There are things that jump out to you upon landing in
this part of the country and not all of them good. Humidity!
Wow, you live long enough in the desert and you forget how awful it
feels to step outside and simply start sweating while standing still.
Then there’s traffic.
I used to think my occasional forays into Houston were worse than the
tri-state area but it appears things got markedly worse in my absence. A 10 minute drive from Newark Liberty Airport
to my brother’s home in Clark wound up taking almost an hour!
A Friday night trip into Brooklyn to my niece’s apartment
to hook up an air conditioner made me remember why I loved the City as we watched
Anne Hathaway filming a movie right out front as we sweated through the
installation of an air conditioner we lugged up her 5th floor
walkup.
Of course, that nostalgia for what New York can offer was
brought to a grinding halt as we sat outside the Holland Tunnel for over an
hour without moving a single inch.
Traffic is one thing, but this experience was new even by New York
standards. It wasn’t until hearing a
local comedy radio program on Tuesday morning back home did I learn the reason
for the delay. According to the UPI,
well, click
the link if you want all the poop. Only
in New York! (And for the record, that
ten minutes cited in the article is kind of like the same ten minutes your
significant other quotes when you ask, “Are you ready yet?” or you utter during
the 4th quarter of a football game when asked, “How much longer
until it’s over?”)
As we awakened Sunday morning for our road trip it
occurred to me that in my slightly inebriated state after cleaning up from
Thursday night’s pool party back home I had neglected to include any of my Mets
attire. Fortunately a quick stop at
Modell’s changed that as my brother and I each found suitable shirts – a high
tech fabric one for me embroidered with the de rigueur logos and my brother sporting
a Matt Harvey shirt in which the letters for some unknown reason were printed
in a camouflage motif. My brother wouldn’t
know Matt Harvey from Jimmy Stewart’s Harvey, but I assured him it was an
appropriate choice.
We arrived at the surprisingly well planned sports
complex just over the Walt Whitman Bridge where the football and baseball
stadiums plus the arena all shared the same general area with common parking
lots. There was even competition for
your parking dollar with rates as low as $10 and as high as $35. The latter is reminiscent of New York, but
the ten spot made me think I was still in some minor league burg.
We met up with our group outside the gates and made our
way inside, slightly disappointed we weren’t offered the t-shirts being given
away. At first we suspected it was
because we were all sporting Mets orange, black, blue, white and – how many
uniform changes has this franchise had, anyway – but it turned out to be an
option for children 14 or under. Then
again, why would any of us wanted a Phillies shirt?
The Ashburn Alley mini museum is truly the highlight of
this ballpark with a great many memories evoked seeing the photos, the plaques
and reading all of the captions.
However, the adjacent double decker bullpen is a close second as we were
able to see the pros warming up close enough hear the sharp echo of the
fastballs reverberating off the catcher’s mitt.
The Phillies fans themselves, famous for booing Mike
Schmidt, lived up to their reputation as their barbs directed at this Mets clan
were beyond friendly ribbing. It
continued as we ascended to the UPPER upper deck, third row from the top of the
stadium (bad news) but on the infield and under the overhang to shade us from
the sun and later the rain (good news).
Throughout the game our intrepid group led cheers of “Let’s
Go Mets!” and lots of yells and screams with each Mets moment of glory. The hostile looks in the beginning were
gradually turned to averted eyes as Matt Harvey manhandled the Phillies and the
lineup apparently played as if fresh shipments from Biogenesis arrived that
morning. By the time the rain delay
occurred the locals starting leaving in red-clad droves. We challenged each other to do our best Robin
Ventura rain delay impression but thought that might push Phillies fans over
the edge. We stayed to the end and
enjoyed thoroughly this hitting and pitching masterpiece.
To celebrate our good fortune we drove to the
neighborhood that features the famous Geno’s and Pat’s cheesesteak
sandwiches. We split sandwiches from
both to make our judgment (Pat’s, for sure), both paled in comparison to Kipp’s
here in El Paso (yes, I’m far from objective on that count).
Of course, after the game was over the Phillies fans,
with yellow cheese running down their chins, were actually a more amiable bunch
as we needled them about mercilessly about being manhandled by a bunch of AAA
castoffs. Hey, it was unsportsmanlike to
gloat, but this day and the Yankees series were about the only highlights the
Queens faithful had to celebrate this year.
Of course, just to put the cherry on top of this
otherwise wonderful day was the guy inexplicably adorned head to toe in Red Sox
attire who shoved his way through the Philadelphia crowd at Geno’s and loudly
proclaimed, “Fuck you all. Boston’s in
first place!”
All you could do was laugh.
All you could do was laugh.
3 comments:
This may be the post of the year.
Thanks, Mack...and to think this column was the result of writer's block as there was nothing on the player front that seemed worthy of discussion at the moment.
We are a baseball site first, and a Mets site second.
We can't have too many posts like this one.
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