- 5 Straight Games with at least 3 baseballs
4/10/09 Orioles vs. Rays
This is going to be a big, monstrous entry. All I’ll say is 15. Now I’ll start, in present tense.
This day’s journey starts off in the hotel, specifically the Renaissance Inner Harbor Hotel. That is where the Rays and I are staying. I sit in the lobby with my mom to watch some of the people go.
First off I see two players. One of them I immediately recognize, it’s Evan Longoria. I ask him if he can sign, and he does start signing two of the balls for my 1st autograph today when he asks me if I am staying in this hotel. I say yes I am.
Then I see Dan Wheeler and a person, who I definitely know is a player, but don’t know his name, walk out through the café door. I go towards Dan Wheeler and ask him if he can sign. He does sign both for my 2nd autograph, and I tell him that I know Zack and that he is in Toronto originally trying to catch Gary Sheffield’s 500th, but then they released him.
He says “Good Luck” to Zack.
Then I see two players walking in. One of them I recognize as J.P Howell from last year’s World Series Game 4 because he gave me two balls, so I go over to him and get him on two for my 3rd autograph today. The other guy I think is Shawn Riggins, but I’m not sure, so I ask him “Could you sign too?” and he does for my 4th autograph. When I look at his signature I see it is definitely Shawn Riggins so I say “thank you Mr. Riggins.” One thing I found funny about them was that they were talking street like “We clean, we clean, it ain’t gonna rain today, ya ya.” And stuff like that.
There was a guy I saw earlier, with a plaid shirt and slicked back shiny hair. I didn’t know who he was, but he was a player, although he seemed like an overconfident business man. He is originally reluctant, but the player signs my 5th autograph today, and it turns out he is Pat Burrell. Pat also signed two different signatures, one that says “Pat Burrell” in script, and the other says something like “PB” in script.
Top Ball (top to bottom): Evan Longoria, Shawn Riggins, Pat Burrell
Bottom Ball (top to bottom): J.P. Howell, Shawn Riggins, Pat Burrell
The only other player I have seen with two different signatures is Manny Ramirez who I don’t think has ever signed the same signature twice. And that all happened between like 5-10 minutes, so then it got a little dead. Oh, and we can’t take photos inside, so there are going to be few hotel pictures.
I see Don Zimmer walk in and go to the Front Desk, so I follow him over there, but this security lady goes over there with me and when I ask Don she says no autographs. It wouldn’t have made a difference because Don ignored me even though I was 2 feet in front of him. I would also like to say that I am more than 6 inches taller than each of them. J
I see a tall guy. I remembered that the tallest pitcher on Tampa was Jeff Niemann, and this guy sure was tall (6’9”). He also has a tall girlfriend, who is at least 6 feet, and by my guess 6’2″. So, after a bit I decide to get him, by which time he is outside. He doesn’t mind and signs 2 for my 6th autograph today. I talk with a kid wearing a 2008 World Series jacket about just the Rays in general, but when I start to walk away, he points out to me a player name Matt Joyce walking out. I walk over to Matt, and we exchange items for a bit. He hands me his fruit bar and coffee and I hand him my two autograph balls, which he signs for my 7th autograph today and 1934th MLB autograph of all-time. A lot of words, I know.
Remember that guy Dan Wheeler was with? Well, they came back again. They split up so Dan heads into the mall, but the player comes back into the hotel. When he comes in a bit I ask him for his autograph. When he signs the balls for my 8th autograph today I see that it is #46. My computer is down in the lobby, so I go back over there and see that #46 is Joe Nelson. Finally a picture that doesn’t spoil later on.
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Joe Nelson is the bottom one. Just don’t look at the top left-hand corner. ; )
It was then that the security guy came over. Apparently there were some complaints (Don Zimmer?). We think it was the 3 kids who were roaming in and out of the building every couple of minutes. The only people who would’ve/could’ve complained are Pat Burrell and Don Zimmer. We have to stop, but I’m fine with that, after all I did get 8 autographs. I just sit down, and wave to the player’s as they go. A minute or two after we stop, guess who sits down right across from us? Joe Maddon. It’s tempting, but I hold it back. When Bobby Ramos comes in though, I say a bit out loud “Bobby!” He turns around, sees me, I wave, and he comes over to shake my hand. I don’t think he’ll complain.
That’s Bobby with his foot on the chair, and this is a photo of the later game.
I decide to head into the mall to see if anyone is there, since it’s not hotel property. After a minute of two, Carl Crawford comes in. I ask him to sign, but he says he will when he’s done. A couple minutes later he comes walking down the escalators I ask him to sign, and he does sign one, my 9th autograph of the day and my 2344th Total Autograph of All-Time. Also, a random thing, he signed my autograph while riding down the escalator.
I head back into the lobby and wave to players as they leave, and they nod like J.P. Howell and Jeff Niemann. The Rays are relaxed and most of them are nice.
After the bus leaves, we head to the ballpark. When we get there, we see some people we have seen around the past couple days. They have season tickets to this game, so I one of them if I can borrow it to get in, and they are at the front of the line.
Except for that guy in the corner who tried going in front of us, but me and the other guy were able to make it in first. We walked/ran to the area that seperates right field from foul territory.He says just follow me and I’ll say you’re with me. But when we get to the moment of truth…
We pass. That’s me about 15 rows up, black sweatshirt, red shirt.
There is one guy who keeps getting all the home run balls, but he’s ok about it. One home run ball he gives up to a little kid in the front. He is in the Gray jerset, 7 rows up or so.
A minute two after I get there, a ball is hit to the wall. A player wearing a black shirt covering his jersey retrieves it. So I just say:
“Can you toss that ball up please?”
And he does toss up my 1st ball of the day. Based on the way he looked, I would most likely say that he was Nick Markakis. After he gives me the ball, he walks back over to some other player’s standing around. One of them is Ryan Freel, who gets a ball a bit later that bounces off the wall. I ask him for the ball, and he tosses me up my 2nd ball today.
Anyway, my next ball I didn’t think I’d get. It was a ball that bounced off the wall near the bullpen in left-center. The new pitcher Koji Uehara retrieves it. Normally, Japanese players aren’t that friendly. One time, my brother and I stayed after a game near the visitors’ entrance inside Fenway Park. They must’ve thought we were the family of a player. Anyway, after some people walk out, Ichiro walks out. I must’ve been 8 at the time, and I was the only person. I followed him for about 50 steps and he didn’t sign for me even though I was a little kid, and the only one following him.
So back to Uehara. When he gets the ball I say “Koji, can I have the ball?” He tosses it to me, but the throw is low so it bounces off the wall. He raises his hands up and says “Ohhhhhh!” But he gives me another try and tosses me my 3rd ball today.
Did I mention I didn’t have my backpack? I had to give it to my mom to carry so I could go to the shorter line instead of the longer bag check line. I had 5 different pockets. Two of them were already filled up with my camera, my phone, some money, a notepad, a little ID holder, and a pen. I had two deep pockets. I could stuff 3 balls in one, so I did instead of spreading them out 2 and 1. So while running for a ball, I see a ball lying in the seats. BP has been going on for 15 minutes or so and I have already been checking the seats for Easter Eggs. I feel my pockets, but I count 3 balls. This must be a ball nobody noticed. Cool.
Note: That is a recreation of the event.
I pick up my 4th ball, mark it, and put it in my other empty deep pocket. It’s my first ball that hasn’t been thrown or gotten with the glove trick, nice.
My next ball is a hit ball. The ball is hit over people’s heads onto the aisle. It bounces about 3 times on steps. I don’t go after it because I am waiting for a bounce to me, but it then bounces into an aisle. I run ahead of the other people and pick it up for my 5th ball today.
Then it goes dead for a bit. Nobody throws ball, a lot of balls are being hit towards right field. I ask Jeremy Guthrie for a ball that rolls to the wall, but he says “Don’t worry you’ll get a homer soon.” I realize that the warning track isn’t normal dirt, it’s rubber. So, if it hits off the track, it’s gonna bounce into the seats. I go to first row, expecting to catch a ball.
I see a home run ball off to the left, so I track it. It barely goes into the bullpen. I was expecting it to go into the same spot that the Eaton ball went to yesterday, so I was hoping to get it with my glove trick. But it takes the most amazing bounce ever. It has enough force to bounce off the concrete bottom, off the concrete wall, and then into the first row. I barely missed it, by like a hand. And after another crack of the bat, and I move a bit to the right. This is either going into the first row, or bouncing of the wall. I jump and lean out and it goes straight into my glove. My hand stings, but it is a good feeling knowing that I just got my 6th ball of the day and my first hit ball caught on the fly ever.
Jeremy Guthrie says: “There you go; now you all have homers.” The Orioles batting practice ends about 4 pitches later. That’s when the fans from right field make their way to left field. It gets crowded, and the Rays are bunting now, so I go up an aisle to see if any balls have fallen into the gap. Nope, nothing. When the Rays pitcher’s come out and warm up, I go to them stretching, but I get nothing there. I make my way back to seats in fair territory where a group a pitchers are standing around.
One of them gets a ball at the wall. I easily recognize him as Grant Balfour, so I ask Grant for the ball. He tosses it to me, my 7th ball today. Another ball rolls to the wall, but Joe Nelson gets the ball. He tosses it to a crowd of people to the right off me, but they bobble it and it falls back onto the field. Then I call out Joe’s name, he sees my Tampa hat and he walks over and hands it to me, my 8th ball.
I realize that this ball is my 20th ball on this trip. My goal for the trip was 20 baseballs and 30 MLB autographs, and my 30th autograph was Melky’s at the Intercontinental. I go over to the corner spot next to the bullpens in left-center. Two players, Shawn Riggins and Jamie Shields, are out there. After a while I call out Shawn’s name. I say:
“Next ball, here,” while holding my glove out. He nods, and about two pitches later, he gets a ball, and tosses it to me, my 9th ball. The first try missed, but he tossed it to me again and I got it.
Then I see J.P. Howell putting a ball on the dirt and kicking it. What do I see? A glove trick. Later I learn that he learned it from Zack Hample’s site. He doesn’t get the ball because Scott Kazmir kicks the ball away, so I call out Grant’s name. He comes over here and says “What do you have?” referring to signing autographs. I say not that and show him the glove and the string. I say I can do it, so he gets a ball from Dan Wheeler and puts the ball on the ground. It’s a bit to far out, so I move it closer with the glove by throwing the glove.
Then when it’s close enough I pull it up for my 10th ball today. Grant is surprised and tells J.P. and Nelson to look at it.
A bit later I get J.P. to put a ball down. He gets another ball from Dan Wheeler and says:
“Anywhere?”
“Anywhere, but put it on the dirt,” I reply.
“Okay,” he says while dropping the ball. “But I’ll be watching,” and he runs away. I don’t need to move it closer so I just reel up my 11th ball. When I look at J.P. He is busy talking to Balfour and watching the hitters. After BP ends, I ask a policeman for a ball he has. There are two in the bullpen. He hands one to a guy who asked him earlier and then goes into the wall. I think he forgot about the ball, but he comes out later and tosses me my 12th ball. That ball doubled my total for the past 3 games combined. Wow. 12 balls in 3 games previously, and then 12 balls in one game. But it doesn’t stop there.
I see people pointing to something in the gap so I rush over there. But when I get over there my rubber band breaks! So I have to rush back over to left field to get one rubber band and then run back, but by the time I get there, a policeman is in the gap. He picks up both balls and tosses one to a kid and then takes the other with him. Great. Andy Sonnastine warms up with the bullpen catcher, but they take the balls back to the bullpen.
The players’ start stretching, so I get my autographs baseballs and go over there. Most of the player’s walk by and ignore us, but one guy, Gabe Kapler, comes over. I say “Tampa, Tampa, Tampa!” while pointing to my hat and he walks over and signs two for my 10th autograph today.
Even though I have 12, I’d like another. Jason Bartlett starts warming up in front of the visitors’ dugout. When he finishes he starts walking into the inner corner looking for someone to give the ball to. I am standing at the other end of the dugout, so when he sees me, he does a fake throw to see if I’m ready, and I nod, so he flips the ball across the dugout to me, my 13th ball.
Jason Bartlett was a bit in front of the on-deck circle.
Now I have MORE than doubled my previous games combined. I figure why not get another since our seats are on the inner aisle of the dugout, so I figure that if Carlos Pena or Dioner Navarro gets a ball, I’ll try to get it.
The first time he flips it to a glove-less teenage girl with orange all over her, and in the bottom of the 5th, the final out is a strikeout, so I rush down and Dioner flips me the ball, my 14th ball of the day and my 26th baseball of the season. One kid asks me for the ball, but instead of giving it to him, I let him wear my Tampa hat for 3rd out balls and tell him the names of the players. Eventually, he gets a ball by the 8th inning.
Remember earlier when I said hi to Bobby Ramos, the bullpen coach, in the hotel? Well I decided to pay a visit to the bullpen to see if he would remember me. I also go because I see J.P. Howell warming up. When I get over there, J.P. finishes up and the bullpen catcher gives the ball to another fan further away from me. Then Bobby Ramos tosses a ball to a (probably drunk) fan in the area above the bullpen. The first try the guy drops the ball and nearly hits Grant Balfour in the head. The next throw is on the money. Then I ask Bobby Ramos “Da me la bola por favor?” He hold up his index finger to indicate 1 minute, then goes into the bullpen catcher’s bag, gets a ball, and throws it to me…my 15th ball!
There’s Bobby talking to fan above the bullpen.
I go to the dugout after the game to try stuff, but I get nothing. So after the game, I make my way along collecting ticket stubs again. This time, since we are leaving tomorrow, we decide to go to the home plate gate to get some autographs after the game.
The first person to come out is Matt Garza, but he only signs for a little kid who followed him for a bit. The next guy comes out, but I don’t know who he is. A woman says it was tonight’s pitcher, Andy Sonnastine, so I go over there and get him for my 11th autograph today.
There are people at two different places trying for autographs, so I go over to the other place to see if they have gotten anyone yet. They haven’t, but I see the people by the gate fidgeting and stuff, so I rush back over there to see Dioner Navarro and Willy Aybar leaving. I get Dioner Navarro first, sort of in the parking lot, for my 12th autograph today. I say “Mr. Aybar can you sign?” so he stops, but Dioner is using my pen so he keeps walking. After Dioner finishes I rush back over to Willy, and get him on 1 for my 13th autograph today.
It’s dark but Willy is the one with the white sweatshirt and Dioner is right next to him.
I go back over there to see if anyone came out while I was gone; they haven’t, so I head back over to the Home Plate Gate.
After a bit, Jamie Shields and Akinori Iwamura come out. I get Akinori first on two for my 14th autograph and then Jamie Shields on two for my 15th autograph. They were really nice. They signed for everyone, and although Jamie wasn’t taking pictures, Akinori was glad to.
Japanese players are stingy, but Akinori Iwamura was incredibly nice, and I was surprised. We see the player’s bus leave, so we decide to head back to our hotel.
I jokingly say to the cab driver “follow that bus.” The bus left about two minutes before us, but we get back to the hotel before them. There were some people waiting outside the hotel for autographs and I saw Scott Kazmir and Joe Maddon signing autographs. I said “Good Game” to Scott and he said “thanks.” We head inside the hotel where Carl Crawford is standing there. There are a bunch of high school girls there for a volleyball tournament and they are like:
“Do you play for Tampa?”
“Do you seriously play for Tampa?”
“Are you a player?”
“Can I you take a photo?”
And Carl Crawford couldn’t be less interested. He looks down to check his phone, and when he looks up he’s surrounded by 6 high school girls taking photos of him. It was ridiculous. So after we made our way up to our floor in the ‘non-V.I.P.’ elevator, we see Don Zimmer on our floor. We learn that he is lost and forgot which room he is staying in.
So that was a good great day at the ballpark and the hotel. All I was hoping for was 8 balls today, and I thought that that was far fetched. But the luck I had with the guy with season tickets, I’m just shocked. This is probably one of the best days in my collecting life, with 15 autographs and 15 baseballs. Good day in the Ballhawk League.
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baseballs in 4 games, nice.
4/9/09 Orioles vs. Yankees
We arrive at the hotel early because yesterday, an autograph collector told me that the bus would leave at around 9, and since it’s a day game, most of the players would take the bus. We arrived at about 8:15, so we sit against a building. After a while Mick Kelleher and Kevin Long come out in suits and Mick says: “Good Morning”. That’s pretty much the only action for a while. At about 8:55 the bus arrives.
We walk over and get a spot against the ropes and wait for the players. It takes a while, seems like 30 minutes, for one player to come out. It’s Nick Swisher and he comes over and signs my ball first for my 1st autograph of the day. Originally he says “only one,” but I say that it is for my brother and he signs the other one.
Then a bit later Brett Gardner comes out and signs two for my 2nd autograph of the day, and he signs for everyone else. There are no more pictures from the hotel because my camera battery dies, but we have another at the hotel. Melky and Edwar then come out. I have Edwar already, so I want Melky. I thought that ‘Mr. Big Shot’ wouldn’t sign for the fans, but he does. And he signs for me (only 1) which is my 3rd autograph today. Other people come out, like Tex, Nady, Matsui, and Pettitte, but none of them sign. They all just walk past. I head back to the hotel because the bus left, but from my window I can see the bus pulled up again. Oh well, I’ll just wait until the stadium.
We arrive to the stadium later than I wanted, and there is already two huge lines that turn around and form squares. Since we are stuck in center, and Adam Eaton is throwing, I wait until he is done, but he goes into the bullpen. My mom then tells me that we can go into around the stadium, so I rush over to where Eaton is throwing in the bullpen. The Yankees are almost out stretching, so I have to decide between Yankees or Eaton. I will be the only one looking for Eaton’s ball. Then I see Rick Kravitz has a ball, so I ask him when Eaton is almost over, but no ball. I ask him a bit later, but Adam Eaton throws me the ball, but misses. It’s ok because it falls in this area beneath me (see the ball?).
So, I get my 1st ball with my glove trick. Then it goes dead, no other balls for the rest of BP.
I go over to Boog to get his autograph because I promised myself I would, so I get Boog for my 1st autograph today and 1926th MLB autograph of all time.
The Yankees come out to stretch, so I go over there and guess who comes over to sign? Johnny Damon, so I get him, my 2nd autograph, on both balls. It was then I learned that Nick Adenhart died. I am shocked. I expected him to be a good pitcher, and I remember seeing him in the Futures Game in 2006. It’s amazing how quickly they go.
I was really surprised at it, shocked even, but they had to get on with the game. So after the moment of silence for Nick, I ask Rob Thompson for the next infield warm-up ball. He says he’ll ask Mick because it’s his job. But when the time comes, Mick gives me no ball. I want more than one ball. I am worried because last time I tried for a ball during the game, I got nothing and the crowd was smaller that day. But good luck in the bottom of the 4th, Mark Teixiera tosses me the 3rd out ball, my 2nd ball, after pointing me out in the people at the dugout for the 3rd out ball, cool.
It has an interesting mark whipping some print off. I try for the infield warm up ball again at the inner corner of the Yankees dugout, but some woman in the front says you already have a ball, let someone else get it. How did she know that I already have a ball (but not two)?
I head to the bullpen because I see a Yankee warming up and some seats near the bullpen empty. When I get there, I see the bullpen catcher tossing a ball to some other fans. So he is giving today, eh? Jose Veras is warming up with him, so when they are finished, I ask the catcher for a ball, and he hooks me up with my 3rd ball today.
I am less anxious now with 3 balls, but I want a 4 ball average for this trip.
Nothing else really happens for the rest of the game, memorabilia wise, but I do see a lot of foul balls hit to spots near the press box. I should take note of that for the Tampa game…
Well, at the end of the game, I see Mick Kelleher, trying to see if he’ll keep his promise. I ask him for a ball, and he nods. He points at me and tosses me my 4th ball above the crowd at the dugout after the game, and it was a crowd.
After everyone goes into the clubhouse, the usher kicks everyone out. I make my way merrily along to Eutaw Street, while collecting 3 or 4 ticket stubs that I find lying on the ground in many different places. So I make my average so far for this trip 4 balls a game, I hope I can get more than that with the hopefully 5,000 person crowd for the rain soaked Tampa game.
- 5 MLB Autographs Today
- 4 MLB Balls Today
- 12 MLB Balls in This Season
- 32 MLB Autographs in This Season
- 35 Total Autographs in This Season
- 28 Total Balls in This Season
- 1,927 MLB for All-Time
- 2,335 Total Autographs for All-Time
- Attendence: 28,534 people.
- Competition Factor: 114,136
- 4 balls/1 game (for 3 games this season)
4/8/09 Orioles vs. Yankees
We go back to the Intercontinental before the game to see some players leaving and try to get autographs. A couple minutes after I get there, I see somebody going out and in the Intercontinental. It’s Brian Bruney. He decides to walk out instead of taking a cab, and it’s only me and another guy there, so he signs 2 baseballs for me for my 1st autograph today.
Bruney is about a foot taller than long.
Kevin Long is doing the opposite, walking down the street into the hotel, and he stops to talk with Bruney. I decide to get Kevin Long on my baseball for my 2nd autograph today.
I count coaches because most of them have had some playing or managerial history. Speaking of coaches, Tony Pena walks out, but he does the old “can’t sign on the cell phone” trick and waves us off.
I wait for about 10 more minutes when Damaso Marte comes out with a guy who we mistake for Melky (because they are wearing almost the same ugly hoodie) and I get Damaso for my 3rd autograph today.
Damaso keeps walking with his friend down the street, until he stops to talk to Jose Veras. I decide not to bother him since I already have his autograph twice and have gotten 3 baseballs from him in the past WEEK.
My mom and I then leave to go back, but who do we see coming outside of a mall called the Gallery? We see Tony Pena. Originally he was reluctant even though I am the ONLY person asking him, and I am wearing a Yankees hat, and he is not talking. He didn’t sign back there because he “doesn’t want this stuff on eBay.” So he signs me my 4th autograph today and we go on our way. After we head back to our hotel, I decide to go to the player’s entrance to get autographs.
That’s the Player’s Entrance.
It isn’t that successful. Koji Uehara arrives, but doesn’t sign. Kimberly Jones arrives, but I don’t ask her. Pretty much no one comes, except for Jeremy Guthrie.
He comes back from jogging, I assume, and he only signs one for me, so I get him for my 5th MLB autograph today and after him, no other players sign or come.
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See a little orange at the top of my jersey?
What can I say?
And to make this confusing, one guy at the home plate gat sys that only people with season tickets can enter the gates at 5 o’clock. All other ticket holders enter at 5:30. Whaaaaaaaaaaat??
Since it has been a long drought, we go to the Eutaw Street Gate. It’s good to arrive early because a long line has formed, and then they split lines in bag check and no bags. After I scan my ticket (yes I can go in without season tickets) I run to the Center Field area. I see two players off near the bullpens. One of them is Alfredo Simon because he is the only African-American pitcher on the Orioles. The other is either Danys Baez or Dennis Sarfate. I look at the cheat sheet. If he has a dimple, then it’s Dennis Sarfate, if there’s no dimple, it’s Baez.
A ball rolls to the wall, no dimple.
“Danys, can I have that ball?”
“This ball is for her,” he says while tossing the ball to a lady in the front row.
“Can I have the next ball?” He nods.
The next ball that rolls to the wall, he scoops up, and under hands me my 1st ball today.
The Yankees then start to warm up, so I run over there. When I get there, Dave Eiland is already warming up with A.J. Burnett. When he finishes I ask him for the ball, and Dave winds up and fires the ball. It’s too fast that I can’t raise my mitt up in time and the balls ricochets off and 5 rows up, where it is grabbed by a man who finishes his chips and then grabs the ball.
I remember the gap in Center, and my glove trick. I don’t want to run all the way over there unless I see a baseball, so I climb up the aisle nearest to the bullpen and I see a ball, so I bolt off. When I get there I find not one, but two balls. One of them is tucked under a pipe connected to the wall, so I figure I’ll go for the easier one. That’s one is a couple inches out from the wall. I lower my glove over it once, pick it up, but drop it. A lot of people are looking on. I hear some comments from fans.
“It needs to be tighter.”
“It’s not gonna work.”
“How does that work.”
“How’d you come up with that? Did you see it on T.V?”
1 is the first ball and 2 is the second ball that’s tucked under the pipe.
Eventually I reel it in slowly for my 2nd ball today, and my 1st using the glove trick. I am confident now, and nobody stopped me, so I go over to the other ball. I knock it out from underneath, but it rolls to the other side of the wall, so I knock it back into the perfect spot. All I need now is for my glove to stop spinning. It does, and I reel in my 3rd ball today.
My first two “glove trick balls”, thank you Zack!
After BP ends, and all the Yankees go in, I see someone toss a ball to some fans near the gap, and it drops (I thought) into the gap, so I rush over. When I get there, I see no ball, but there’s one on the warning track. A groundskeeper tosses the ball to some fans, but they swat it back down. This time the groundskeeper tosses the ball straight towards me and I catch my 4th ball.
The Yankees come out to stretch, so I go over to where they are. I learn that a kid there got 3 balls, almost out-snagging me. He wasn’t my age, he wasn’t a year or two younger, and he was 1 year old or so. And he was able to get Johnny Damon to come over and sign his jersey, so I get Johnny Damon and the ball I used at the hotel for my 6th autograph today.
That’s me with the Jersey and a little bit of orange on top.
I want 2 more balls for 10 in the last 2 games, so I switch sides. After a while, I get nothing. I go to the bullpens, nothing. I try for after the game stuff, nothing. So now I need 12 balls in the next two days. I hope Tampa Bay has BP.
That’s it for the day, here are some shots of the empty stadium:
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It was amazing. I looked at Camden’s attendence for past Yankee Games, and they all drew at least 40,000 a game, but this had a little more than 20,000! I was really shocked.
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6 MLB Autographs Today
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27 MLB Autographs so far this Season
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30 Total Autographs so far this Season
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4 MLB Balls Today
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8 MLB so far this Season/Trip
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3 BP balls, 1 Pre-Game ball
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2 Thrown Balls, 2 Glove Trick Balls
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22,856 People in Camden Yards
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Competition Factor: 91,424
4/7/09 at the Intercontinental
Today, I decided to find out where the Yankees are staying. Yesterday, some people at the ballpark told us that they got autographs at the Sheraton. We saw somebody in the Sheraton who was at the Hyatt. The Hyatt told them that the Yankees were at the Sheraton. But there was no sign of the Yankees whatsoever. And the lady at the Front Desk said the Yankees were staying at the Renaissance, which is my hotel, and they weren’t. And also, when we were leaving in the morning, I saw Edwar Ramirez walk through our hotel and then into the mall. I was so confused, so I asked the doorman if he knew. He told me that he positively knew that they were at the Intercontinental. So off we go to the Intercontinental!
We saw some people in Yankees gear outside, so we know they are there. One of the people was the kid who said I wasn’t getting any balls yesterday. First we see Cody Ransom walk out with his family. I don’t ask him since he’s with his family, but another kid asks him and he signs for him, so I ask him and get him on both for my 1st MLB autograph of the day
Then we see Edwar Ramirez walking down the street, so when he gets close enough, I get him for my 2nd autograph today. And then Tony Pena comes in, but I am not getting coaches so he just walks by.
It is very cold. Extremely cold. My hands make me jump when they touch my face. So I decide to go into a store to sit down and warm up. I stay there for a couple minutes, but I jump up when I see Xavier Nady walking by. When I get out I hear him say:
“I can’t sign now, but I will when the bus comes.”
Oh, so there’s a bus?? The next people I see are Melky Cabrera and Jose Veras walking down the street, heading for the hotel. When Melky approaches I ask him to sign two, but he signs only one, my 3rd MLB autograph of the day, and 1912 MLB autograph of all-time, and my 2320th Total Autograph of all time.
Jose Veras is almost in, but I rush over and get him on 2, my 4th of the day.
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Top to Bottom: Cody Ransom, Melky Cabrera, Jose Veras, and Edwar Ramirez
Then the team bus comes and parks outside. It stays there for about 30 minutes and then the team comes out. I see some people, but I don’t get them like Cody Ransom and Ramiro Pena. But Nady kept through on his promise and signs two for my 5th auto of the day.
Then Joba comes over, while Nady is still there, and signs my 6th autograph of the day. I wonder where they are going because everyone is in suits. One guy says:
“How long is this trip to the White House?”
After the bus leaves, we go back to the hotel, but we come back later to see if anyone is there coming back from dinner, but no one is there. Johnny Damon comes out with his wife, and since I’m the only one there he signs for me, my 7th MLB Autograph today.
Then we go to dinner, and we see Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada leaving from our restaurant. I can’t get the baseballs out in time, and by the time they do, they are 200 feet away from me. That’s okay though, I already have them.
P.S. Tampa Bay is staying in my hotel starting Thursday, yay!
- 7 MLB Autographs today
- 21 MLB Autographs this season
- 24 Total Autographs this season
4/6/09 Orioles vs. Yankees
I wanted to arrive in the ballpark early, like 1:30, which is 30 minutes before Eutaw Street opens. I saw on the Orioles A-Z Guide that the gates open 2 hours prior before each game, so since I thought we were early and the gates hadn’t open, I decided to use my camera to see if there was BP. When I took the photo I saw people by the dugouts.
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WTH?!
So I scan my ticket (the people said the gates open 3 hours and 15 minutes prior), run inside, and see two Yankees, Joba and another, warming up. So I position myself behind them and when Joba’s done I ask for the ball, but he tosses it to someone else.
Then Jon Albaladejo and Brian Bruney warm-up and they basically warm-up right in front of me. I don’t need to ask for their autographs because two people next to me are trying to get autographs. So, when Jon’s done I call out for the ball, but he tosses the ball to the left. But then Jon comes over and signs for me and I get my 1st MLB autograph of the season and day.
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That’s me with the Pinstripe Jersey and Yankees Hat above Jonathan Albaladejo.
Then while asking for a ball from the players a kid next to me says:
“You’re getting no baseballs.”
I’ll prove him wrong.
First, I ask Jose Veras for a ball (in Spanish) and he obliges. But instead of throwing me the ball, he walks over and hands me my 1st baseball of the season to me.
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You see Phil Coke off to the right? He makes his way over to me and I get him for my 2nd MLB autograph today. And then Jose Veras is signing a little to the right, so I move over and get him on my 2 autograph baseballs for my 3rd MLB Autograph today.
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Phil Coke (top), Jose Veras (bottom) Jonathan Albaladejo
Then after D’maso Marte finishes throwing, I ask him for a ball, and he throws it, but I barely miss it. I know that last paragraph was just condensed, but it all happened really quickly.
I then see someone warming up in the Yankees bullpen, so I throw on my Randy Johnson #41 Pinstripe jersey and rush over there. When I get over there I see A.J. Burnett warming up, with Dave Eiland and Chien-Ming Wang standing next to him.
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When A.J. finishes, Dave Eiland ends up with the ball. I call his name and he tosses it to me from the other side of the bullpen. His throw is a little too short and to the left, but I can’t move over because there’s a fence blocking me. So, I have to lean down, almost so I’m balancing on the railing, and stretch my arm out far. I catch my 2nd baseball today with room to spare. When I get up I hear Dave Eiland say:
“You’re good.”
Then it starts to rain again at 3:15. All the fans duck for cover, expect my mom and I with our umbrella and a couple of other poncho wearing fans.
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Then some Yankees come to stretch. Nothing happens, so I think that that is the only stretching there are doing, so I go over to the Yankees dugout to try and get Jeter’s pre-warm-up ball. He tosses it to a little kid in the front row though. So I just sit in the second row, and watch the ceremonies for the next 30 minutes. I like the orange balloon arch and carpet in center, but I feel that there are too many fireworks.
They have 2 different types of fireworks after each starting Oriole is introduced, and then they have VP Joe Biden throw out the first pitch, cool.
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I should try to get his autograph…
Then after the ceremonies finish I try to get another ball because I need a 3rd, want at least a 4th, and maybe a 5th. While changing sides I switch hats and put on or take off my Yankees jersey depending on the team I’m going to. I am wearing a bright orange Orioles shirt underneath. I experience a lot of Yankees hate from fans such as:
“*&$^ the Yankees!”
“BOOOOOO!!!” a guy trying to scare me.
“We are sorry about the series,” and etc.
There are a lot more Oriole fans than expected. Also, this game is the highest crowd ever for opening day at Camden Yards.
At about the 4th inning I decide to try to get Joe Biden’s autograph. They have about 7 secret service men at the top of the aisle, about 7 more sitting in seats around him, and then two ushers at the top of the aisle, so I decide to go into the other aisle and cut into his aisle. I get an aisle seat on his aisle just before the innings over, and then Joe Biden starts to leave. He signs autographs and take pictures with people, but once he gets to me…
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I get both (my 4th total autograph). J So after I get his autograph, I go back to switching sides.
Finally, after switching sides for a bit, I get a ball. It was a foul tip towards first base coach Mick Kelleher. Since he is by the Orioles dugout, I am all in Orioles gear, but I call out his name, he lobs it underhand towards me, and I reach out and catch it, my 3rd ball of the game.
Then I go to the bullpen to try and get a ball from either team, but I get nothing, zip. I decide I’ll try to have my fourth ball to be the Yankees infield warm-up ball, so I go to the inner corner of the Yankees dugout. Guess who ends up with the ball? Mick Kelleher. I call out his name, and he flips me my 4th ball of the game.
I decide that that’s enough for now. I’m not going to try as hard as I did before, so I don’t get anything. I try for something from the Orioles dugout after the game, but I get nothing again. That’s okay. 3 MLB autographs, 1 autograph from the Vice President, and 4 baseballs? I’d say that’s a good day for my first day in the ballhawk league.
Stats:
- 3 MLB Autographs in this game
- 14 MLB Autographs in this season
- 1 Executive Autograph in this game and season
- 17 Total Autographs this season
- 4 MLB Balls in the regular season
- 4 balls/1 game
- Attendence: 48,607
- Competition Factor: 194,428
2009 AL Season Predictions
I’ve decided to do what many other people are doing, picking how the season goes. Most of the detail focuses on the AL East, since that is where I live and the teams I pay closest attention to. I’ll first start off with the AL East.
I have bias towards the Yankees, so I’ll try to put it aside. First off the Blue Jays. They aren’t going anywhere anytime soon. They didn’t get any better by loosing Burnett. Then the Orioles. They can obviously match up. Ty Wigginton = A-Rod, Jeremy Guthrie = C.C. Sabathia, and Cesar Izturis = Derek Jeter, how can they lose?! The only competition is the Yanks, Rays, and Sox.

The main thing about the AL East is you need a good rotation. The Rays showed they had that last year, and they only lost Jason Hammel this year. The Yankees have a solid rotation, and aquiring two new starters this year, but my guess is that A.J. blows his arm about halfway through the seaons. Then you have the Red Sox. Jon Lester is blossoming into a great pitcher my predictions:
AL East Predictions:
1st: Red Sox
2nd: Yankees
3rd: Tampa Bay
4th: Blue Jays
5th: Orioles
Now the AL Central

White Sox:
Good Hitters, Ozzie is a leader, Some Nice Pitchers.
Indians:
2 Star Pitchers, Some All-Star hitters, Reliable Closer, Grady Sizemore and Cliff Lee.
Tigers: Best and ONLY good pitcher is Verlander, Some good hitters, can put together most of a nice starting line-up, this year’s Lions
Royals: Young and Good Pitchers, Good prospects, Very able roster, this year will ALMOST be Tampa-Bay
Twins: Has to be a last year at ballpark Cinderella story thing, but many no-name players.
AL Central Predictions:
1st: White Sox
2nd: Royals
3rd: Indians
4th: Twins
5th: Tigers
Now finally the AL West.
Angels win, nothing said. Power Line-Up, good Bullpen, not even Matt Holiday can stop them.
A’s have some no-name pitchers, but good batters.
Texas seems pretty good. Josh Hamilton and Kinsler are the best batters. Expect them to be good.
Mariners, I like their Starters, but the line-up isn’t as good as the others.
AL West Predictions:
1st: Angels
2nd: Rangers
3rd: A’s
4th: Mariners
Postseason:
Red Sox over the White Sox in 4 games in ALDS
Yankees over the Angels in 5 games in ALDS
Yankees vs. Red Sox in ALCS
I’m not sure who wins the ALCS. I mean by now, A.J. is healthy after blowing out his arm, and they now fully have A-Rod. But if the Red Sox lose a starter, they always have another to take his place. This is hard to decide, but if I really had to choose, I would say…
The Yankees. They are going to ride the New Stadium and all its amenities to keep them healthy, while the Sox are cramped in the Fenway clubhouses. Also, the Yankees have Tex, C.C., and A.J. They also know have Joba in his first season. The Sox only have some new, sort of realiable, All-Star pitchers, Jed Lowrie is going good, and now they have Bay for the whole season. But that isn’t enough to reign over the Yankees.
I hope to see some good ‘ol fashion fun with each other though!
I’ll try to do the NL from Baltimore…
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