Results tagged ‘ Glove Trick ’

8/18/09 White Sox vs. Royals

            There were no Easter Eggs or glove trick baseballs at “The Cell”. That meant that I’d have to ask the player shagging in left Field for the balls that rolled to the wall. That player would be the so-far-nice Josh Anderson. I asked him for the first ball that rolled to the Left Field wall when I was there, and he tossed me the ball, my 1st ball.

Josh Anderson and Baseball

            The first group was predominantly lefties, so I moved over to Right Field. They were hitting some bombs, maybe twenty rows back into the furthest section. I have no clue who the hitters were, but they sure were good.

            One bomb was about 12 rows over my head and 15 feet to my right (I was standing in row 6 on the aisle) when the seats were still fairly empty. As soon as the ball was hit I knew that it was a bomb, so I ran up the steps and saw the ball land in an empty row. It stayed put and didn’t trickle down any rows, so I ran into the row that it landed in and grabbed my 2nd ball.

Scuff on Baseball2

            Then the same batter blasted another ball in a different round of swings. This time the ball landed in the section closest to the batters’ eye, a section 8 seats wide and one section to my right. I saw the ball land, so I ran to that row and saw the ball trickle down a row, and then another, and then another, and then another, where it stopped because it hit a seat’s support beam and it laid dead in the tow. I ran over and grabbed my 3rd ball, which wouldn’t have been mine had it rolled one row further.

Ball No. 224

And then the photo below shows where the ball landed (red arrow) and where I picked it up (yellow arrow):

Location of 3rd Ball 81809

            Joakim Soria, one of the last players on the Royals that I hadn’t gotten went over to the foul line to pick up some balls, and then he started signing.

Joakim Soria Signing

          So I got my ball and had him sign my 1st autograph, put the ball back, and then immediately ran back into fair territory.

            My 3rd Ball would be my last ball in Right Field. I was over in Right Field when I saw a ball gets tossed to the first row, but it was knocked into the moat. When I saw that I immediately sprinted over to Left Field. When I got there I knew I needed to work fast because the only usher with an issue with using the glove trick patrols the moat and Left Field Bullpen. So I looked into the moat, but I saw nothing.

Nothing in

          I asked the people around me and they pointed to a spot where they thought the ball had gone. It turns out it went underneath the overhang, so I wasn’t sure where it was or how far back it was. But eventually, after looking for a bit I saw it. It was about 1 foot underneath the overhang; you could only see it if you were directly on top of it. So I let out some string, swung the glove underneath the overhang and knocked the ball closer on the first try. I reeled up my glove, put the rubber band around the tip and the sharpie in the middle, and I reeled up my 4th ball with ease.

Glove Tricked Ball

Then about 3 little kids without gloves came running up to me asking for the ball. I politely said no because I:

            A) Don’t give balls away to people who ask

            B) Don’t feel I is right to give one ball to one kid in front of other kids of the same age.

            But little did I know that these little kids would help me get a couple of baseballs.

            I stayed over in Left Field for the rest of BP.

            Joakim Soria fielded a ball in front of those little kids, and then another ball in the same spot.

Joakim Soria Headshot

            He wanted to give them baseballs, but since they were about 3 or so and there were no adults in the front row I told Joakim that I would get a baseball and give it to a random kid there. He tossed me the baseball, which I then gave to an aforementioned random kid there. Since it wasn’t intended for anyone and I had the right to decide who to give it to I count it as my 5th ball. Then he took the other baseball and tossed it to me, and this time he told me to give it to a specific kid. I pointed to the kid and said: “Him?” just to be safe, and when he nodded I gave it to that kid. That ball I didn’t count because I had to give it to that kid, it was intended for a specific person, and I caught it for them because they couldn’t. So then Joakim asked Bruce Chen, also in Left Field, for a baseball that he just retrieved. This time Joakim pointed to me and mouthed:

            “You keep it.” So it was unlike a similar accident yesterday where I was standing on a chair, Joakim tossed me a ball, I caught it and then I fell backwards. This time I was standing on a chair in the second row and Joakim tossed me a ball, but I caught it without injury this time for my 6th ball of the day, and last one for batting practice.

Ball No. 227

            I tried to make it to the dugouts in time for the end of BP, but I was unsuccessful and got no balls there and like last time I got one autograph, Roman Colon (my 2nd autograph).

            I didn’t get anything at pre-game throwing because of the incredible competition.

 

TOUGH Competition

            A little Royals fan. Can’t compete with that.

            Skip ahead to the game and in the Top of the 1st inning Mike Jacobs flew out to Gordon Beckham who ran back to grab it, and then Gordon tossed the ball into the seats along the foul line. I was over 100 feet away from where he tossed it, but I still got a ball tossed to me by someone coming off the field.

            Paul Konerko is one of the only First Basemen that I have seen toss the pre-inning warm-up ball into the crowd after each time that the inning ends. He catches it from the dugout, looks into the crowd and tosses it to someone. Well in the first inning he looked into the crowd and tossed it to me for my 7th ball so far.

Dirty Ball No. 228

            Since I had gotten a ball at the White Sox dugout so early I figured that I would sit at the Royals dugout as close as I could.

            Well I noticed that in the Royals dugout that not only Bob McClure had a ball in his hands, but there was a ball sitting on the fence in front of Miguel Olivo who was a few feet to Bob’s left.

Miguel Olivo1

             I think it was the Top of the 2nd when I got there, but at the end of the 2nd I asked Miguel Olivo for the baseball, and pointed to it. He looked in front of himself, saw the baseball, grabbed it, turned back toward me and tossed me my 8th ball.

Miguel Olivo Baseball1

            I made my goal for the night to be double digits after I got that ball. So I headed over to the bullpen to try for a ball. I saw that Roman Colon had a ball in his pocket, so I asked for it, but he lied and said he didn’t. And then not one Royal gave out a ball from the bullpen the entire night. In the Top of the 8th when I saw that Roman had a ball I asked him again for it.

Roman Colon1

He gave it half his might and it fell short, and then even though it was his fault he kicked the ball into the bullpen and didn’t give me another try.

So no baseballs came my way during the game. At the end of the game I ran down to the dugout and got a spot in the corner and saw that Rusty Kuntz had a baseball that he was putting in his pocket and I asked him for it. He saw my Royals hat, walked closer and flipped me an extremely beaten up baseball for my 9th ball of the night.
Rusty Kuntz Emtremely Beaten Up Baseball


I put it away quickly so I could focus again on the dugout. I thought that that would be the last ball that I got. All the players had left an only a few remained, and they were being interviewed. I hoped that I a ballboy would find a baseball among the benches and give it to me, but that didn’t happen. I saw that Josh Anderson had a baseball, and I asked him for it, but then he started looking in the crowd for someone. He stood for a minute or two, looking, but he didn’t find the person, so he tossed it to the crowd to my left, but they bobbled it. So then he took the ball again and flipped it again into the crowd, and this time I caught it, but a kid next to me took it out of my glove, stood there for a moment and then walked off. I didn’t know what happened. He seemed extremely desperate to get a ball. But now I wasn’t sure whether to count it or not. I had it in my glove, and then he took it out of it. So did it count or not? I was flip-flopping on the decision when I remembered of an encounter that Ballhawk League Creator Erik Jabs had where a fan ripped a ball out of his glove and then tossed it back to him. He decided to count it, so I figured why shouldn’t I? So then I counted it, my 10th ball of the night. Double Digits…
Haul from 8/18/09

 

Stats:

  • 10 MLB Balls Today
  • 2 MLB Autographs Today
  • 154 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 193 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 231 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 252 Total Balls in this Season
  • 7 Thrown, 2 Hit, 1 Glove-Trick
  • 6 BP, 2 During, 2 After
  • Attendance: 28,812 People
  • Competition Factor: 288,120
  • 37 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 27 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 22 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs

8/17/09 White Sox vs. Royals

My fourth Royals game this vacation, this time at US Cellular Field.

US Cellular Field1

            I arrived to the game 20 minutes before the gates opened. I went to the gate closest to right field and saw “The Happy Youngster” Nick Yohanek at that gate.

The Happy Youngster and I

I stopped to talk with him and he let me go in with him. My goal for the day was 10. We decided that we should try for 20+ combined. But that didn’t happen.

After running up the ramps and showing my ticket to the guard in the 100 level, I ran into the seats. I saw Bob McClure in the bullpen with a non-rubbed up baseball, so I assumed he picked it off the ground. I asked him for it and he tossed me my 1st ball.

Baseball No. 215 Lifetime

After not finding any Easter Eggs in right field, I went to left field and checked the moat.
Checking the Moat

There were two balls there. Nick went for one and I went for the other. The ball was a bit under the overhang, so I had to knock it out from underneath. When I finally knocked it out from underneath, I lowered my glove over it and reeled up my 2nd ball.
Nick and I using the glove trick

Batted balls were flying all around as I rolled up my string. I saw Nick catch some on the fly, and then one was coming right to me. I moved maybe 2 steps or so to make sure that the ball wouldn’t hit me because it was coming exactly to me, and the ball clanged off a metal bench above me. I didn’t have my glove on, so I waited for the ball to take a lucky bounce. It didn’t bounce, it rolled. It rolled down the steps to me. To prevent it from rolling past me, I stuck my foot out. My foot stopped the ball in its tracks and then I reached down and picked up my 3rd ball. As you can see from the photo below it got scuffed up from smacking the ground:
Scuff on Baseball1

            I tried moving around in the outfield to catch fly balls, but it was crowded. Not New Yankee Stadium crowded, just enough to block off a lot of rows. I was going to look at the bullpen for balls, but before that I asked Luke Hochevar for a ball in the left-center corner while standing on a seat. He saw my Royals gear and threw me my 4th ball.

Ball No. 4 81709

I got a ball like that later, but more painful, but before that I went to the bullpen to see if any balls were to be glove-tricked.

There were a couple balls, but just as I got there, Rusty Kuntz came into pick up balls that were there.

 

There was one ball that could be mine in a couple seconds, so I told Rusty:

“Leave it there. I can get it.”

So he stood there and watched, kicked it closer when it needed to be, and laughed as I reeled up my 5th ball.

Lifetime Baseball No. 219

Now here’s a story. Since the front row had become crowded, I stood on a seat in the second row and waved my arms and John Bale tossed me a ball, but a kid in front of me deflected it into the moat.

No problem, right?

Wrong.

            Just as I lowered my glove down to get it, another kid with a glove trick came over and lowered his glove.  I asked him if I could try to get it and he raised his trick up, but when I raised mine up to loosen the band a bit he lowered his.

Kid lowering device to fight me

           I told him I wasn’t done, but he wouldn’t listen. I tried knocking the ball away from him, but our strings got tangled.

Tangeled Strings

So I raised the glove to try and untangle it. The kid was calling his brother over to get the ball with his device. Not so fast. I gave Nick permission to get it, so he did, and then graciously helped untangle the string for a couple minutes. It probably cost me and Nick a ball or two, and we weren’t too happy. Because of that incident, left field became dead. But there was some action at the dugout. Mitch Maier came in and started signing, and since I was focused on ballhawking at that moment and it was too far away (it would take my minutes to get there and get his autograph) my brother took the baseball and got Mitch Maier to sign it for me, my 1st autograph. Remember, an autograph is not the same as a baseball and has different rules. But now let’s get back to the Ballhawking.

So Nick and I moved to right field. Remember about that painful ball that I mentioned earlier? I was standing on a seat (again) and calling to Joakim (Waa-keem) Soria for a ball that rolled to the center field wall. He saw my Royals shirt and threw me the ball. But it was high. I wanted that ball.

So I jumped off the seat.
Jumping off a seat1


I reached up high.


Jumping off a seat2

 


I grabbed the ball out of the air, but then I fell back.

Jumping off a seat, not a good idea3

I was heading for the seat, then Nick, who was behind me, slowed me down, and I barely hit the seats. I wasn’t sure if I still had the baseball because my glove felt right, so I opened it up and saw that the ball was tucked in the very tip of the glove, not going anywhere. So there it was, I had my 6th baseball. I stood up and showed Joakim that I had the ball, and he gave me a thumbs up.

Thumbnail image for Joakim Soria Painful Baseball1

That was my last ball of BP. I made it late to the dugout. So I got no balls and only Alex Gordon’s autograph (my 2nd autograph.).

There’s another story from the game.

In the first inning, a Royal hit a home run into the White Sox bullpen. As soon as it landed, I was off. I got there and the ball was in the front of the bullpen.

 

Home Run in Bullpen

Two people that I recognized were already there though, Todd and his son Tim. They write a blog with the URL http://cookandsonbats.mlblogs.com and they were standing in the concourse when they saw the home run land, so they ran down to look at it. A little bit later, Nick came also and we grabbed two seats on the aisle about 8 rows back. Since the seats were wet, I was wiping them down when another home run was hit. Nick and I ran down, but the home run landed in the bullpen, a couple feet from Nick’s glove. Guess what happened? Juan Nieves, the bullpen coach, grabbed the White Sox home run and threw it into the crowd. Guess where it landed? IN the seat I was in before I ran down to the bullpen. And then a security guard grabbed the other home run and gave it to a kid who didn’t know what was happening and wasn’t even asking for it.

First Braun’s homer, then this. And the competition was intense at the dugouts. I only got one more ball, my 7th ball. It was from an unknown Royals pitcher after the game, it was also my last ball of the day.

Haul from 8/17/09

Stats:

  • 7 MLB Balls Today
  • 2 MLB Autographs Today
  • 152 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 191 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 221 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 242 Total Balls in this Season
  • 4 Thrown, 2 Glove Trick, 1 Hit
  • 6 BP, 1 After
  • Attendance:  36,703 People
  • Competition Factor: 256,921
  • 6.14 Balls / 1 Game
  • 36 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 26 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 21 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs

Oh, and two more cool photos:

Rainbow1
Rainbow2

 

8/14/09 Brewers vs. Astros

Next Destination: Miller Park. The gates would be opening at 5:30, but I got into the stadium at 4:15. How?

            There’s a Friday’s restaurant in Miller Park. You enter by the Friday’s sign on the third base side, have your ticket scanned on game days and take a table.


Friday's Front Row Entrance

There are two patios with a view of the field that you can snag baseballs from: the inner patio and the bullpen patio (outer). I choose the latter and looked for balls in the bullpen to get via glove trick.

            There was one ball in the bullpen.

Ball in Brewers Bullpen1

          There’s a net extending 3 feet out of so to prevent stuff from falling from the tables into the bullpen. I made it a bit difficult to reel in balls, but I was able to knock it closer a bit.

            After about 10 minutes and 3 dropped sharpies I had my 1st ball reeled up.

Ball Tricked From Brew's Bullpen

          Since there were no balls left in the bullpen I went to check the moat in front of the inner patio. There was also one ball in the moat.

Ball in Friday's Moat

I asked someone if I could try to get it and they moved a bit. I lowered my glove, dropped it over the ball, and had the balls easily, but as I was reeling it up the ball dropped!

            I lowered it over the ball again, but now it was too loose. So after reeling my glove up, tightening the band just a bit, and lowering it again I went back to work. I lowered my glove over the ball, jiggled it to make sure it was in, and reeled up my 2nd ball.

Friday's Moat Ball1

            Another ball landed in the bullpen and I threw my glove out to knock it closer,

Trying to Knock a Ball Closer Using Glove1

          But Brewers’ Bullpen Catcher Marcus Hanel told me to stop. I read off an encounter Ballhawk League Founder Erik Jabs had with Marcus that Marcus considered the glove trick stealing. So I rolled up my string and waited for a home run.

            Mike Cameron yanked a big one out to the furthest table to center in Friday’s. The guy situated at that table caught it on the fly with his bare hands.

Furthest Table in Friday;s

          Then a swing or two later he launched one to the same spot. The guy didn’t try to catch it this time and he let it bounce out of Friday’s. It clanged off a stand or something and went high in the ait. I hopped over an annoying railing and grabbed my 3rd ball as it came back down to earth.

            That was my last ballat Friday’s When all the gates opened I bolted inside to where the Astros were throwing. I got nothing quickly, but then I saw that the person throwing with Darin Erstad (the player I now believe is Michael Bourn) threw a ball that tipped off Darin’s glove and rolled to the wall. He had another one, so he didn’t walk over to get it, so I moved over to where I though it was.

            Nobody noticed the ball or picked it up, so I leaned over the wall, knocked it closer with my glove and grabbed my 4th ball of the day and No. 200 Lifetime. Not exactly the way I’d like to snag #200, but a ball is a ball.

Ball No. 200 Lifetime

            After I got that ball I got no other ones from the Astros when they were throwing. I went back to Friday’s to see if I could get any balls in the moat. There was one ball there that I was trying to knock closer. It was able 1 foot out from the back wall, but there was also a metal beam that jutted out about 8 inches. I had to keep tossing my glove out, trying to land it on the ball, and then immediately pull back, but it wasn’t working. At one point two groundscrew members came in and I asked them for the ball, but they just ignored me and kept walking into the bullpen, and when they came out of the bullpen I asked again, but they ignored me again! Finally a police officer came in to the moat and I asked him for the ball. He picked it up and tossed it to me, but it was too far out and it fell back in the moat. I said that he could just put it in the glove, so he did, very firmly, and while doing so he knocked the sharpie out of the glove. He took up the sharpie and started scribbling on the ball.

            “No! Don’t do that!” I yelled and he stopped. I reeled up my 5th ball and he went over and pocketed another ball that landed there for himself.

Sharpie on Baseball (Thank You Police Officer)

I made my way up to the LF Bleachers above Friday’s expecting to get a ball or two, but no. The Astros weren’t hitting them to me, and the players down below weren’t being too generous, so I got nothing up there and I left to go to the Astros Dugout for the end of BP. It ended up being a terrible decision. The Astros kept pelting the seats with homers that I was just in and I didn’t get any balls at the Astros dugout because I couldn’t identify any of them, even with my picture roster. Doug Brocali *did* sign my 1st autograph, but that was it!

So I headed back to Friday’s to see if I could get anything. There was nothing in the moat, but there were three balls in the bullpen. One was too far out, the other two balls I could’ve gotten. I tried knocking them closer, but some bullpen workers appeared before I could get them close enough.
2 Balls in Bullpen


I asked them for one of the balls, but he ignored me and started setting up the bullpen for the players. Luckily when he was done he took one of the balls, one that I had wanted because of a marking on the sweetspot, and tossed me my 6th ball.


          I moved over to where the Astros would be stretching in hopes of getting something. Kazuo Matsui and his trainer started throwing on the foul line and I asked the trainer for the ball in Japanese, but he didn’t give it to me. I did learn how to ask for the ball in a proper Japanese accent from a Japanese cameraman. My favorite Astro Hunter Pence started walking in so I called out “Hunter! Hunter!” in hopes that he would come over to sign. I wouldn’t be telling you this had I not gotten it, so yes I got Hunter Pence to sign my 2nd autograph.

Hunter Pence Signing

          Here are the only two autographs from the game:

Doug Brocali and Hunter Pence Autograph

          I barely missed out on Michael Bourn’s signing. I was the next person for him to sign for before he left.

Missing Out on Michael Bourn Signing

All the players went in, so I went into a great foul ball in Miller Park, the cross-aisle right in front of the press box. But since I didn’t have a ticket there, I got kicked out of that. I then moved to a foul ball spot along the right field line, but I kicked out in about 10 seconds. And then I came close to Ryan Braun’s 1st Inning Home Run even though I was about 400 feet away from where it landed. It landed in a closed off box next to the Center Field Ivy. Ryan Braun Game Home Run

          Another kid and I waited out there and someone retrieved it, but he gave it to the other kid. I was so P-O’d from everything that happened in the first inning that I just wanted to sit in one place and watch the game. Even though I was incredibly p*ssed I still ran down to the first row when Jason Bourgeois (pronounced Boo-jwaa) grounded to Geoff Blum who threw the ball to Lance Berkman to make the third out. I ran down to the front row and realized that I was at the wrong end of the dugout. So I cut though the first row to some empty seats there and got Lance Berkman to toss me my 7th ball.

Lance Berkman Baseball1

I made my mission to get 10 balls on the night so I kept switching dugouts. At one point I asked First Base Coach for the Brewers for the next inning warm-up ball. When that time came he disappeared into the dugout with the ball, but I stayed there just in case he came out randomly. He didn’t come out randomly, but he did flip the ball over the dugout about 10 feet to my left. The people in those seats didn’t see the ball pop out of the dugout, so I was overjoyed when the body rolled off the dugout, bounced off one of them and plopped down on the ground where I picked up my 8th baseball of the night, and hit my lip.

 

 

Final Ball at Miller Park in '09
 

          That was my last ball during the game. At the end of the game I tried to get an ump ball, but about 5 littler kids rushed the area and got balls. I tried to get a ball from the pitchers walking in from the bullpen, but to no avail. So how did I get my final baseball of the night? I peeked into the dugout to see if by any chance that there was a baseball was lying around. I stuck my camera out a bit to take a photo of the parts of the dugout I couldn’t see. I didn’t see any baseball, but I stuck down there for a bit longer. There was a guy in the dugout cleaning things up when all of a sudden I saw him get on his knees and look underneath the bench. He reached down, underneath the bench and pulled out a baseball. I asked him for the baseball and as he approached me he flipped me my 9th baseball and my final one of the night, but I did get Geoff Blum and Jason Michaels’ autographs for my 3rd and 4th autographs respectively. The End.

The Practice Balls:

5 Practice Balls

The “H” and “—-” Balls:

H Balls and ---- Ball

And The One Normal Game Rubbed Ball:

Ball No. 203

Next Game: Wrigley.

Stats:

  • 9 MLB Balls Today
  • 4 MLB Autographs Today
  • 130 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 169 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 205 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 226 Total balls in this Season
  • 5 BP, 1 Pre-Game, 2 During, 1 After
  • 3 Glove Trick, 1 Hit, 5 Thrown
  • Attendance: 37,715
  • Competition Factor: 339,435
  • 6.03 Balls / 1 Game
  • 34 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 24 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 19 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs

 

8/12/09 Twins vs. Royals

            I got to the hotel around 3 today and the bus was already outside. I thought I had missed a bunch of people, but it turns out not many of them signed. Soon after I got there Kyle Davies came out with his iPod. He signed for everyone including me, my 1st autograph, and instead of getting on the bus he got in a cab. Soon after David DeJesus, Willie Bloomquist, and John Buck came out to (again) go in a cab. David wouldn’t sign, and I approached John Buck who signed my 2nd autograph. I tried to get Willie, but he got in a cab before I could get him.

            One of the guys I (and about everyone else) wanted was Zack Grienke. Everyone was keeping an eye on where he would be. They saw Zack go into a mall, so the collectors went into the mall to try and get him. He said no and went into a smoothie place. I saw two other players in the smoothie place and they came out to where we were. One was Jamey Wright (who I have) and the other was Ron Mahay. I got Ron Mahay for my 3rd autograph and then went outside. By that point a lot of the players had already left, so then the 9 or so collectors turned in 1. I was waiting until the bus left and while waiting I saw Frank White in the lobby. I got out a new baseball out and approached him as he got out (as did the other collector and my brother).

            “Ya’ guys nervous, ain’t cha?” I was a bit. But he signed my baseball on the sweetspot for my 4th autograph. Nobody else came out to get on the bus so we left for the ballpark.

            I entered the Metrodome this day hoping for a day like the 11th. The Royals were taking BP again, instead of the Twins. There was one guy that I had befriended last game, he gave ms some tips on the Metrodome. But when an unknown Royal fielded a ball and I asked for it he said:

            “He was wearing a Twins hat a minute ago.”

            But the Royal still tossed me my 1st baseball.

Baseball No. 185

            My brother told me that Yuniesky Betancourt was signing and I tried to get over there in time, but I couldn’t. I gave my brother the baseball since he would be focusing on autographs, and he was closer to Betancourt and he was able to get an autograph for me my 5th autograph. Some people may not count that, but as a kid I couldn’t make my way to the front of crowds when someone was signing and I ended up handing someone closer the ball and they would get it signed for me, and I counted those as a kid. What I do is if I count something once (I.E. a ball from the Home Run Derby), I always continue to count balls from the type of event. And besides, an autograph is different from a baseball. My autograph collection is very complicated while my baseballs from games collection is different. Well let us get back to batting practice.

            I made my way over to the Left Field foul line because I saw a baseball lying against the wall that could be gotten with the glove trick.

Ball Against LF Foul Wall

          I didn’t expect to find was a baseball lying in the front row. I immediately picked up the Easter Egg for my 2nd baseball and then once I had it I put it back down to take a photo of it.

Easter Egg!

Not only was it unexpected, but it was a Metrodome baseball.

Metrodome Ball1.jpg

          I miss Easter Eggs. I get in a Yankee Stadium 3 hours before the gates open, and the ushers are carefull, so there are no easter eggs.

          I was nervous about using the glove trick because of the usher from yesterday, so I made my way back to the RF Corner where I got that ball from John Bale.

            John Bale was again running around the outfield warning track and two balls just so happened to find their way to him. John Bale looked at the about 4 other kids leaning on the wall calling for the ball. He tossed the ball towards us, but it fell short and landed in one of the BP nets beneath us. He tossed the other ball to us, but that again fell short, tipped off the very end of my glove and landed in a BP net. He walked into the gap where both balls had fallen, picked one up and tossed it up. I let a kid next to me get that one and then John Bale took the other ball and threw me my 3rd ball.

John Bale and Baseball2

            That was it for the end of BP. The Royals ended 10 minutes early again, and I wasn’t at the dugout so I missed out on getting any balls there. I decided to head to the gap in CF to see if any balls were able to be gotten via the glove trick. There was one ball that was about 6 inches out from the wall; I didn’t have to move it all.

Easy Glove Trick Ball1

I wanted to use it so bad, but the usher who told me to stop last time was watching me, so I couldn’t use it.

            I moved over to where the Royals were stretching to try and get some autographs from them. There was a lot of time and I had down all my wandering the day before so I sat down and waited. I saw that John Mizerock, the Bullpen Coach, had tossed a ball to a kid in the crowd so I moved over there to try and get a ball. John ended up tossing a ball to a lady (seen below standing up and asking for the ball) in the front row that he and the catcher had been rolling back and forth from Center Field to the Bullpen Bench.

Lady Asking For Ball From John Mizerock

I said:

            “John!” He shrugged his shoulders. I then pointed to my Royals hat and he took a ball from the bag and tossed it to me, my 4th ball.

Ball From John Mizerock

            Some of the players came out to stretch and two of them, Willie Bloomquist and Mark Teahen threw.

Willie Bloomquist and Mark Teahen Throwing

I waited until they were done and called out Willie Blolomquist’s name. He looked at me and threw me my 5th ball.

            Alex Gordon was the only player that I needed to sign that was left stretching, but he left and didn’t sign. Everyone left stretching I had already gotten so I headed over to the dugout to try and get a pre-game warm-up ball tossed to me. Alberto Callaspo came out to throw with Yuniesky Betancourt and I noticed the Callaspo brought the ball out, so he’d end up with it. It was also the less-crowded end of the dugout, so I moved over there. While Alberto and Yuniesky were throwing I noticed that a ball had rolled over to Alberto feet from the outfield. I could see that it was a Metrodome ball and Alberto picked it up. He looked at the ball and then continued throwing without giving balls. He would alternate between the original ball and the new ball while throwing. When they finished Alberto ended up with both of the baseballs he tossed me on of them, my 6th ball,

Alberto Callaspo Throwing

and then tossed the other one to a little girl on my right. Luckily the ball he tossed me was the Metrodome ball.

            The game started and I just wandered around a bit not wanting to go for third out balls. I forget what inning it was or who hit it, but a Ground-Rule Double was hit into the gap where the seats start to disappear into the batters’ eye. I went over there a bit later and I saw the ball a bit under the overhang, but able to get with the glove trick.

Ground Rule Double In Center Field Gap

I wasn’t going to use it during the game, so I waited until after. But I wasn’t able to get there in time and a security guard tossed it to someone else.

            But before the end of the game I was able to get another ball. I headed to the dugout in the 6th inning and a bit later grabbed a seat in the third row. In the top of the 8th a batter hit two grounds balls back to back into the same spot in the Royals dugout. Yuniesky Betancourt grabbed one of them and Alberto Callaspo grabbed the other. I asked Yuniesky for the ball and he tossed it to me, but even though I was 5 feet above him he tossed it short. He got up, took the ball, and basically slam dunked it into my glove for my 7th ball.

Alberto Callaspo Baseball

So that was the last thing I got in the stadium. Alberto gave his batting gloves to a different kid.

            I went to the hotel after the game to try and get autographs as they came back from the game. No collectors were there, so I assumed it would be easy to get them to sign. I was able to get two people.

            Miguel Olivo came back by a big white car with Alberto Callaspo and I asked him to sign. He signed my 6th autograph at the door before he entered and then he went in. Then the team bus came. I was only able to get one player, Willie Bloomquist. I was reserving my requests for Zack Greinke, Billy Butler, or Alex Gordon. Of course I didn’t see any of them and Willie was one of the last people of the bus. So I got him to sign my 7th autograph and last autograph of the day.

Haul from 8/12/09 Twins vs. Royals

Stats:

  • 7 MLB Balls Today
  • 7 MLB Autographs Today
  • 124 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 163 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 191 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 212 Total Balls in this Season
  • 3 BP, 3 Pre-Game, 1 During
  • 6 Thrown, 1 Found
  • Attendance: 30,105 People
  • Competition Factor: 210,735
  • 5.97 Balls / 1 Game
  • 32 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 22 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 17 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs

8/11/09 Twins vs. Royals

            I woke up and wanted to check the weather for the game, but then I realized that it wouldn’t matter. But before that let us talk about the site of Metropolitan Stadium, Mall of America.

Thumbnail image for Mall of America1

            The Mall of America is HUGE. I went in a few stores, but walking around there were more stores than I thought. There was a mirror room:

Mirror Room

A water massage place:

Aqua Massage

An Amusement Park:

Mall of America's Amusement Park

            And the exact seat where the longest home run (hit by Harmon Killebrew) landed in the old stadium:

Harmon Killebrew Seat

            Oh, and yes, a huge amusement park. Even though it was designed for kids there were some rides that I could see in Six Flags or such. I even won a huge banana.

Banana1

            Our next stop wasn’t the Metrodome, it was the Royals’ Hotel. I wanted to work on a Royals’ Team Ball because I would be seeing them for 5 games, so I decided to stop at the hotel until we leave for the game.

            The first player appeared soon after I got there. He was Mark Teahen and I was able to get him on one for my 1st autograph. I didn’t know who the next player was, but he came out with security and while they had their backs turned I got him for my 2nd autograph. The player was Jamey Wright. So there were also some collectors there (surprisingly) for the Royals. They identified the next player to come out as Gil Meche, who signed for everyone (my 3rd autograph).

Gil Meche Signing

A while after that David DeJesus came out with his iPod. I didn’t expect him to sign, but he did (my 4th autograph). Most of the players had left, but a few hadn’t (one guy was marking down who had left and who hadn’t). I waited until the team bus came. Robinson Tejada came out talking on his phone. I tried asking him in Spanish to sign (I rarely need to). Well he came over and signed my 5th and last autograph at the hotel before the game.

Robinson Tejada Signing

The team bus came and of the people who were left, nobody signed.

            Off to the Metrodome I went.

            When I got to the Metrodome I had two thoughts:

A)    Oh my god I’m finally here.

B)    The outside is the same

That was my thought when I wandered around the Metrodome. Bland outside design. It isn’t really unique at all.

Outside of Metrodome

Well I guess it is unique for not allowing guns:

It has gray wall with red support beams holding up the roof. That’s it. The outside (and the inside) are the most simplistic stadium designs I have ever seen. (Well I do have to admit that I am a bit spoiled with the $1,000,000,000+ New Yankee Stadium as my home park, but still I have been to 16 different stadiums in my life. The only stadium that probably would come close to this would be Olympic Stadium, and I don’t remember much of it.)

So I got on line and a line started forming at around 40 minutes before the gates open (for anyone who wants to know). And I ran in. I’ve only been in 1 truly domed stadium for a game (Olympic Stadium) so when I ran in I paused to take it all in. The sound of the bat made an echoing noise throughout the whole stadium. The Royals (not the Twins) were batting. There was nobody in the seats when I got in, so it was the first time when I had the whole stadium to myself for batting practice, so I immediately got underway.

            I ran down the steep steps and almost tripped a couple times. When I got to the third row I started looking for Easter Eggs. A bunch of baseballs were in the hands of an usher who was walking towards me, so I gave up. I shouldn’t have. I saw a couple guys pick up about 5 baseballs one section to my right. I was p*ssed but I had to keep going.

            There was one Royal in Left Field shagging baseballs when I got in. He was wearing a pullover so, and since all Royals look the same I couldn’t identify him. But when a ball was fielded I just asked him for a ball and held open my glove. He surprisingly tossed me my 1st baseball,

Ball No. 177

when there was still only about 20 people.

Uncrowded Left Field Seats

. I was wearing a Twins shirt and a Twins hat when I entered because according to a normal BP schedule the Twins would be batting for about 20 minutes. But the Royals started and ended early. So a little bit after I got that ball a wave of fans started pouring into the seats (probably from other gates?). That didn’t stop me.

            I moved over to left-center field to try for baseballs. Bruce Chen had now come out to Left Field to shag, and since he was to the left of the previous Royal who tossed me a ball, he would be getting all the balls hit to Left-Center. I was right and when Bruce Chen fielded a ball and I called out Bruce as he slowly walked over to field it. He tossed me my 2nd baseball, probably due to the fact of my Royals shirt and hat.

Bruce Chen Baseball1

            Then Mike Jacobs signed my 6th autograph. I was in such a rush because of all that happened that I didn’t know the details. I can barely remember the details of the balls I previously snagged because I was in such a rush to head over to the gap in Center Field. I wanted to do the glove trick at least once (at most 4 times) here at the Metrodome. The gap was perfect. And sure enough there were about 7 balls that with a lot of effort I could get. I had read and heard previously that the glove trick was incredibly easy to do at the Metrodome. At the Gate that I went in there was a season ticket holder who had a device that he used to retrieve home runs that landed in the gap. He told me that security would have a problem with my device, that they would take the string, and even my glove to teach me a lesson. But I had to go for it. I am doing the trick at least once in every park (except Wrigley) on my trip. I was going for it.

           One ball was too easy to snag by using the trick. Here is a (very) blurry shot of the ball (I was in a rush):

Ball in CF

Right underneath me, hidden from view of the usher on the Lower Deck (they have two decks, Upper and Lower. An Upper Deck ticket won’t get you to the Lower Deck, but a Lower Deck ticket would get you into both decks), about 2 feet out from the wall. Problem was that it was about a 30 foot drop. I lowered the glove that incredible distance. It hit the floor. I moved it over to the ball, it was on the ball, but the ball fell out. I knocked the ball closer, and by doing that it got stuck on a towel or something on the ground. I wasn’t sure whether to be happy that it wouldn’t be moving or sad that it wouldn’t be moving, but I went for it. Sure enough I was able to get to ball inside the glove. Then I pulled the glove slowly up to make sure the ball didn’t fall out. Pretty soon I had gotten my 3rd ball using the glove trick. And an usher in the Upper Deck cheered when I got it.
Glove Trick Metrodome Baseball1


I was thinking that nobody would have a problem with it so I used to glove trick to get a ball on a platform one section down. I had to knock it off the platform closer to me. I threw my glove out to try and pull it back. Not the first time. The second time it moved back a little. Before I could do it a third time and usher on the Lower Deck got my attention and said “No way” while giving me a glare. He proceeded to stare me down while I rolled up my string.

While rolling up my string a couple balls landed on the track. Joakim Soria retrieved one of them. I called out “Joakim!” and pointed to the kids beneath me because I wasn’t ready. But Joakim looked at my Royals stuff and threw me the ball over everyone’s head (my 4th baseball). Since I wanted to have one of the kids beneath me get a ball I immediately picked one out and tossed him the ball.

            After that I knew that Left Field was used up, so I moved over into the Right Field corner to try and get a ball. My spot is circled in red in the photo below:

Royals Side of the Metrodome

          There was a guy there who was running poles and a ball rolled to him. He picked the ball up and I was able to catch a glimpse of his last name, Bale. I didn’t know his first name so I just said “Bale” to try and get his attention. He turned around, saw me, and threw me my 5th baseball from a good distance.
John Bale and Baseball

          I decided that since the Royals were finishing up I should move over to the Royals dugout to try and get baseballs when they are coming in.

          When I got there I saw another kid in the Ballhawk League Aaron, aka District Boy. We talked for a bit and when they came in I moved to the spot in the front row with my brother and watched for anyone who had a ball. I spotted John Buck with a baseball in his hand and when he crossed the foul line I started calling his name. He looked up, saw me, took a few more steps and tossed me my 6th baseball.

John Buck Baseball, No. 182

I was only aiming for 6. I knew the Metrodome was incredibly hard so I decided to aim for 15 for the three games there. That was still my goal though.

There were a couple people still over at the Right Field foul line so we moved over there. John Bale (Ball No. 5) was still there so I moved over to him while he was signing. I waited for him to make his way over to me, and when he did I got him sign my 7th autograph. Then I saw Bob McClure (who I recognized by his mustache) and called his name. He walked over and signed my 8th autograph. Then Manager Trey Hillman was talking to some people a bit over to my right and when he finished talking he started signing along the foul line. I was able to get him for my 9th autograph. Wow.

Remember how I said that there were about 7 baseballs out in Center Field? The Royals hit more there, so I just decided to see how many there were. When I got out there I saw a rubbed up baseballs on top of a seat (most likely a game home run ball) and a guy picking up all baseballs within reach.
Guy Picking Up Baseball Metrodome1

He was putting them in a bag (either to be sold or re-used) and I asked him for a baseball. He shook his head without even looking up. So he looked the whole area for any visible baseballs and when he was finished he started walking off. He missed one baseball and when I asked him again for a baseball he shook his head. Then I told him he missed one. He looked up at me and said where. I told him that it was wedged in a seat on a platform. After a puzzled look on his face he got on the platform and looked for the ball. After he looked a bit he found the ball

Baseball Wedged in Seat

          And instead of keeping it he tossed me my 7th baseball.

          I wanted to wander around the stadium after that and I did. After talking to my parents I made my way out to where I got the ball from John Bale.

RF Corner View Metrodome1

And photographed the batting cage:

BP Cage1

Then I walked through the concourse from Right Field to Left-Center.

Outfield Concourse1

Photographed the view from Center to my Right:

Evil Twins Usher

The usher in red leaning on the wall is the one who made me stop using the glove trick. Watch out for him if you plan on using it.

I didn’t have time to make it to the Upper Deck because the players were already stretching. Royals Stretching

I moved down to the foul line and sat down in the first row waiting for a player to sign. Josh Anderson finished running and started making his way in when we called his name and he walked over. He signed for everyone who wanted an autograph and including us for my 10th autograph.

I tried for pre-game throwing, but I picked the wrong end of the dugout and Billy Butler kept his baseball. I kept switching dugouts because I wanted a nice game-used Metrodome baseball. In the top of the third inning I got my wish. Billy Butler grounded a ball to Alexi Casilla who threw the ball to Justin Morneau to get the 3rd Out. I ran down to the bottom of the aisle and waited for Justin Morneau to come in. He caught the third out ball, looked up and tossed me my 8th baseball, and perfect Metrodome ball with a scuffed up surface.
HHH Metrodome Baseball1

After getting that ball I decided to head to the Upper Deck. The Metrodome is so simple. The architects must’ve just said “We need some entrances/exits, a lower concourse, a Lower Deck, an upper concourse, and an Upper Deck” and built on that motto because the Metrodome is only that. But the upper deck has big patches of empty seats, which I visited, hear are some photos from the Upper Deck.

The Upper Deck’s concourse:Twins' Upper Deck Concourse1

The view from behind the big banners of former Twins:

View From Behind Twins' Banners1

The view of the seats behind the banners:

View of Twins' Seats Behind Banners1

The view from the furthest seat out in Center Field with a view of the field:

View From Furthest Seat in Metrodome1

After the game I went to the Royals dugout to try and get something, but the guy who got the final ball, Alberto Callapso, tossed it to a guy wearing Royals gear who caught in one hand with his other hand holding a baby wearing Royals gear. Couldn’t compete with that. I may have exhausted all of my resources, but I am not sure. I’ll see today…

 

Haul from 8/11/09 Twins vs. Royals

Stats:

  • 8 MLB Balls Today
  • 10 MLB Autographs Today
  • 117 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 156 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 184 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 205 Total Balls in this Season
  • 5 BP, 2 Pre-Game, 1 During
  • 7 Thrown, 1 Glove-Trick
  • Attendance: 32,121
  • Competition Factor: 256,968
  • 5.94 Balls / 1 Game
  • 31 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 21 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 16 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs

 

 

6/27/09 Mets vs. Yankees

Subway Series, Part 3. Part 1 ended with 5 Baseballs, one of which was My 100th MLB Baseball of the Season. Part 2 ended with another 5 Baseballs, 3 Special Citi Field Baseballs and a bruise on my knee. How would Part 3 end?

            Apparently the Jackie Robinson Rotunda isn’t the first gate to open. The Left Field gate opens at the same time. I learned that when I approached Left Field. But First I entered through the JRR, and ran towards left field. I snuck a peek at the field and saw B.P. was on (FINALLY!) But I also saw a baseball lying inches from the wall.

            First when I arrived in Left I scanned for Easter Eggs (none), and then I went to work. I lowered my glove, but the way I bundled up my string made the glove not work so well. I lowered it right to the bottom and tried picking it up. But it was too tight. Then Fernando Nieve made an appearance. He took the ball and placed it where my hand goes. Odd, but I’ll take the help. I rose up my 1st ball  (And just to tell you, it’s a device ball because he didn’t toss it up to me, he put it in a place that I could only get with a device,) and stuck it in my pocket to wait for some action.

62709 1st ball

            But I would have to wait a bit. A ball rolled right near the wall. I took out the string and was about to lower it, but Mike Pelfrey went to pick it up. It’s quite a drop so I couldn’t lower it before he got there.

Left Field 15ft Citi

15 feet in fact.

            “Leave it there! I can get it!”

            “What?” He asked a bit confused a tossed me the ball, but it was short and fell back down. Being it was his fault he gave me another throw, and I caught it, my 2nd ball. Oh, it was a Shea Commemorative baseball also.

Shea Stadium Commemorative Baseball2

            Even though the Yankees haven’t started to hit yet, the crowd arrived early, and they concentrated into Left Field. Yay! So what I did was I ran to Center Field.

There were only about 15 people there, and this would explain why: It was 415ft from Home Plate.

view from 415ft from home plate

Yeah, not many balls were going to be hit out here, but I saw that Right Field was also not that crowded, so I went over there. But nothing happened over there, while I saw a couple balls near the wall in Center, so I trudged back over there. But then I saw some balls in the black in center closer to left field, so I went over there, but as soon as I arrived a guard came to pick them up. So I moved back to Center again as a pit stop to re-fuel. Then I ran back over to Right. And all that movement took about 15 minutes.

All of the outfield is bad for snagging. Left Field gets too crowded. Center Field is 415ft from home plate. And Right Field is 18 feet from the ground and blocked by the second deck. I had to wait until Dave Racaniello made an appearance until I got my next ball.

Dave Racaniello

            While in Right I made a request to Dave: “Could I have the next ball you get?” He just shrugged his shoulders, but when a ball smacked off the wall in front of me and landed 5 feet in front of me, 20 or so feet down, I called out his name, and he took the ball and tossed me my 3rd ball.

Ball No. 118

It was far up.

            And here are two things to note that happened in Right:

1) I asked Nieve for a ball, but he shook his head after remembering me from left

2) I saw a guard pocketing a ball that landed in the bullpen. I told the guard above in the seats and he just laughed.

So sensing that Right was dead I move back to Center. But needing a batter to hit a ball about 420ft to reach me, no home runs were hit. But there was one batter who was blasting balls towards Center, but just not IN Center. One was hit close enough to the wall that the player who was shagging balls, Bobby Parnell, couldn’t ignore the people asking him, including me. Well he turned around and threw me my 4th ball of the day.Bobby Parnell and the ball thrown to me

Bobby Parnell is the player just to the right of the top of my glove.

            I moved back over to Left Field because I saw two glove trickable (yes, trickable) balls in the black. I didn’t get those, but I did notice that the Mets jogged off the field before the Yankees were even throwing.

Gary Sheffield and the Yankees in fron of their dugout

Odd… So I had nothing to do with the dugouts being blocked off. I just waited for the Yankees to start hitting. When they did, I had to wait a bit for some action. A BUNCH of balls were hit to the wall, and only Dave Eiland was picking them up, slowly, one by one. But I waited for the pitchers to start, but as they came to the foul line, the fans did also. But that made Left Field a bit less crowded (they moved over to the foul line, as you can see here).

A-Rod signing

 So I ran out to Left Field again.

            Nothing came my way for a bit. There were some balls that were hit to the wall towards my Left and Brett Gardner went to retrieve them, so I ran over there to ask him. But when I was close enough to ask him I noticed a guy taking his hat off and jostling for position. So I looked up and what did I see? A ball about .75 seconds away from landing. So when it landed it happened to land right in my row, so all I did was I turned and bare-handed my 5th ball. It was a New Yankee Stadium Commemorative ball with an odd, but cool black mark.

Cool Black Mark_1

            Pretty soon a ball landed inches from the wall by the foul pole. I moved over there and asked the people huddled above it:

            “Could I try to get that ball?”

            After about 30 seconds my glove was trying to knock the ball closer. I moved it about 2 feet closer; I rose my glove back up, placed a sharpie in it, and lowered my glove again. But when I placed my glove on top of the ball, something happened: the rubber band wouldn’t stretch around the ball. It was too tight, so I was forced to raise it back up and loosen it a bit I was getting nervous and my knees were quaking, literally. The previous attempt had taken around 4 minutes or so. There was a guard nearby, who could clearly see it. I lowered my glove once again after loosening it, after landing on the ball and telling that it was trapped in my glove, I raised my glove up, but now the band was too loose. I was really worried now. I raised my glove back up.

            “Don’t give up now kid!” Some guy yelled.

A person behind me asked if he could try to get it if I couldn’t.

            “One more try.”

 I tightened the band maybe about 1 cm and lowered my glove again. This whole attempt had taken about 10 minutes or so already. I was worried. I remembered reading on Donnie’s blog that security at Citi Field was getting stricter on ball-retrieving devices. My glove was a ball-retrieving device. They took away two other people’s device already prior to this day. Would they confiscate just my string? Or would they be jerks and confiscate my glove? Would they rip up my ticket and saw that was a warning? Or would they eject me? Ok, that last one was too extreme, but this was definitely my last chance, whether I would like it or not. So I lowered it over the ball. The glove touched the ground. The rubber band stretched around the ball. Now would it hold? I raised my glove up and I felt the pleasure of my glove being heavier than normal. So slowly I raised it up, slowly, slowly, slowly, and then pretty soon, my 6th ball was in my hand. People cheered and clapped.

             But I risked the trick once more by trying it on a ball (the red circle) that was a few feet out from the wall.
627090010 modified.jpg


The labels will come in handy, just read on. I arrived over there and asked if I could get it. A kid (the orange circle on the wall) next to me said things repeatedly to me. It annoyed me so much. I took out my string.

“That’s my cousin’s ball; it was tossed to him twice.”

            “You’re not gonna get that!”

My string was tangled so I raised it back up and released the tangles so it could go to the bottom. It successfully made it to the bottom, but my sharpie fell out.

            “Oh, he’s gonna get it!”

            “No wait, it’s too far out.”

            “Only a cup trick works.”

            I started swinging in a circular motion to knock it closer.

            “It’s still too far out.”

            I knocked it closer.

            “No wait he’s gonna get it! He is!”

            SHUT UP!

            But before I could pick the ball up, Alfredo Aceves (the orange circle on the field) walked over. He looked at my contraption. He took the sharpie that had fallen to the ground. He took the ball that I was trying to get. So what he did next I didn’t ask for. He signed the ball. I couldn’t do anything. I didn’t want THAT ball signed, but he did it. What was I supposed to say? “DON’T SIGN IT; JUST GIVE ME THE BALL AND SHARPIE???” So he signed it and did what Fernando Nieve did. I raised my glove up and looked at the signed ball. It was my 1st autograph then my 7th ball.

Aceves signed ball (1st auto, 7th ball)

He signed it before I had it, so yeah. But anyway security finally cracked down on me.

            An usher told me to come over there after I raised my glove up.

            “I’m sorry, but you’re gonna have to stop doing that.”

            “Oh O.K. Sorry. I didn’t know.”

            “Yeah people high up, they saw you, and they were talking to me on the walkie-talkie.”

            “Oh, it’s just that at other parks they allowed it, like at Shea.”

            “Yeah there was this one guy who came here a lot. Kamble?”

            Zack Hample?”

            “Yeah him, he has like 3,000 baseballs.”

            “Actually 4,100 baseballs.”

            So that was it. Nothing taken away. Nothing to make me worried. It’s just that I won’t be using the trick at Left Field anymore there. So the glove trick is officially banned in both New York Stadiums. That was the last stuff to happen to me during B.P.

            But after B.P. I was talking to a couple when they said the “Knicks Italian Basketball player is here. He’s wearing a red hat.”

Danilo Gallinari1

See him?

They told me where the player, Danilo Gallinari, was, and I went over there. I approached him, got a photo with him, and got him to sign two tickets stubs for my 2nd autograph so far.

Danilo Gallinari2

            I stayed over near the dugout in hopes of a third out ball, but on the inner corner because a strikeout pitcher was pitching (A.J. Burnett).

            In the First: Strikeout, but Jorge rolls the ball back to the mound.

            In the Second: Groundout, Tex takes the ball to the other end of the dugout.

            Before the Third: I get the infield’s warm-up ball for my 8th ball of the day, courtesy of Mike Kelleher.

JR's 42 and my 8th ball

A very beaten up New Yankee Stadium Commemorative baseball posed on the ’4′ in the ’42′ dedicated to Jackie Robinson.

            At the 7th I moved over to the Mets dugout. I wanted a game used, rubbed up, Citi Field Commemorative ball. So when Sheffield got the inning ending ball, I ran to the First Row. When he came in, he flipped the crowd a ball, which I got, my 9th ball. The type of ball that I wanted.

9th ball 62709

Stats:

  • 9 MLB Balls Today
  • 1 MLB Autograph Today
  • 1 Basketball Autograph Today
  • 2 Total Autographs Today
  • 124 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 140 Total Balls in this Season
  • 83 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 88 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 7 BP, 2 During
  • 5 Thrown, 3 Glove Trick, 1 Hit
  • Attendance: 41,302 People
  • Competition Factor: 371,718
  • 11 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 21 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB Baseballs
  • 6 Consecutive Games with at least 4 MLB Baseballs
  • 5.9 Balls / 1 Game

 

Haul from Subway Series Part 3

Subway Series Part 3: 9 Baseballs and some odd stories to tell… 

6/17/09 Yankees vs. Nationals

            I arrived just as the gates opened and I had to wait a bit to get in. When I went in I saw Cliff who I knew from Zack Hample’s blog. After I talked to him for a bit I went over to the dugout to try and get Tony Pena’s attention for a baseball.

tony pena

I wasn’t able to, but to my delight I saw that there would be a special pitcher’s B.P.

            It started about 10-15 minutes after the gates opened, and it was the usual round. C.C, A.J, Phil Hughes, Andy Pettitte, Alfredo Aceves…

pitchers bp2

Well the seats weren’t crowded at that point and a ball was hit to the wall. I ran to the front row and saw that David Robertson had fielded the ball.

            “David!” I said. He looked up and flipped me my 1st ball.

106th ball of 2009

I put my ball away and waited for a break in the action to take notes and label it, but the pitcher with a few homers to his name stepped up: C.C.

            Well sure enough he hit one out. It traveled about 400ft. I will use this picture to help describe it:

Section 101?

So what happened was I ran to the aisle closest to the bullpen, and I ran through the row with the guy with his hands on his hips. I watched helplessly as the ball landed near the end of aisle about 3 rows from me. It took a lucky bounce and settled against a wall one row down, so I ran over and grabbed it, my 2nd ball, and almost hurting my ankle. It was the same ankle that after I hit a ball in a little league game, I dropped the metal bat right on the ball of my ankle. Ouch.

            The Yankee pitchers had come out and I had noticed that they were using a bunch of commemorative balls. The Yankees had switched over to their hitters and the seats had gotten more crowded. I saw that a ball Andy Pettitte was using was commemorative…but I didn’t get that.

the yankee pitchers warming up 61709

. I had to wait for a ball to settle on the grass before the warning track. It came to a stop dead center with the commemorative logo facing me. After a bit of me and other people asking players to pick it up, Phil Coke came over. He took the ball, and did some sort of a blind toss. Well it sailed into a bunch of people, and I wasn’t in the center of it. I saw it bounce off of Cliff’s head, and it bounced right into my awaiting glove for my 3rd ball. I had my glove in a lucky place; I didn’t even move it when I caught the ball. It just landed into my open glove. It was a commemorative logo, like I said, near perfect, with the mark on the ball being a dirt and grass stain from where it settled on the field.

Yankee Stadium Inaugural Baseball with Grass Mark1

Meanwhile there were many juicy balls laying RIGHT next to the wall that needed no lifting. One of which Cliff got with a cup trick, and another that layed there for a good 15 minutes:

warning track ball

I had it. Next game time a ball rolls to the wall at Yankee Stadium in Right Field, I’m getting it.

            Right field had gotten crowded. Left field too, but it was less crowded. I decided to do something I hadn’t done before for a while: go to left field.         

   It was a bad decision. In the time I spent over there for Yankees B.P, ONE ball left the field and into the stands. The Nationals had come out, but the Yankees were still hitting. I changed into my Bright Red Nationals Hat and my Inaugural Season at Nationals Park shirt.

            One ball was hit while the Nationals just started. I saw that it was going, so I bolted up the steps. The ball took a high bounce and settled in a seat. I was right there, but so was an adult who was on my tail. What happened was he grabbed the ball a bit before me; his hand was over the ball while my hand was 2 inches from the ball. He got it, and no hard feelings. It was fair and square.

race for a ball

            My 4th ball would come from the Nationals throwing. I remembered Jesus Colome and saw him finish up. I moved over to where he was and I called out “Jesus”. After a bit more talking to his friend, he flipped me the ball,

jesus colome baseball mid-air

a cheap, very used up, made in China, Training Ball. Yay, training balls! A Major League Baseball probably costs 3 bucks. A training ball probably costs 50 cents.

Cheap Training Ball

After Randy Knorr rejected my request I moved over to where Joe Beimil was finishing up. I got his attention, and instead of tossing me the ball he had been using, he tossed me a ball that was hit there and had been lying there for a while, my 5th ball.

Joe Beimil

You can tell which ball it was. Right?

Some players (Ron Villone, Wil Nieves) had talked to fans on the wall after they finished. I went over to Ron Villone, who was now signing autographs. It took a bit for me to get the ball out, but I got him for my 1st autograph so far.

ron villone signing1

I then moved down to Wil Nieves. He was all smiles, very social. He was talking to three girls in #23 Nieves shirts. He was doing anything. I got him to sign my 2nd autograph.

wil nieves signing1

I then saw the open ball bag near him so I asked him:

“Could you get me a ball from the ball bag, please?” I asked while pointing to the ball bag. He gladly walked over, took out a ball, and tossed me my 6th ball, and 111th on the season. 
Wil Nieves, Baseball, Ball Bag


You can see the ball in my glove and the ball bag a bit to the right of Nieves. And then a lady next to me somehow convince Ronnie Beliard in Spanish to come over and sign. I was able to get him on two for my 3rd autograph.

Ronnie Beliard Autograph

That was it for B.P. I did learn from a worker though that basically the entire NY Giants were here tonight and Peyton Manning…

At about the second inning I went up to see Jane Heller of http://janeheller.mlblogs.com or writer of The Confessions of a She-Fan. Me and her talked for a bit, and she filmed a video of me. You can see it on her blog.

Jane Heller and I

Anyway, remember the Giants were here? Well, I got a stub for the section right behind home plate, 120B. But by the time I got there, only Peyton Manning was left. At the end of the game he walked out, by he wouldn’t sign. I then rushed outside to the Legends exit where I got Doc Godden the other night, but I saw him get taken away by a security guy. Maybe he was going out near Gate 2, so I rushed over there. But there was this guard who kept pointing people around the Press Gate. I just sneaked by him and waited. I also saw Vanessa Williams, the actress. I got her to sign two ticket stubs for my 4th autograph.

Vanessa Williams (Actress)

But Peyton never showed…

 

Stats:

 

  • 6 MLB Balls Today
  • 3 MLB Autographs Today
  • 4 Total Autographs Today
  • 111 MLB Balls in this Season
  • 127 Total Balls in this Season
  • 81 MLB Autographs in this Season
  • 86 Total Autographs in this Season
  • 6 BP
  • 5 Thrown, 1 Hit
  • Attendance: 31,906 People
  • Competition Factor: 191,436
  • 5.84 Balls / 1 Game
  • 9 Consecutive Games with at least 1 MLB Autograph
  • 19 Consecutive Games with at least 3 MLB 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.

evan longoria auto1

         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.

dan wheeler auto1

            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.

collection of rays autos1

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.
joe nelson and other rays1

 

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.

bobbys in bullpen

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.

front of the line at camden1

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…

gloriously empty seats in camden1

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.

freel and mystery, markakis.jpg

         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.

koji uehara ball1

         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.

first easter egg!

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.

hit ball, bouncing against concrete1

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.

 

6 balls from camden bp

            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.

joe nelson 20th 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.

shawn and me1

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.

tossing glove at grant balfour's head

 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:

j.p howell anywhere

“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.

andy sonnastine warming up1

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.

barlett 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!

 
bobby ramos in bullpen1

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.

willy aybar and dioner navarro1
 

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.

akinori iwamura outside camden

jamie shields outside camden

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.

15 balls ball art

Stats:

  • 15 MLB Autographs Today
  • 15 MLB Baseballs Today
  • 47 MLB Autographs in This Season
  • 50 Total Autographs in This Season
  • 27 MLB Baseballs in This Season
  • 43 Total Baseballs in This Season
  • 9 Thrown, 1 Found, 2 Hit, 2 Glove Trick, 1 Hand-To-Hand
  • 11 BP, 2 Pre-Game, 2 During
  • 27 Baseballs in This Trip
  • 36 MLB Autographs in This Trip
  • 37 Total Autographs in This Trip
  • 6.75 Ball/ 1 Game (average on this trip/season)
  • Attendence: 22,866
  • Competition Factor: 342,990

 

I got
27 balls ball art

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.

nick swisher kslajfl

          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?).

ball eaton glove trick2

glove trick 3

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.

boog1

            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.


tex ball interesting white mark

          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.

        

jose veras askldfj warm up ball1

           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.

Mick Kelleher 3rd ball from him, after game

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.

4 balls 4909 haul

 

  • 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.

Brian Bruney and Kevin Long tall

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 01

            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.

Player's Entrance at Camden

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.
Jeremy Guthrie 01


See a little orange at the top of my jersey?

 

Orioles shirt, Yankees Jersey, 1

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.

028mashup baez.jpg

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. 

1st ball from Danys Baez

            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?”

DSCF0211mashup glove trick.jpg

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.

glove trick first balls

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.

Johnny Damon signing120

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:
Empty Camden 01
Empty Camden 021
Empty Camden 0324

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.

 

  • 6 MLB Autographs Today
  • 27 MLB Autographs so far this Season
  • 30 Total Autographs so far this Season
  • 4 MLB Balls Today
  • 8 MLB so far this Season/Trip
  • 3 BP balls, 1 Pre-Game ball
  • 2 Thrown Balls, 2 Glove Trick Balls
  • 22,856 People in Camden Yards
  • Competition Factor: 91,424

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