Showing posts with label At-Game Recap 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label At-Game Recap 2013. Show all posts

Sunday, August 24, 2014

A Fault in Our Star Wars: Episode One

In searching through the extensive, covert SoSG archives, I came across the following full length article.... in the f'ing draft folder. Like the lost episodes of the Honeymooners or the recently unearthed outakes from Star Wars...

... I now present the family DeShields experience at Dodgers Star Wars night. Circa 2013.

Would have posted this yesterday, but I had a layer of 100 Degree grime to powerwash. Avoid the visual... if you can.

Most importantly, the Dodgers were who we thought they were. The Spankers of the lowly Padres. In the time it took the family DeShields to walk from our seats to the car, the Dodgers put the final five nails in the monastery. But what of Star Wars night? What of theme? Of symbolism? Of Grand Moff Tarkin?

On a 100 Degree day, one of the less appreciated sights is a long line. Or... TWO OF THEM.

One for shirts, and one for entering the all you can eat pavilion. The problem - every third person in the t-shirt line had no idea they needed vouchers. So after waiting for 20 minutes, they came up empty handed. Not. Cool.

Except for the DeShields, whose family is now sporting truly kick ass nerd wear.

Though it might take my son two thousand days to grow into it. (Sidebar: what is the deal with Dodgers giveaways for kids? Between this and the Child Replica jersey, I'm convinced the Dodgers base their kids sizes on those roided up Little League World Series behemoths).

My boys did themselves proud in the All You Can Eat Pavilion. The rest of the ravenous crowd there, however, left me aghast.

I've expressed my issues with Dodgers Star Wars Night in the past.

As far as I can tell, there was a couple of guys dressed like storm trooper. So I heard. I never saw this with my own eyes, so it could be propaganda. The pics of the players wielding light sabers is always good for a "Hey, it's Juan Uribe holding a light saber instead of a churro" chuckle.

Showing Han kiss Leia on the Kiss Cam was cute. Albeit, this would have gotten more of a response.

On one hand, I'm glad the promotions don't overpower the game itself. (Unlike the wave, which I've now been over for almost 30 years.) That being said, I think the Dodgers could amp up the theme a bit. Have Jek Porkins throw the first pitch.

Or let people in costume do a lap around the field before the game begins. Heck, combine it with Bark at the Park.

Overall, the little DeShields had a great time, which was the whole point in enduring the indignities that is the all you can eat pavilion. And that t-shirt really is... as nerd-wear goes... pretty damn cool. But for 2014, it might be time to put a bit more thought in making the Star Wars pop off the screen and onto the field.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

At-Game Recap: NLCS Game 4 / Before The Disappointment

AC sent these pictures over from the game last night. The first two look fine enough but given the third one, it was destined that there was going to be heartburn at the Stadium, one way or another.



Thursday, October 10, 2013

Dodger Stadium Video: Seven Nation Army (October 7, 2013)

In Games 3 and 4 of the 2013 NLDS, Dodger Stadium sported a new interstitial video in between innings, set to The White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army". Despite liberal cuts on some of the verses, the impact of the video (with enlarging images coming at the viewer, set apart with blue-highlighted, black-and-white highlight clips) was pretty awesome.

I saw this during Game 3 and loved it. Here's my feeble attempt at picking up the feed in Game 4 (October 7, 2013), with my little iPhone 5:

Awesome job, Dodgers!

Let's Re-Live The Dodgers' NLDS Win With Kenley Jansen And Justin Upton

Top of the ninth, two out, Dodgers up 4-3. No one on base. The Dodgers' closer, Kenley Jansen, faces the Braves' Justin Upton.

First pitch is a ball. And here's the second pitch of the at bat, for strike one:

So it's a 1-1 count. Jansen serves up another ball. And here's the fourth pitch of this at bat, for strike two:

So it's a 2-2 count. And here's Jansen, getting Upton to swing for strike 3, sending catcher A.J. Ellis euphoric and clinching the NLDS for the Dodgers:

DODGERS WIN! DODGERS WIN!

Pitch-by-pitch detail from espn.com

At-Game Recap (Part 2): Photos From The Clincher (NLDS Game 4, October 7, 2013)

Putting up my at-game photos on the same day that we post a slew of great pictures from the speedy shutter of Scott Killeen would be like sending David Carpenter out to the mound, late in a must-win game, instead of Craig Kimbrel.

Too soon?

Well then. Without further ado, here's my photos from NLDS Game 4 at the Stadium:

First pitch of the game, from Clayton Kershaw.

First beer run of the game...and guess who I bumped into: UCLA basketball star Lorenzo Mata! Man, he is tall.

Back to the action on the field.

THIS should be the only bunting we should be seeing in the game! (Hat tip for this joke: SoSG Dusty Baker)

"Soak this in, kid. This game is a classic."

The Killeens are indeed seen.

Pau Gasol hanging out with Magic Johnson.

Let the post-game, post-clinch, post-NLDS revelry begin!

Post-game interviews and hijinks.

Confetti streamers, caught on the wire.

Party on the field!

One last shot on the way out of the first-base side Field Level gate. The auxilliary scoreboards were showing NLCS logos, animated. My camera couldn't pick that image up.

Next up: Some videos (stay tuned)!

Earlier At-Game Recap from NLDS Game 4: Part 1

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

At-Game Recap (Part 1): The Clincher (NLDS Game 4, October 7, 2013)

With the memory of this game more freshly situated in my mind, I'm going to try and write my thoughts of NLDS Game 4, the clinching game of the series, and an incredible roller-coaster ride of a game for Dodger fans. Having just attended Game 3 the night before, and still riding the high of that beatdown, I was hopeful. But little did I know that this Game 4 was going to play with my emotions like a high school girlfriend on Adderall.

To start out, the couple with whom we were attending was late arriving to my house. It was only a 15-minute delay, but having suffered through some pretty bad traffic on Sunday, I was pretty stressed out. I cut through backyards and alleys en route up the hill to the Sunset Gate (luckily, the incline wasn't that bad), only to be thwarted in Lot G (not only were normal entry points closed off, but I had to park all the way over at the far end of the first-base side, which was a pain relative to our third-base side seats).

Literally sprinting down the concourse (stopping only for two Dodger Dogs and two beers), I was able to make the first pitch. (I saw the pre-game ceremony involving our father, Steve Garvey, in between sprints down the concourse; I loved the fact that Garvey said "Welcome to the final game of the NLDS!" to the crowd, which got a great roar of approval.)

Don Mattingly had opted to start Clayton Kershaw on short rest, a decision that was widely panned in the media, given Kershaw had never started on short rest before, and he was coming off a 124-pitch Game 1. Indeed, Kershaw was off his game a bit, only because he has set his own bar so high: balls were landing in the dirt five feet in front of the plate; time in-between pitches seemed extra elongated; the pace of the game seemed to slow to take a lot of bated breaths.

Complicating the factor was Adrian Gonzalez, who pulled the wrong night to stop sniffing glue (or making solid defensive plays, as he has all year). Gonzalez allowed leadoff batter Jason Heyward to reach in the first inning, and even though Kershaw got out of it, it set the tone that this wasn't going to be an easy night.

And then: Carl Crawford. His mammoth home run to right field to lead off the bottom of the first sent the place rollicking. It was if all the energy from the crowd the prior night had just been unlocked again and things were about to start rolling. My wife and our friend even made it to the seats in time to see this HR, which was great.

The guys behind me started doing the fake tomahawk chop chant, which the Dodgers opened up late in Game 3 after we went up 10-4. This was a 1-0 lead. Waaaaaaay too early, I was thinking to myself.

But the Dodgers did keep rolling that first inning. Hanley Ramirez got in a one-out single to left, prompting a clip on Diamondivision of Ken Jeong screaming "I SEE YOU!!!" (they had showed this clip on Sunday night as well, and the place erupted both times). Yasiel Puig hit a moonshot to right that Justin Upton caught on the wall, but instead it was only 1-0, though Dodger fans were feeling and acting like it was 3-0.

Crawford came up in the bottom of the third with one out and hit another solo HR (2-0, LA), immediately followed by a strange Mark Ellis double that landed just inside the right foul line. Dodger fans were feeling it, again; the tomahawk chop chant started from behind me, again. But Freddy Garcia gutted through the inning and kept the Dodgers from scoring again, so it was only 2-0.

Between innings, Nancy Bea Hefley played "Master of the House" as Diamondvision tipped its hat to Orel Hershiser, who was in the booth. Orel got a nice round of applause.

And then came the fateful bottom of the fourth. The Braves tied the game after Gonzalez made his second error of the night, turning a likely double play into a no-out, men-on-first-and-second situation. The crowd groaned when both Braves scored to tie the game at 2. And this is where Kershaw's laboring became increasingly apparent; Kershaw didn't look sharp, in fact he looked really tired. In the stands, you could feel the tension rising.

The Dodgers didn't score in the fourth, fifth, or sixth innings, and when Ronald Belisario came out to relieve Kershaw in the seventh, Dodger fans were stunned. If Mattingly wants to go all in for Game 4 with Kershaw, why send the game to Belisario, who has been shaky for over a month now?

And sure enough, Elliot Johnson tripled to right field (which should have been a double, but Puig's defensive aggressiveness caused him to pass the ball as it caromed away and Johnson proceeded to third). Garcia was finally lifted for PH Jose Costanza, a MSB generously listed at 5'9" (measurements must have been taken on platform shoes day). And Costanza singled to center, scoring the Braves' go-ahead run. Belisario was mercifully pulled. The crowd just groaned in derision over this managerial move; you could sense that a Game 4 loss would certainly cause Mattingly's firing over the off-season. J.P. Howell came in to get out of the jam.

Bottom of the seventh, the Dodgers get a two-out double from Mark Ellis, and HanRam gets a IBB. But Adrian Gonzalez fouls out to right field to end the threat. At this point, the Dodgers crowd became incredibly quiet. I had this unique situation where the field level seats in front of my were unoccupied as there was a problem with the seat. So I spent my aggression beating the hell out of the seatback in front of me.

I kept thinking, this is a shitty way to lose the game. Game 5 back in Atlanta is going to suck. We're doomed.

And then, in between innings, they ran a Roy Campanella "Dodgers Legend" tribute. I remember looking over at my wife and explaining to her how awesome Campy was (from what I've read, of course), and how moving that evening at the Coliseum honoring Campanella must have been. The mood was reverent and somber. But the spectre of the Dodgers legend made things seem we had history and tradition on our side.

If there's anyone not steeped in Dodgers history, it's probably Puig, one of the newest members to the team. He led off the eighth with a double to right off of Braves reliever David Carpenter, and suddenly things got loud again. The crowd was back into it...

Except when the following batter, Juan Uribe, crouched over to bunt. WHAT THE FUCK IS GOING ON HERE? We had gone through this EXACT situation earlier in the year, and I don't recall the outcome being positive--the key to Uribe's turnaround this year has been his crazy violent swing actually connecting, not his ability to advance runners with sac bunts. I was hurling profanities and epithets. Everyone around me started booing. Two failed bunt attempts and an 0-2 count later, I knew we were going to lose this game.

Until Tim Wallach laid off the bunt sign, and rightfully and finally let Uribe swing. BOOM. Uribe homers to left, just inside the pole. And it was pande-frickin-monium at the Stadium. High fives, people hugging random other people, everyone jumping up and down like they had just won the lottery. And we had. Juan Uribe won the 2013 NLDS lottery for us. And we were going to move on.

Or, to parahprase Bill Plaschke: In one moment, the Dodgers crowd was sad and forlorn. In the next moment, we were going apeshit wild because JUAN URIBE JUST GAVE US THE LEAD!

You've heard the radio call. "Isn't it amazing what somebody will do when he can't bunt."

Juan Uribe. Juan Frickin' Uribe! Sometime after the season ends, I'll take time to reflect on Uribe and his miraculous recovery this year from a miserable first two years of his contract. For now, I'm just in awe of that guy. Wow.

I felt bad for Carpenter, but hey, Dodger fans know that feeling all too well.

Enter Kenley Jansen for the ninth. Exit Braves from the NLDS.

Braves closer Craig Kimbrel was left fuming in the Braves' bullpen. And ironically enough, the managerial misstep being discussed after the game had nothing to do with Mattingly, but rather the call by Braves Manager Fredi Conzalez not to call upon Kimbrel for six outs. Whatever. The Braves entered this postseason having issues. Upon Justin Upton's final strike three, the place went nuts.

Dodger Stadium had blue and silver ribbons explode into the sky and cascade down. The crowd reveled to Randy Newman's "I Love LA". And everyone just hung out and partied there for a long while (we stayed for thirty minutes or so to just soak it in; my mother apparently stayed for 90 minutes and saw the players emerge from the dugout and take victory laps on the field, high-fiving the fans).

Much has been made of the Dodgers' partying after the NLDS, as if it was excessive in its celebration (despite there being no stadium pool in which to go swimming). I say: Screw that. This team was left for dead in early June, and here we are advancing to the NLCS, and clinching at home, no less.

We've got eight more wins to get this year. But we deserve the opportunity to celebrate, especially winning a short best-of-five series in which (in baseball in particular) anything can happen. We've earned the right to enjoy it.

I took home a silver confetti streamer, dozens of photos (some of which I'll publish later, as to not try and compete with the Killeens' masterpieces).

And very, very fond memories of the Dodgers advancing to the 2013 NLCS. GO DODGERS!

photos: Crawford: AP / Jae C. Hong;

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Todd Helton's Last AB

Picking up where Orel's post left off, here's some shots from Sunday's game, where the Rockies' Todd Helton ended his 17-year career with a final AB (a strikeout from Kenley Jansen):

And here's some shots from the post-game postseason rally (including the USC marching band, trumpeting Lane Kiffin's firing):

All shots are courtesy our SoSG stringer. Thanks!

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

At-Game Recap: One Screenshot (August 28, 2013 vs. Cubs)

I went to the Wednesday day game last week and all I got was this lousy screenshot.

It was fun, though. And not as hot as Sunday's game against the Padres.

But here's the proof. Shot taken from club level.

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

At-Game Recap: Melting In The Sun (Sept. 1, 2013 vs. Padres)

Sunday's game this past Labor Day weekend was incredibly hot at the Stadium, so much so that it almost made it unbearable. It had that humid oppressiveness which would have been disgusting at Turner Field altogether. At Dodger Stadium, it wasn't that bad, but it was enough to find beads of sweat rolling down from your elbow and the back of your neck. One ended up being stuck to the seat.

Luckily I had great company at the game not to mention a fly-by from SoSG Dusty Baker and his groupies, which is always a pleasurable experience.

SoSG Trivia: This is not the first time I've used "Melting In The Sun", let alone an INXS reference, in an At-Game Recap. What's more, the Dodgers also won that game, much beer was again consumed, AND Sax and Dusty dry humped during the game. Eerie coincidences (and lack of originality) abound!

Oh, and I had beer. Admittedly, domestic light beer (it was hot!), but "beer" nonetheless.

KTLA guy was there. Man, that's a pretty cheesy jersey. I hope a bowl of soup came with that.

Cotton-ball clouds up above.

That is a long, loony last name.

Finally, someone found a good use for the Dodgers "hulk hands". It makes a large beer look like a 12-ouncer!

Spot the typo (unfortunately, it's not the 0-for-3 performance on the right).

52,168, as Jansen deals to Kotsay for the final out.

Dodgers SWEEP the Padres!

This time I took fewer shots of the field than normal. But whenever I was looking at the action on the field, I was trying to remember every shadow, every blade of grass, every bead of sweat--and save those images in my mind for later.

The summer of 2013 is going to move on much too quickly, I'm afraid. I want to savor every moment. Even the oppressively hot and humid ones.

Friday, July 26, 2013

Two Quick Pics

From tonight's game. 

Walter White signing autographs. 


Major party foul. 


Sunday, June 30, 2013

At-Game Recap: Walking Off Over the Phillies, June 29

Thanks to the generosity of Sax (tickets) and Dusty (Stone IPA), last night at the park was a win to remember.

Get your kicks....

First pitch.

Puig singles.

Hanley with the three-run bomb off Cliff Lee. Cliff Lee!

"UCMe?"

"Hey, do these things come off?"

Brute 66 on deck.

A.J. stabs 'em in the heart.

Left: hopes dashed. Right: Hanley smash!

Shredder Ethier!

"Thanks for saving my ass!"

"Mine too!"

"Made up for that bad catch, didn't I?"

"All in a day's work."

"Seriously, guys, do these things come off?"