Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Chase Field


Chase Field
Originally uploaded by bdinphoenix
The most important man in the ten year history of Major League Baseball’s Arizona Diamondbacks is not former owner and founder Jerry Colangelo. That distinction goes to a mechanical engineer named Willis Haviland Carrier, who received a patent in 1906 for his invention of an “Apparatus for Treating Air”. Carrier’s invention permitted his paper company employer to use four color printing without the colors becoming mis-aligned due to heat and humidity in his factory. There is no indication as to whether Carrier received a raise from his $10 a week salary.

Carrier’s invention has enabled the Diamondbacks to entertain baseball fans in their state-of-the art facility, Chase Field, in downtown Phoenix, Arizona. Looking like a transplanted airplane hangar, Chase Field has a retractable roof, panels on one side of the arena that permits stadium management to open the panels, as well as the roof when the weather permits. In Phoenix that does not occur often.

Daytime temperatures have gone as high as 123 degrees and it is not uncommon at game time to have temperatures in the 110-115 degree range. But in Chase Field, with the roof and side panels closed, the air conditioned stadium can feel as comfortable as your living room.

On the night I went to watch the Diamondbacks play National League west foe San Francisco the weather was perfect for baseball. The roof and side panels were open and the Diamondbacks were in first place, 3.5 games ahead of the second place Dodgers. The announced crowd of 23,604, looked sparse in the cavernous environs of Chase Field. While I am no expert on crowd size, I had the feeling that the only way there were 23,604 people in that stadium was if a sizeable number of them had come disguised as empty seats.

I arrived early and there were friendly stadium hosts and ushers everywhere. They were even friendly when they asked political petition carriers, a Phoenix pastime, to leave the stadium area so customers would not be hassled. I moved quickly and easily to my seat, stopping to get a Diamondback hot dog and a beer on the way. The concession worker even gave my ego a huge boost by asking me for identification to prove I was 21 years old. I can tell you that at my age of 61 that rarely happens. The hot dog was huge and the beer was cold and together almost made a meal. Some fans seated near me chowed down on some chicken tenders and French fries and next to me a fellow and his wife had one of the biggest ice cream cones I had ever seen.

Fans at Chase Field certainly have a clear view of the baseball field. There are unobstructed views to the field and some fans were even using a swimming pool behind the center field wall. I suspect Chase Field is the only stadium in the world with its own pool. Unfortunately Chase Field is so large that I could not get the same feeling for the game that I had received earlier at Camden Yard. We could just as easily have been watching a football game, which Chase Field hosts during the college bowl season, or a tractor pull, which Chase Field also hosts from time to time.

Chase Field, while an engineering and architectural marvel, is certainly proof that bigger is not always better. It also did not help that the Diamondbacks, losers of five of their last seven games, were thoroughly outplayed by the Giants. Looking tentative at the plate, the Dbacks were overwhelmed by the pitching of San Francisco’s Tim Lincecum. With no Barry Bonds to boo on the Giants roster and the Diamondbacks doing very little at the plate, the fans biggest cheers came when center fielder Chris Young fired a bullet from center field to home plate to prevent a Giants runner from scoring.

Giants catcher Bengie Molina, coming off a week in which he was recognized as the National League’s player of the week, hammered a pitch into the left center field stands to give the Giants a 3-0 lead they never relinquished. By the ninth inning most of the fans had gone home and the Diamondbacks suffered a 3-6 defeat.

Now to visit southern California and the Angels, Dodgers, and Padres.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Orioles Park at Camden Yard


Camden Yard
Originally uploaded by bdinphoenix
Orioles Park at Camden Yard, built in 1992 at a taxpayer cost of $110 million, gives you the feel of what a baseball stadium should be like. I don’t know whether it is the warehouse look behind right field, or the signs on the ramps that warn “Watch Out for batted balls” but you get the feeling that this is going to be a great place to watch a baseball game.

I went with family and friends to watch Baltimore’s Orioles play a match with the World Series Champion Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox, as usual, are in the thick of the early season fight for first place in the American League east division. The Orioles are in the unaccustomed position of also being in the hunt for the division lead. It had all the markings of a great game and it was.

After we settled into our seats I immediately realized there was not a bad view in the stadium. There were views from a distance but like Great America Park and Nationals Park, a spectator can clearly see the field from any location. The seats however, were not very comfortable and whoever designed the interior of Oriole Park neglected to add cup holders, a small but convenient feature that permits you to set your drink down and applaud the Orioles with both hands. The Oriole Park management also neglected to train its concession staff in the art of friendly service. Almost all of the concession workers were surly to the point of making me wonder why they worked at Camden Yard if they hated their job as much as it appeared they did.

The game was a doozy. We arrived late and the Orioles were already down 0-3, having helped the Red Sox along with two first inning errors. In years past that would have been enough to ensure that the Orioles had safely secured another loss. But not these Orioles. They battled back and were only down 2-3 when Luke Scott hit a three run homer to put them ahead, 5-3. He hit that homer off Boston ace Josh Beckett, last year’s top pitcher no less.

But these were the Red Sox and they battled back. Perhaps the key moment in the contest came in the seventh inning when the Sox loaded the bases with no outs. Manny Ramirez was batting against Oriole’s pitcher Jim Johnson. Manny worked Johnson for ten pitches before hitting the ball back to the mound, where Johnson started a rally killing double play; pitcher to catcher, to first base. Even this early in the year that might become a defining moment in the Orioles’ season. The next batter flied out to left and Baltimore’s lead was preserved.

The Red Sox later added another run but they went out meekly in the ninth inning. Boston slugger David Ortiz provided some comic relief in the ninth when he uttered some magic words to the umpire after a called third strike, and was ejected. Ortiz then returned to the dugout, where he pretended not to know he had been ejected. The umpire of course, held up the game until David left the bench area.

All in all, an exciting game at a very nice park. Now it is back to Phoenix and Chase Field.

Click on the photograph to see a photographic set of Camden Yard

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Nationals Park


Nationals Park
Originally uploaded by bdinphoenix
So my son Khary and life-long friends, Ross and Cheryl, have now gotten me interested in baseball again. So on May 10th my brother, nephew, and I went to watch the Washington Nationals play a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

In Nationals Park in Washington, DC, you do not watch baseball as much as you experience it. Most of my previous baseball watching was at the Vet in Philadelphia. Generally considered one of the world's worst stadiums, the Vet is now history, but Nationals Park is very much in the present and it is very, very nice.

From clear sight lines to the field to its game pavillions and food courts, it is possible to go to Nationals Park, never see the game and leave well fed and thoroughly entertained. I chowed down on a half pound burger with all the trimmings while my brother became very familiar with a bratwurst smothered in onions and peppers. I think I will find my way back to this place.

There was a game too and I saw once again why bad teams stay bad. Pittsburgh has been bad a long time. I remember the Pirates of Mazeroski, Clemente, and Stargell. Later there was a sprinkling of Bonilla and Bonds. Now they are the Pirates of botched double plays and errors on routine ground balls. Not that the Nationals were much better. Today they won but I don't know if they were better than the Pirates or Pittsburgh was simply worse than Washington.

Managers get paid a lot of money to be the brains behind the team but in a contest where hits were flying everywhere and errors were common, one of the managers tried a sacrifice bunt with no one out and runners on first and second. Now if the pitching were going good or the hitting was going poorly this might have been sound strategy. Today however, the hitting was going great and the pitching was putrid so playing for one run in a middle inning made no sense. The sacrifice failed, the hitting continued, and excitement wise the game was worth it. Oh, and today the Nationals were the better team.

Now it is on to Camden Yards and the Baltimore Orioles, another team that used to be good.