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Berm's Eye View: A baseball outsider looks out

Berm's Eye View: A baseball outsider looks out

Tag Archives: Todd Steed

On The Evening Of Game 7

02 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by apeville in Baseball

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Baseball, cubs, Tennessee Smokies, Todd Steed

img_1795

I don’t need to tell any of you Indians and Cubs fans about the absolute tense, terrifying, thrill of an impending game 7. So I won’t.

Instead, here’s a love letter.

We booked an AirBnB in Chicago that was walking distance from you. I had heard all of the stories and accolades about you for years. Your ivy, your history, your vibe and your sad selection of nasty food and antique bathrooms. Yes, I know you are a bit older than some of the others, it’s in your profile. You were already swaying in the wind when the Golden Gate Bridge was on the drawing table. But some of us prefer a little age.  It gives us time to see where things really stand and how steadily they stand there. You are beauty that defies numbers, categories and adjacent parking lots.

Best way to get there? Best way to get anywhere: walk it.

We left two hours before the first pitch from North Hamilton.  There are a dozen routes to get to it, but we went through the streets of old neighborhoods with no shortage of trees, character, breezes and brownstones.

Meander. Stroll. Take a photo. Grab a sip. You’ll get there. You can’t get lost. Follow the happy people.

And then, like the Grand Canyon it just sort of appears out of nowhere. And like the Grand Canyon or the Brooklyn Bridge- you have seen the pictures but you have never felt the place. You will. You do. It does.

I definitely have my preferences.  Here they are in a tidy list:

Month: October

Food: Thai, Chinese and Greek

Instrument: Guitar

Traffic: None

Composer: Zappa

Sport: Oh, come now

Team: Giants

Baseball Stadium: AT&T in San Francisco

Uh, except that last one.

It just changed. To Wrigley. It blew me over like a Champman fastball.

Wrigley is the home plate of baseball parks and I hope to see a thousand games there.  Or just one more inning.

So tonight, I am throwing it in for the Cubbies and their team of dreamers, most of whom made a pitstop or two in Kodak, TN to gives us all a preview of possible greatness until we can get to Wrigley.

So, let it be done. Raise the flag or break a million hearts

What Not To Do At A Giants Vs. Angels Game

13 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by apeville in Baseball, Uncategorized

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Angels, Bay Area, Blog, Brandon Crawford, Fans, Foul Ball, Giants, Mike Trout, Mitt, Todd Steed

Decisions.

Decisions.

What do you do when the squad splits? Do you stay in Scottsdale and gamble on a better roster or do you venture off for Tempe just so you can say you saw Mike Trout?

I saw Mike Trout.

I also saw Brandon Crawford smash a marvelous triple. Sorry, Mike, Brandon was more fun to watch despite your cannon throw from center field.

By all accounts or at least mine, it was a radiant, pleasant day watching the Giants lose to the Angels. Losing is acceptable when it’s Spring Training. The final winning score is whether you had a good time or not- and I did, though I must confess I left during the 7th inning.

I would have stayed for the whole thing but I realized my preference for older, rundown stadiums had suddenly waned right about the time they cued up Take Me Out To The Ballpark. 

 Some brands of charm can’t sustain nine innings of inspection. The Angels fans were gregarious, generally tipsy and quite knowledgeable about the game even though nobody in my row could pronounce Adrelton correctly.

The fans were not the problem. There was just TOO MANY OF THEM….crammed in every shaded and sunny space one could find. The bleacher rows were horribly oversold and cramped unless you happen to be sitting next to a group of Thai ballerinas.  If you wanted a pretzel or had to pee you had to find a way to get dozens of baseball fan statues to slightly move so you could get by.

diablo

Like I mentioned, the fans were fine. Unless. Unless you happen to have brought a mitt to the game and then had an easy foul ball drop right into the mitt and then the ball somehow gets free of its own accord. Then Angels fans turn on you like wild, rabid beasts. There was hellish heckling and sarcastic belittling like you have never heard even at a hockey game.

If you drop a foul at a Giants game you will get, maybe, a chorus of sighs. Awwwwww. They feel for you. Many Bay types even empathize. Some of the more sarcastic fans will offer the tired but well meaning old chestnut: Send him back to AAA!  It always get a few mild laughs.

But lord help if you drop a foul ball at Diablo Stadium. You’ll immediately learn where the name for that stadium originates.

A Short Essay On Pence

11 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by apeville in Baseball, Baseball and Byond

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Baseball, Berm, Giants, Hunter Pence, Scottsdale Stadium, Todd Steed

PENCE

PENCE

It was a very hot desert afternoon but I walked straight to Scottsdale Stadium from my rental room several blocks away in honor of Hunter Pence.  I didn’t have a scooter, but feet are the next best thing. I was also hoping by committing this act of unity he would be in the lineup.  He wasn’t.

See exhibit A:

lineup

Read it a couple of times, his name still won’t be there.

I grabbed my frosty beverage (lemonade) and quickly found my primo seat in 208. The view was perfect and it was in the shade. To my left was a fairly rabid fan who spent much of the game bidding online for signed Duffy items. I liked him. Everything he said was right.

To my left was a sweet couple from Georgia who had no dog in the fight but were very happy to be there.  The belle noted she was cheering for the ‘blue team’ because she liked that color very, very much. When her boyfriend suggested this was unwise she countered with: This is America.  Diversity and stuff.  

I don’t know what that meant but I grew to like them both quickly as well.  Just as I got my score card adjusted they announced the lineup….. including the name PENCE.

PENCE!?  It was even better that they lied on the lineup. I love a switch surprise.

Seeing him take the field is akin to coming back from Buck Toms Summer Camp and realizing your best pal you made HAD JUST MOVED TO YOUR TOWN AND WAS NOW ATTENDING YOUR JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL.

Pence comforts.  Pence inspires. Pence makes us relax knowing he’s there for us with all his goofy, talent soaked equilibrium.  And he was. And he is. And he will be.

At first I panicked a little when he bobbled a ball and whiffed out on his first at bat. Was he  just setting us up?

At his next at bat, with Posey on second, he approached the plate like a starving caveman at a kale buffet. He was ready.  He watched 3 sliders turn into balls and waited for his pitch. The count was 3-1 after letting the one good slider get by. And then it came.  Fastball. Even faster leaving his bat for the left field berm. Perhaps beyond it. Perhaps it never landed. I know I haven’t.

That, my friends, is why the Hunter Pence bobblehead is the only bobblehead I own.

 

 

IMAGINARY FAQ

19 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by apeville in Baseball

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Baseball, Berm, FAQ, Todd Steed

Whilst I try not to think about the coming up World Series I will graciously answer a number of your burning questions.

NOTE: Some of them actually have been asked while others I am fairly sure somebody will ask me eventually.

Q: You are from Knoxville.  How did it come to pass that the Giants are your team?  Shouldn’t the Braves or the Reds be your favorite team?

A:  First off, the imaginary rules CLEARLY state that if you have no MLB team in your hometown then you can choose ANY team, past or present.  Furthermore, imaginary clause 8b indicates that a fan is not bound to like the team in closest proximity.

Q: Isn’t that not answering the question?

A: I am the last of five kids in my family.  By the time I was born, my two older brothers had already picked over the proximity teams. Plus, being the classic youngest child I wanted to defiantly proclaim my difference by choosing the most exotic team I could find- other than the Expos, who weren’t even real yet. All that and … Willie Mays.  Once I saw him play on TV, it was all over. Scoring his baseball card right off the bat (accidental baseball metaphor!) further sealed the deal.The fact I did not go to San Francisco until 2013 is irrelevant.

Need other reasons? Orange is also the color of the UT Vols.

Q: But don’t you love the Braves? The Reds?

A: I do love the Braves, they were my dad’s and oldest brother’s favorite team.  I will always support them on their behalf- unless they are playing the Giants in which case I will have an existential crisis.

We weren’t very good at geography in my family, so ‘no’ on the Reds love. I had no idea they were so close.  I thought they were in Ohio. But hey, I love baseball.  So if the Reds are playing someone like the Rangers, I’ll root for the Reds.  I also dig the Tennessee Smokies, the Oakland A’s (the hippie marketing worked on me in the 70’s) and any UT team that has balls.

Q: Why is your baseball obsession so pronounced all of a sudden?

A:  It’s returning to form, now with newly acquired reading and listening skills.  I was way into baseball as a kid- from playing to watching to listening to collecting.  When I got what turned out to be a very jealous guitar at the age of 15, I was forced to dump sports for a while.  Baseball definitely played second fiddle (an accidental music metaphor!) for decades.  I still enjoyed going to various sporting matches and watching the better parts of the post season. I LOVED going to watch the Knoxville AA team until it left for the next county over.  But that devotion to any particular team was not there. The steroid era further allowed me to push MLB away while I focused on home, music and career.

But everything changes, for better and for worse, and occasionally for the heartbreakingly disastrous.

I lost my mom in 2008 and that very same day my dad lost his wife of 60 years. Though very little helps in that situation,  he took comfort in watching baseball. I took  comfort in watching it with him.

I was a bit bored, but at that point if he would have asked me to sleep on the roof every night in a gingham dress, I would have done it. I had lost a lot of my knowledge of the game and certainly didn’t know many of the players. But I watched.  We often sat there, in silence, watching Chipper Jones knock the crap out of the baseball.

Night after night, would would watch the little screen, talking here and there and not talking here and there. I slowly…. started…..getting….interested. When the Braves played the Giants, my ten year old self elbowed my current self. “Remember how fun this was?”  My dad, who pitched semi-pro in his youth, pointed out that Tim Lincecum was a fabulous pitcher and I should pay attention to his throwing.  He explained things to me in a way that was not a sales job about baseball, but an explanation of skill and beauty. And sometimes he would just say: I really like this guy.

A few months of this and I was almost hooked.  And then, like a pop fly ball out of the blue, he got cancer.  Fortunately, the kind of cancer he got was not the sort that kills the love of baseball. So we watched some more.  And some more.  One night I noticed that I could, finally, almost talk intelligently about it.

We didn’t talk about predictable, boring cancer. We talked about curve balls.  Double plays.  Great announcers.  Lousy announcers.

And then like the last unwatchable strike in the last inning of an extra innings game you thought would go on forever, he was gone.  And there I was staring at an unplugged TV.  Not wanting to do much of anything, especially watch baseball.  The new, empty arrangement didn’t suit me much. The 2009 season was about over, anyway. I took up sitting around the house. On alternate days I took up staring.

Fast forward to 2010. I still missed him. More than I thought possible.

Somewhere in the cloudy mist of all that loss, I finally began to feel the feeling of missing baseball. Towards the end of the 2010 season I started paying attention to the Giants…maybe this could be a good year for them, and, maybe, if luck would have it, a better one for me.

This isn’t a FAQ anymore, is it?

Post in Pitt

04 Saturday Oct 2014

Posted by apeville in Baseball

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Giants, pittsburgh, Tall Boys, Todd Steed

On the slow march down Pressley Street to the Pirate’s PNC Park a strange urban squirrel darted in front of me. It was rough looking, thin, and featured something I had yet to see in a squirrel: a strange orange hue.  The orange squirrel was completing its mission when a large, black, imposing SUV zoomed down on him. And even though the street was the domain of the vehicle, the squirrel knew exactly what to do and crossed safely to the other side of Pressely with nary a nick.  I dubbed the squirrel Madison for every brave orange squirrel needs a regal name.

I cut through an alley where I was verbally accosted by some tail gaiting Pirate fans that noticed the SF on my hat. I jousted back, mildly and cautiously, given I was outnumbered 3-1 and ultimately 30,000 to 8. The jousting, as it often does, ended up in the downing of a warmly offered cold tall boy on a warm, Wednesday autumn day. Why does beer taste better during work hours?  You know why.

I eventually met my West Virginia friends Jim and Jenny outside of PNC where we downed additional tall boys and talked, not trash, but baseball- and lots of it. My Pirate loving pals guided me through the street and into the cathedral gates, through the merch shop, and into actual cathedral.  Yes, the rumors are true, PNC is undeniably impressive. I just stood there and looked it, trying to take it all in, knowing it can’t all be taken in.  The river, the bridge, the sun, the 8 other Giants fans, the Manny’s BBQ, the french fries inside of a sandwich.  Everywhere you look is something awe inspiring.

The post season.  The post season.  The post season.

Click your childhood fantasy three times and there you are, standing in the middle of it, 40 years later.  Here’s some good news: the dream loses nothing over time.

But here in the present, the game is over, you know what happened. However, here is a sample of what happened from my vantage point in the men’s room in the bottom of the third. (Inning, not bottom third of the men’s bathroom.)

Sitting in the middle of a row you have to choose your bathroom breaks carefully. I split at the end of third to hit the bathroom one more time, planning not to leave my seat again until the end of the game.

Every single Pirates fanatic I met was superbly friendly and good-natured in their ribbing if they ribbed at all. Every single one, except the guy by urinal three.

“What the hell is HE doing in here? Get the hell out of our bathroom!!”

And he was serious and more importantly, seriously drunk.

I made a joke about long lines and tall boys, hoping to quell is anger, but I was drowned out by the EMPHATIC CHORUS of full bladdered Pirates fans telling him to SHUTHEHELLUPMAN.  He did, after mumbling something about me admitting I love the Pirates. And of course I do, I love baseball, and they are baseball.

The lines were long- so long that when I got back to my seat the Giants were in the process of loading up the bases. The fans in black were THE ABSOLUTE LOUDEST FANS I have ever heard, screaming to the point that I actually felt like a 1972 Who concert would have been quieter.  I wanted earplugs.  It was incredible.

And then…..the… Grand Slam.  Yes, the Grand Slam I predicted in the previous blog entry.  And then, on a dime, it was, crazy, eerily quiet.  I have never seen such a radical switch in energy.  It felt weird to make a scene when everyone around me was about to cry. I heard a Giants fan screaming from two sections away, and that was about it for audible expression, except for the sound of Crawford high fiving the third base coach on his way home. It pretty much stayed that quiet until I got back to my hotel.

Except for the last pitch of the game- when the sizable number of Pirates fans that had not bailed gave their post-season Pirates, who had just gotten beaten to a pulp, a standing ovation.  I clapped for them, too.  And somewhere, a drunk Giant hater was puking up warm tall boys in a parking lot as his depressed friends waited for him to finish so they could get the hell home. A perfect ending to a to perfect evening.

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Surrounded Selfie. Click for the punchline.

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