All posts by Tim Anderson

Camden Yards Ball Hawk: 5/7, Towson University v. University of Maryland at Ripken Stadium

So I’m a Major League ball hawk: I am only really concerned with getting baseballs at Major League games because, well, it’s the pros. But, I will admit, it is kind of cool getting different balls from different minor or independent leagues as well as different collegiate conferences.

I had heard that Towson University and University of Maryland would be playing a game at Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen — home of the Ironbirds. Since I’m a Towson University student, and fellow ball hawk Alex Kopp is a Maryland graduate, we decided to attend the game and see what came of it.

In all honesty, I had never been to a minor league ballpark before to see a game. Ever. So this experience would be . . . an experience.

When I completed the 35 minute drive to Aberdeen, I met with Alex, and he wanted to do some exploring:

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Here is where we were:

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Guess what he was looking for:

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Yup:

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Random freakin’ baseballs.

That ball is a Wilson A1030, your run-of-the-mill baseball that you can find in any sporting goods store. We assumed this ball had been used for batting practice for one of the teams earlier in the day.

Alex also found some barely covered, muddy baseballs that we could not tell what they were. But he also found a Ripken League baseball. 

We were curious as to which balls they would be using during the game. For Towson’s home games, they use official CAA baseballs, the conference they play in. For Maryland, they, of course, use ACC baseballs (until next year). But this game was being played at a neutral site, so there was also a possibility that they would be using those Ripken League balls. Another far-fetched possibility was commemorative Ripken Cup (that’s what they’re calling this thing) baseballs. But, that was doubtful.

I thought they would be using ACC baseballs, because it is a major conference with more funding than, say, the CAA.

There was also another question: could we keep the baseballs? At most college games, when a ball is hit foul, the teams ask for it back so that they do not run out when the season nears the end. But this was being played at a big-ish stadium where balls could really go anywhere.

Anyway, we got our tickets ($3) and waited outside the gates for them to open at 6:

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When we went in, they handed us these:

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Which became handy later.

On the field, there was no batting practice (which really isn’t a problem), but some University of Maryland players were playing games in shallow right field:

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Meanwhile, Alex and I walked around the stadium. Probably the coolest part of the park is the Marriott across from the park, behind the third base side. Why is that cool? Check it out:

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It was designed to look just like the Warehouse at Camden Yards.

We walked around in the seats down the third base line and just hung out. On one of the walls down the line there was a wicked hole that looked like it was made by a sharp liner:

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When in the seats, I noticed something else: all of the railings were plastic, PVC piping, even the ones that prevent fans from falling onto the field. On top of that, most of them were cracked and broken. Toto, this isn’t the Major Leagues anymore.

As Alex and I walked over to the first base line, I asked him if he brought his ball retriever, hoping to God that he didn’t. He did. And guess what else he did:

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Used it. He fished-up a ball that was old as hell and barely stitched together.

For the game, we settled on a spot down the third base line that had more room than ever to run for a foul ball. I’m not kidding. Look to our right:

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To our left:

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Directly behind us:

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Hi Alex.

The weather was kind of crappy. For the beginning of the game, it sprinkled a little bit and there was no sun. As it got later, it got really cold. We were both glad there wasn’t an Orioles game because we would just be freezing there, too, and for even longer.

One thing I learned about college baseball: there is not as many foul balls as the majors. If this were an MLB game, Alex and I would have grabbed more foul balls that we could have ever imagined. But in this game, Alex counted 10 balls that went out of play. Four of them went out of the stadium, one went back onto the field, and the others went into the stands.

Early in the game, Alex was able to get one off the bat of Towson outfielder Dominic Fratantuono. And I was right: they were using ACC balls.

And no one came to take them back.

A little later, I got mine: a deep foul hit by Maryland outfielder Anthony Papio. It landed over to the right of that white tent pictured above. Check out the ball:

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Later, Alex got another one and gave it away to a little kid who came asking for it.

If you’re wondering, Alex does keep track of the minor league, college and Major League balls (in fact, he recently got his 1,000th overall baseball). However, he will not be counting those muddy balls he found outside the park. He will, however, count the two foul balls he got at this game.

The game ended a little after 9:30, and before we left we looked outside for those balls that left the park, but we couldn’t find them.

. . .

For every game I go to during the 2014 season, I recap my ball hawking adventures for Eutaw Street Report. Follow this link to read-up on all of my crazy ball hawking stories. 

 

World baseball challenge: the Australian Baseball League

In an attempt to occupy myself during these months void of the Orioles and Camden Yards as well as baseball and a batting practice as a whole, I have embarked on a challenge to ball hawk across the country without ever having to even leave the state.

I do not exactly remember what gave me the idea, but it came to me one day as I was longing for the left field bleachers. My plan was to acquire a baseball from each of the professional baseball leagues around the world while only paying my own postage and trading one of my many Major League baseballs.

To begin, I set my sights on the Australian Baseball League. It seemed to be one of the easier leagues to accomplish despite it being so far away. Of course, the reason for that is because of the shared language, something you will not find in a majority of the other leagues around the world.

Continue reading World baseball challenge: the Australian Baseball League

Basketball in Baltimore: The 2011 Lockout Game at Morgan State

Last night, the Wizards and the Knicks played the first NBA game — albeit a scrimmage — in Baltimore since 1999.

The match-up at the 1st Mariner Arena, the dump that Baltimore is obliged to call their own, featured no real big names besides that of the city’s own Carmelo Anthony as Tyson Chandler only saw six minutes of action; Amar’e Stoudemire, J.R. Smith and Metta World Peace were all DNP’s; and, of course, after John Wall, the Wizards are only the Wizards.

While I did not attend this preseason Carmelo-lovefest (something about an NBA game at 1st Mariner Arena just didn’t tickle my fancy), I was in attendance at 2011 when the best NBA match-up the city has seen since the Bullets left in 1973.

Remember, in the fall of 2011, the NBA was stuck in a lockout. But, of course, the players still wanted to play. The game’s bests were showing their talents at street ball courts like Rucker Park while others were playing in the Goodman and Melo Leagues.

On August 30th, two squads composed of NBA talent like LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant, Chris Paul, Eric Bledsoe, Gary Neal, Jeff Green, Juan Dixon, Austin Daye and others planned a game between the Goodman and Melo Leagues in the basketball-loving and basketball deprived city of Baltimore.

Continue reading Basketball in Baltimore: The 2011 Lockout Game at Morgan State

From The New York Times’ Archives: Babe Ruth’s 700th Home Run (1934)

In 1934, it was called “a record that promises to endure for all time.”

From the New York Times article written on July 13, 1934:

A record that promises to endure for all time was attained on Navin Field today when Babe Ruth smashed his seven-hundredth home run in a lifetime career. It promises to live, first, because few players of history have enjoyed the longevity on the diamond of the immortal Bambino, and, second, because only two other players in the history of baseball have hit more than 300 home runs.

Of course, today, we stand with Ruth as third on the all time home run list and 54th on the games played list. The scientific developments that forever changed the game were unforeseen in the mid-30’s where 700 home runs seemed unattainable unless you were the Bambino. Imagine Ruth slugging in this era where something close to one-thousand bombs would be said to “endure for all time.”

Continue reading From The New York Times’ Archives: Babe Ruth’s 700th Home Run (1934)

The FCC Received Multiple Complaints about Flacco’s Post-Super Bowl F-Bomb

With American culture placing such an importance on the Super Bowl, nearly ever pair of eyes and ears are fixated on their televisions the first Sunday of February, including the most sensitive ones.

Every year, the Federal Communications Commission receives dozens of complaints stemming from the Super Bowl, its commercials, and its halftime show. This year was no different than the others. There was passionate tongue wrestling and pole dancing in commercials and provocative attire from halftime performer Beyonce.
Continue reading The FCC Received Multiple Complaints about Flacco’s Post-Super Bowl F-Bomb

Smoking Ban at Orioles and Ravens Game Will Be Tough for Those Addicted

“I can’t go all that time without a smoke,” he said almost-desperately as I relayed to him the information. Starting in March at all events held in Oriole Park at Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium, smoking is prohibited. No more designated smoking areas, banned completely inside the stadiums as well as 25 feet from the entrances outside the stadium. He is my uncle, in his mid-fifties, an Oriole fan for decades, a smoker for probably longer, and a common visitor to both Memorial Stadium and Camden Yards. “I won’t go,” he added.

“Earl Weaver smoked in the dugout!” he pleaded.

Continue reading Smoking Ban at Orioles and Ravens Game Will Be Tough for Those Addicted

Joe Flacco said He Would Tackle Ted Ginn if He Broke That Final Punt for a Touchdown

After Sam Koch effectively wasted eight seconds of play by scurrying around in the end zone, taking a safety, Joe Flacco and the Ravens anxiously awaited the ensuing punt as well as the remaining four ticks of the clock. It’s no secret that Flacco wanted 49ers returner Ted Ginn to be stopped short of the goal line and to win the game, but he was willing to go to extremes to make that happen. Flacco was heard saying this by NFL’s Sound FX:

Flacco to Dennis Pitta: “If he starts to break it, go tackle ’em.”
Continue reading Joe Flacco said He Would Tackle Ted Ginn if He Broke That Final Punt for a Touchdown

Tim Anderson's Memorabilia Collection

Jones HR 2 (2010)

Jones HR 1 (20110)

From my 2010 ball hawk season in review blog post:

After under-rowing the last homerun hit my way. I told my friend, who was sitting with me, that my first move on the next one will be up the steps then back down. When Adam Jones struck one in the 8th, I immediately ran up the steps, evaluated the flight of the ball, the quickly ran back down. Thankfully, the ball was going to land right in the stairs and it was hit high in the air, giving me time to recover. I reached over the mob of five people and caught the ball thanks to my height and the height of the step I was on compared to everyone else. My second homerun of the season was another clean catch, this time of a ball hit by an Oriole. One of the six people I caught the…

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