Friday night I had the pleasure of visiting Southwest
University Stadium for a rematch of the visiting Las Vegas 51s with the home El
Paso Chihuahuas (also known as the C-Dogs and sometimes the Angry Puppies). They’re flush with their collective little chests
puffed out because in some "Clash of the Caps" baseball cap contest they apparently won
best design over such luminaries as the Albuquerque Isotopes and the Richmond
Flying Squirrels.
The last time I was here it was with press pass in
hand. This time I was part of a group
purchase of the Fiesta Patio area, a series of tables with four mesh swivel
chairs surrounding them at field level just past the 1st base dugout (which in this stadium is reserved for
the visiting Las Vegas 51s).
I arrived around 5:45 for the 7:05 game and got in line with
some of my coworkers. Everyone seemed
genuinely excited about going to the game and it was clear that despite their
lackluster standing in the division, the Chihuahuas are a huge hit in
merchandising. The vast majority of the
9000 fans in the sellout crowd were wearing some form of Chihuahuas attire.
As the game prepared to start it turned out to be an exact
rematch of the pitchers from May 15th’s game – righty Giancarlo Alvarado
for the 51s and lefty Jason Lane for the Chihuahuas. Prior to the start of the game the players
were so close I was able to converse with several of them. Josh Satin extended his greetings to the
Macks Mets family. Omar Quintanilla was
smiling and seemingly enjoying his celebrity status as the locals cheer for the
hometown hero as loudly as they do for the Chihuahuas. Cesar Puello was genuinely friendly, came
right up, shook my hand and said he hoped to make it to Queens someday
(pointing at my chest emblazoned with a Mets embroidered logo).
When the game started it looked like it might be another Las
Vegas laugher with two loud fly balls for outs off the bats of little Danny
Muno and Josh Satin. As Andrew Brown stepped to the plate I turned
to the people surrounding me and said, “This guy has excellent power against
lefties – just watch!” Right on queue he
slams the next pitch over the left field wall for a solo home run and a 1-0 Las
Vegas lead. They loaded the bases on
hits by Zach Lutz, Cesar Puello and an
error landing Kirk Nieuwenhuis on first.
Unfortunately catcher Taylor Teagarden struck out to end the threat.
Giancarlo Alvarado started off strongly with a 1-2-3 first
while keeping the ball in the infield the whole time. Unfortunately his strong start was
short-lived as the C-Dogs struck back quickly in the second with three runs of
their own, including a very non-pitcher-like swing for a run scoring double
down the line by former outfielder Jason Lane.
With the seats right on top of the field we were wondering
if foul balls would reach us and sure enough a liner foul to right bounced into
our reserved group area from the upper tier with one of our employees grabbing
it for his daughter. Later on another
foul was fielded cleanly by another employee who presented it to his son who
had just arrived from Atlanta the previous day.
It couldn’t have happened any more perfectly.
The game was fairly uneventful until the 6th when
Omar Quintanilla hit into a 4-3 forceout to drive in a run pulling the 51s
within a run, 3-2. Unfortunately that
margin was quickly given back when a routine fly ball to end the inning pitcher
Jason Lane on first running on contact resulted in a run when Puello dropped
the ball making a casual one-handed play.
At 4-2 it looked like
a lost cause for the 51s until the top of the 9th inning when all
hell broke loose. After Danny Muno hit a two-out double to bring
the tying run to the plate, Josh Satin lined a ball down the right field line
for a triple to drive in Muno. Of
course, if you were Jeff Francoeur fielding the ball, you would go ballistic
with the umpire, insisting it was a foul ball.
While we couldn’t hear exactly what was said, he got one of the quickest
thumbs I’ve ever seen. His manager took
up his cause and needed to be physically restrained when he, too, was run from
the game.
When the on-the-field festivities appeared over (and the
fans were screaming that the Chihuahuas were robbed), .365 hitting Andrew Brown
strolled to the plate to try to bring the tying run in from third. The Chihuahuas pitcher, Blaine Boyer, promptly
plunked him with the first pitch. The
fans cheered this unsportsmanlike conduct, but upon reflection I can’t help
thinking it was not intentional as it would have been foolish to put the
go-ahead run on base with a .300 hitter in Zach Lutz coming up next. Unfortunately it was not to be and Lutz flew
out to right field to end the game.
With a hometown victory, everyone was leaving the stadium
with big smiles. The ballpark has been a
huge success and brought a much needed “thing to do” in a town where the lack
thereof is a common complaint. There was
no visit to the locker room this time, but I’ll most definitely be back
regardless of the opponent.
4 comments:
Cool update!
I am happy to see the man and not just the rumors, etc. with Cesar Puello. You read what you wrote, and it makes you feel much better than if he were brooding and depressed. He'll get it together.
Downtown Andrew Brown needs to be going downtown in Philly for the Mets and not in El Paso....a waste of talent, which talent the Mets don't need right now because they after all are a clutch, offensive juggernaut who you know will always get the better of the opposing team in tight games!!
The photos from others in the group are starting to trickle in, including a shot of Cesar Puello in his 51s uniform posing with the little girl from the foul ball picture in her Chihuahuas shirt. Not only is he a seemingly nice guy, but he can absolutely fly on the basepaths. He's also a bit bigger than you expect him to be.
I enjoyed your piece. You do a good job on these feature pieces. I really get a feeling for the vibe of the El Paso ballpark - sounds and looks like a very nice place to see a game!
Thank you, Steve. I know sometimes I go too negative (or rush without editing as happened last night after the game) but I try to keep it engaging.
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