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Emperor Ump Fri Aug 15, 2008 12:17pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by gordon30307
Doesn't matter how you get it. It would be great to work a game at Wrigley Field. Good luck and have fun.

Exactly, I'm so jealous.

JJ Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:28pm

Game Over!
 
The game is done, and it was pretty cool. This is the 4th big league yard I've worked, and easily the one most steeped in tradition. The umpire's room was small and reminded me of a finished basement - false ceiling, half a dozen small lockers divided around the room, a 3-fixture gang shower, a toilet and urinal (can I say urinal here?), a small refrigerator (Pepsi products and Gatorade) and small table. The Cubs clubbie (Tommy, a retired firefighter in his second season with the Cubs) was there to help us out and gave us the grand tour of the Cubs lockerroom and lead us through the tunnel up to the field.
The game itself was a yawner - 3 1/2 hours of watching high school senior pitchers throw the ball 92 mph past most of the hitters, with an error now and then and even a home run in the 8th inning to keep the crowd interested. Oh, it was Chicago's annual "Air and Water Show" so we had the Blue Angels buzzing the yard throughout the game, too. THAT kept us awake!
It was one of those events that doesn't mean anything in any league or tournament or standings, but it made memories that few get to experience. Thank you, baseball!

JJ

David B Tue Aug 19, 2008 08:56am

Quote:

Originally Posted by JJ
The game is done, and it was pretty cool. This is the 4th big league yard I've worked, and easily the one most steeped in tradition. The umpire's room was small and reminded me of a finished basement - false ceiling, half a dozen small lockers divided around the room, a 3-fixture gang shower, a toilet and urinal (can I say urinal here?), a small refrigerator (Pepsi products and Gatorade) and small table. The Cubs clubbie (Tommy, a retired firefighter in his second season with the Cubs) was there to help us out and gave us the grand tour of the Cubs lockerroom and lead us through the tunnel up to the field.
The game itself was a yawner - 3 1/2 hours of watching high school senior pitchers throw the ball 92 mph past most of the hitters, with an error now and then and even a home run in the 8th inning to keep the crowd interested. Oh, it was Chicago's annual "Air and Water Show" so we had the Blue Angels buzzing the yard throughout the game, too. THAT kept us awake!
It was one of those events that doesn't mean anything in any league or tournament or standings, but it made memories that few get to experience. Thank you, baseball!

JJ

Really neat, and just a little extra something for all the hard work that you've put in through the years. These type of "extras" make it worthwhile and something we can remember for a lifetime.

thanks
David

johnnyg08 Tue Aug 19, 2008 09:01am

Quote:

Originally Posted by JJ
The game itself was a yawner - 3 1/2 hours of watching high school senior pitchers throw the ball 92 mph past most of the hitters, with an error now
JJ

at 3.5 hrs, either they weren't striking out that many hitters or they weren't throwing 92...that seems like a really long game for that calibre of baseball...

David B Tue Aug 19, 2008 09:05am

Quote:

Originally Posted by johnnyg08
at 3.5 hrs, either they weren't striking out that many hitters or they weren't throwing 92...that seems like a really long game for that calibre of baseball...

Seems long, but these kind of games take forever. Just look at the All-star game for MLB. Everyone has to play, they change pitchers a lot so you have lots of extra warm-up time and no telling what goes on between innings etc.,

If I had to guess that was what was going on.

thanks
David

johnnyg08 Tue Aug 19, 2008 09:32am

Quote:

Originally Posted by David B
Seems long, but these kind of games take forever. Just look at the All-star game for MLB. Everyone has to play, they change pitchers a lot so you have lots of extra warm-up time and no telling what goes on between innings etc.,

If I had to guess that was what was going on.

thanks
David

solid points...that could be the case.

Steve M Tue Aug 19, 2008 09:21pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by johnnyg08
at 3.5 hrs, either they weren't striking out that many hitters or they weren't throwing 92...that seems like a really long game for that calibre of baseball...

I did a similar game a few years ago in Philly, it took about the same length of time. Lots of subs, long warm-up times and all that.
That particular game was not exciting - except for where it was - in a MLB park. After that game - I've umpired in 1 and played in 2. Each time was an experience not worth trading for almost anything.
Congrats, JJ - hang on to the memory.

JJ Wed Aug 20, 2008 10:58am

There was a new pitcher nearly every inning, and long commercial breaks. I was told that of the first 33 outs (that's through 5 1/2 innings), 23 were strikeouts. That's why the game took so long, even though the players were truly "all stars".
My old high school coach used to say, "If you're striking everybody out you're throwing too many pitches." Such was definitely the case in this game! But the memories...walking around the field with nearly a century of ghosts...
:)

JJ

johnnyg08 Wed Aug 20, 2008 11:08am

pretty cool experience

SanDiegoSteve Wed Aug 20, 2008 11:49am

Quote:

Originally Posted by JJ
But the memories...walking around the field with nearly a century of ghosts...

What a great thrill to get to work at Wrigley Field. I got to do a couple of similar games (1st base for both) at Qualcomm Stadium when the Padres played there. Not quite the same thrill, but still a thrill. Mostly lots of memories of bad-to-mediocre baseball teams :) .


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