The Bets Game Evar (except for the blood)
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Tuesday, August 28, 2001, at 12:18:33
Last night my wife, The Scotsman, and I went to watch a Dayton Dragons ballgame. The Dragons are a minor league baseball team based in our hometown, a farm team for the Cincinnati Reds. They are also a very recent addition to the city. Construction on Fifth Third field was completed in April 2000, and the Dragons began their first season immediately thereafter. Last night's game was the second-to-last scheduled home game of their second season.
Fifth Third Field is located right next to the Miami River in downtown Dayton. It's a fairly small stadium compared to Riverfront (which is now called Cynergy Field) where the Reds play. As a result, there are no "bad" seats. We were seated in the lower section in row 11, a short distance from left field just behind third base. We had a great view.
The Dragons were playing the Michigan Battle Cats, a farm team for the Houston Astros (??? why a team from Michigan would be affiliated with a team from Texas was beyond our comprehension.) The Battle Cats had beaten the dragons soundly 14-4 the night before, so they needed badly to receive a come-uppance. As the visiting team, the Cats were up to bat first. They scored a run in the first inning, and then were quickly ousted. The dragons did not score in the first inning.
During the bottom of the first inning, while the Dragons were up to bat, one of the batters knocked a foul ball straight into the stands just below and to the left of us. The ball literally went straight from the bat into some poor guy's face. I think the man was looking up at the video scoreboard at the time and never saw it coming. It looked like it got him square on the nose--ouch! Didn't knock him out, but it probably broke his nose. EMTs arrived on the scene quickly and took care of him. Needless to say, he and his family left early...his wife looked mad...we hoped they at least got their money back. We tried to keep our eyes glued to the field from then on, at least whenever someone was up to bat. Fortunately there were no other incidents of that nature the rest of the evening.
Nothing interesting happened that involved the game until the fourth inning, when the Dragons finally got their first run. However, at Dragons home games, there is always some kind of entertainment going on in between every inning. The Dragons' mascot, "Heater" (you guessed it--a dragon) came out and played tug-of-war with a kid, while they played Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' "I Won't Back Down" over the loudspeakers. Naturally, a couple of the players came out and helped the kid win. They also had ballerina come out and dance, and she was joined by Heater in a tutu. That act ended rather badly when the dragon knocked down the ballerina at the end and she stormed off in a huff. Later, a female dragon (I think it was Heater in a wig) appeared to "lip-synch" love songs and dance with one of the umpires. In between all of this and the game, roving camaramen wandered throughout the ballpark shooting pictures of the unwary (and the wary, too) and projecting them for all to see on the video screen. The Scotsman made it onto one of these shots, and Mrs. Grishny and I would have too if she hadn't shooed the camaraman away. Too bad, too; I was wearing my RinkWorks convention shirt and Sam could have gotten some free publicity.
The fifth inning was spectacularly boring...nothing happened. The sixth inning was about the same, at least until my nose started bleeding. No, I didn't get hit with a foul ball; I just happen to be like Sam in that I am one of those people who get gusher nosebleeds from time to time for no apparent reason. Bleagh. You can read all about this phenomenon in the first "Bleeding Excessively" chat archive if you like. Anyway, with nothing on hand to stop the flow, I'm afraid my RinkWorks tee got a bit ketchupy. Oops--I'm probably grossing people out here. Mrs. G saved the day, running to get napkins and some ice for me. I missed most of the sixth and seventh innings while I was staunching the flow in the restroom.
I came back for the eighth inning to find I hadn't missed much. Same score, 1-1. However, by the bottom of the ninth, the Battle Cats had pulled ahead, getting three more runs to make the score 4-1. Undedicated fans began packing up and leaving early, while the Scotsman sat there and scorned them, loudly announcing his policy of never, *ever* leaving a ballgame until it's over. So we waited, and...the Dragons caught up! They managed to tie the game, 4-4, by the end of the ninth inning, so it went into overtime.
Nothing happened in the tenth inning.
Nothing happened the first half of the eleventh, and we began wondering just how long this game would last. Scots told me that he thought the record for a baseball game was 25 or 26 innings. Yeesh.
Bottom of the eleventh. We're in overtime. The score is tied, 4-4. The Dragons only need one run to win the game. Someone finally makes it on base. Then the next guy walks. Then the next guy walks too! Now the bases are LOADED. Here comes our star, Wily Mo Pena, up to bat. The crowd is going wild! Here comes the pitch...he swings...WHIFF! Strike one. Awww. Here comes the second pitch...he swings...CRACK! GRAND SLAM HOME RUN! Final score, Dragons 8, Battle Cats 4. This is how baseball should be all the time.
Gri"glad we stated for the fat lady's song. And yes, his name really is Wily Mo Pena"shny
Dayton Dragons
|