Taking a trip to the East Coast
Last week the Coastline Pilot ran an account of a dream vacation
for Laguna residents Mark and Jackson Christy. The father and son
took a tour of America traveling to 10 ballparks, cheering for the
hometeam and partaking in as much local charm as they could. The duo
had just left Cleveland and were headed for Comisky Park and Wrigley
Field.
Now the quick 400-mile jaunt to Chicago to watch the White Sox
take on the Royals at Comisky Park. The Sox won the contest that day,
but to be honest, and in Jackson’s own words, “It’s all about Wrigley
in Chicago.†Chicago, despite its gruff reputation, is a very
friendly place. The subway the following day to Wrigley was filled
with anticipation for both of us. Here I was, 30 years later, and my
own son was saying, “Dad, how cool is this? Your dream, our dream, is
finally coming true.â€
A quick high-five and a giggle, man, life is good! The locals in
Chicago think of Wrigley as the Holy Grail of ballparks, and for good
reason. The dogs were awesome, Slammin’ Sammy Sosa knocked a frozen
rope over the ivy in centerfield, and the Cubbies and their home
field were everything I had hoped they would be. But for me, the
coolest thing about Wrigley is actually not in Wrigley itself. It is
the dozen or so ancient brick buildings across the street in right
and left field where they have erected all varieties of bleachers on
the roofs to watch the action for free. If I ever get back to
Wrigley, I want to somehow arrange watching from that rooftop. Now
THAT is local flavor.
It was back into the four-door meat-locker on wheels and off to
Cincinnati for a pair of Reds games. Now we had a problem. Before
embarking on our trip, we had decided to sport local colors and
support the home teams. But the Reds were playing the Dodgers, and I
have been bleeding Dodger blue from the first time I uttered, “Strike
the bum out†more than three decades ago. So we compromised. Jackson
wore a Reds cap, and I donned my LA blue. I took some friendly fire
for my attire from the Reds fans, but they laughed when they realized
even my own son was on my case for cheering the visitors.
Well the first of our two games happened to be the night game in
which Dodger closer Eric Gagne was tossed from the contest in the
ninth for throwing what the ump felt was an intentional bean ball to
a Reds hitter. (A side-note; I still remember the first time I ever
heard my own father use some “colorful†language, albeit relatively
mild, when he was cut off on the roadway in his Corvair). There is
little doubt that Jackson will forget my own creative use of the verb
for “to draw into one’s mouth as with a straw†in a discussion with
the umpire from our front row seats in response to his call. The
Dodgers ended up dropping the game in 13 innings.
We piled back into the car for the 600 miles to Philadelphia to
see the Dodgers try again for a “W†on the road. This time even
Jackson felt bad and put on his Sean Green jersey and Dodger cap.
They call Philly the “City of Brotherly Love,†that is, unless, you
are rooting for the visiting team at a Phillies game. We’ll leave it
at that! We sat front row behind the Dodgers’ dugout. We cheered the
boys in blue till our faces matched their caps. Alas, to no avail.
The lads from L.A. dropped their third in a row. In the race for the
wildcard playoff berth, the Dodger’s seemed to be running in the
wrong direction.
Then, on the scoreboard in Philly, they announced that the
evening’s Mets game in New York against the Diamondbacks had been
rained out by a freak thunderstorm and that there would be a rare
daytime double header the following day at Shea. Jackson pointed out
that we had tickets to see the Mets take on Arizona the next day,
what luck!
A jolt of Starbucks (which back East they refer to as
“four-bucksâ€) and back into our trusty four-wheeled steed for the
easy run up the coast from Philadelphia to Brooklyn, N.Y.
To make a long-story short, we were there nearly nine hours,
consumed half a dozen dogs and an estimated 20 bottles of
$3.50/bottle water. But we saw the Diamondbacks sweep the day, some
phenomenal baseball, and sat, once again, in the front row for the
duration of the two games. It was long, it was hot, it was great
baseball and we’ll treasure every moment. The following day, we were
bumped from our flight, but re-scheduled for a later flight and were
given travel vouchers and seats for the replacement flight in
first-class. We weren’t on the plane 90 seconds when I heard a small
voice yell “FIRST CLASS RULES.†I didn’t need to look. That cheering
voice had become quite familiar to me over the last 16 days of 24/7.
It was a lucky and fitting desert for our fortnight plus of America’s
Favorite Pastime. But indeed it was time to head home and back to
reality. But without a doubt, this had been the trip of a lifetime
for a father and son.
* MARK CHRISTY is a Laguna Beach resident and owner of Hobie
Sports.
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