Craig pulls the curtain back about what it’s like to work in this baseball fantasyland. He says he makes it a point to walk through the Plaque Gallery every day to remind himself where he’s at.
Craig goes on to share the story about how this baseball Shangri-La came to be in the tiny village of Cooperstown in central New York State.
As noted in the companion post (Where’s the Golf!?! [aka My Time at the 2025 Ryder Cup]), my father and I had our planned itinerary out east get scrambled thanks to the weather forecast … and the generosity of the PGA of America.
We were supposed to finish our travel into Long Island from our Pennsyvlania hotel on Wednesday and stop along the way to check out one of two museums in New Jersey we’d both been eyeballing for sometime: The Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center on the campus of Montclair State University and the USGA Golf Museum and Library in Liberty Corner. We’d then hit the other museum on our way out of town on Friday.
With the hurry-up call to get to Bethpage Black Golf Course on Wednesday, we made the decision to head to New Jersey on Thursday and pay a visit to both museums rather than spend another day on what was looking to be a soggy and somewhat deserted Ryder Cup grounds.
Here’s my take on the two museums, as different as night and day, but equally enjoyable in their own way.
But First … Christy Mathewson
About the time we pulled into to visit the Mathewson family plot, a man was walking his dog and offered to take our photo. A pretty special moment to be sure.
We spent the night during our trip east in New Columbia, PA, which is just a few miles from Lewisburg, home of Bucknell University.
My dad, in doing his research before our trip, discovered that Christy Mathewson, one of the Baseball Hall of Fame‘s original class of inductees, was buried in Lewisburg Cemetery. A native of Factoryville, PA, Mathewson was a 3-sport athlete at Bucknell and his wife was a Lewsiburg native.
It was a no-brainer to pay our respects to a name we were both familiar with.
And then we discovered the football stadium is also named for the baseball great so a campus drive about ensued. Which led to a visit to the Bucknell Golf Club and a spotting of its own version of the more-famous Oakmont Country Club‘s “church pew bunkers.”
Clockwise from upper left, the backside of the baseball stadium’s scoreboard; Christy Mathewson’s gravestone; the Bucknell University Golf Course features it’s own version of the “church pew bunkers” from a more famous Pennsyvlania course, Oakmont Country Club; the Mathewson family plot; and the athletic stadium named in Mathewson’s honor.
The USGA Golf Museum
The exterior of the USGA Golf Museum and the map of its interior.
This has long been on my father’s list of places he’d like to visit.
An avid golfer throughout much of his life and a 1-time card-carrying member of the United States Golf Association (USGA), he’s frequently talked about this spot, but never had the opportunity to get there. I determined we’d make a go of visiting and, if the weather permitted, even pay the extra $10 fee to do some putting on the famed Pynes Putting Course. (Spoiler alert, the weather did not cooperate.)
As one might imagine a golf museum, it is stately and, for the most part, a quiet space to brush with the greatest in the game’s history.
There are five rooms dedicated soley to the accomplishments of five notable golf individuals from golf’s history: Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and Mickey Wright (widely considered the greatest women’s player, ever).
The Hall of Champions, as the name suggests, features the names of every USGA-sponsored competition winner in history as well as all of the trophies on display.
Finally, there is an exhibit near the back that takes visitors through a chronological history of the game in the United States.
Many of the artifacts are breathtaking and straight from the collections of the golfers (in the case of the five themed rooms) themselves. Reading the names of past winners in the Hall of Champions – especially those of Junior-level winners – is fascinating to see who has/have become household names in the sport achieving greatness in their youth.
Clockwise from upper left, a showcase featuring artifacts from Arnold Palmer’s career; this painting of the 16h hole at Augusta National Golf Club was painted by President Dwight D. Eisenhower and presented to Bobby Jones; this portrait of Jones by Thomas Edgar Stephens was later copied by Eisenhower (the Eisenhower version hangs Butler Cabin at Augusta National); this Jack Nicklaus sculpture is a centerpiece in his namesake room; the U.S. Open Championship Trophy includes the name of 2025 winner, J.J. Spaun; a wider look at all the trophies on display; this “Superpowers” area features plenty about Palmer, Nicklaus, and Gary Player; this Sam Snead hat caught my eye; the jumpsuit of Jack Nicklaus II who caddied for his dad during the 1986 Masters; Mickey Wright’s final round scorecard of her 1958 U.S. Open victory at Forest Lake Country Club in Bloomfield Hils, MI, (I’ve enjoyed brunch there on several occasions!); the Ben Hogan Award; Hogan’s Green Jacket from The Masters; various artifacts from Johnny Miller’s 1973 U.S. Open victory.
Perhaps my favorite item in all of the museum was the drawing of Palmer by James David Chase entitled “Gratitude.” At first glance, as you enter the Arnold Palmer Room it appears to be created by a series of lines or a sketch. Upon closer look, it’s actually words and statements either used by Palmer or by others to describe Palmer, his game, his humanity, etc. The accompanying video interview with the artist indicated it took 12 years to create and for many of the smallest statements he needed to wear eye magnification and hold his breath while writing.
It’s hard to do it justice, but what appears to be a pencil drawing of Palmer’s face (top) is, in reality, a series of words and phrases (bottom two images).
The Yogi Berra Museum
A look at Yogi Berra Stadium (home to Montclair State University and the New Jersey Institute of Technology baseball teams), the outside of the museum, and a famous Yogism.
I’m not a New York Yankees’ fan (I live in Detroit, right!?!), but I am a fan of baseball and the English language which, I suppose, means I’m bound by primal forces of nature to be a fan of Baseball Hall of Famer and Yankees’ legend, Yogi Berra.
Having never seen him play, I only knew about Yogi the ex-baseball player and probably wouldn’t have given a second thought about visiting his namesake museum and learning center on the campus Montclair State University, but I am familiar with the Yogisms and his on-the-field success. The tipping point for me wanting to pay a visit, however, was viewing the 2022 Berra documentary, “It Ain’t Over.” I cannot recommend it enough. A total loveletter from his
While there are some lovely artifacts housed here, I’d categorize the spot as more of a menagerie of things collected through the years by either the Berra family or donated to Yogi by former teammates and other Yankees.
The theater in the Yogi Berra Museum.
If you find yourself in the area like we did, do take the time to visit the theater, which is built to resemble Yankee Stadium, and view the 2011 episode of “Boys in the Hall” that features Berra. It’s hosted by longtime NBC anchorman Tom Brokaw and provides a terrific backdrop about who Berra was.
Clockwise from upper left, Yogi leads a cavalcade of Hall of Famers onto the field during the 2008 All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium; an area near the entrance to the exhibit hall; Yogi’s Presidential Medal of Freedom and military medals; several artifacts from his playing days with the Yankees; Yogi was on Omaha Beach during the D-Day Invasion; plaques of teammates Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle from the old Monument Park at Yankee Stadium; the jerseys of fellow Yankee catchers Elston Howard (the first black Yankee), Thurman Munson, and Jorge Posada; some artifacts from his time with the New York Mets; the yellow Yankees’ World Series rings are the ones Berra won; portraits of some New York baseball royalty line a wall; broadcaster and former teammate Phil Rizzuto was fond of saying “holy cow,” this one’s signed by many legends; a look at the exhibit area.
In the early morning hours of Wednesday, October 22, 1975, Boston Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk pulled a fly ball deep into the leftfield corner of Boston’s historic Fenway Park and its famed Green Monster.
At the time, Game 6 of that year’s World Series was tied at six, it was the bottom of 12th inning, and as Fisk’s deep drive continued to hook into the dark and foggy Back Bay night, the catcher famously hopped along the first base line waving his arms to the right, imploring his drive to stay fair.
It did!
And Fisk’s walk-off home run meant the Red Sox, by virtue of the 7-6 win, and their opponents, the Cincinnati Reds, would return the next night for a winner-take-all Game 7. A game the Reds won, 4-3, when they scored the go-ahead run in the top of the ninth inning.
Boston Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk is about to touch homeplate after his walk-off Game 6 homer during the 1975 World Series against the Cincinnati Reds. (Photo by J. Walter Green/Associated Press)
This week’s Fan Teaser image, captured by the Associated Press’ J. Walter Green, is not the most-memorable image from that night (see below for that one), but it does a fabulous job of capturing the unmitigated joy Fisk and his teammates felt following four hours of tense game action.
A few fast facts about what happened in the aftermath of one of the most famous homers in baseball history:
Seventy miles to the north, in Raymond, NH, an Episcopal minister ran to St. Bartholomew’s Church, grabbed the rope, and began ringing the church bell.
The first person Fisk shook hands with was Red Sox first base coach, Johnny Pesky, who Fenway’s right field foul pole was unofficially known for years as “The Pesky Pole” due to the non-power hitting Pesky’s knack for wrapping home runs around the shortest pole in the Majors. It was officially dedicated in Pesky’s honor September 27, 2006. A year earlier, ironically, the left field pole was officially recognized as the “Fisk Foul Pole.”
The home run ball actually caromed off the poul and back into the field of play. Reds left fielder, George Foster, tucked the ball in his pocket and sold it at auction in 1999. It fetched $113,273 from Red Sox fan, Keith Elfman. It is believed that media personality Keith Olbermann purchased the ball for $142,000 in a 2014 auction and then, controversially, sold ownership shares on Collectable in 2022.
NBC camerman Louis Gerard famously – and accidentally! – wound up tracking Fisk’s arm waving from his spot in left field rather than tracking the flight of the ball (as he was supposed to) because of a pesky (no relation to Johnny) rat in his camera well. It sort of changed the way television production moved forward, seeking reaction shots in addition to game action.
NBC play-by-play voice for the Series was Dick Stockton, the regular lead TV announcer for the Red Sox during the season. He met a young reporter for the Boston Globe at Game 6 named Lesley Visser. The two married in 1983 and were married for 26 years before divorcing in 2010.
The video of Fisk’s iconic homer. This is the more famous photo of Fisk, in mid-wave, as Reds’ pitcher, Pat Darcy, and catcher, Johnny Bench (only partially visible), look on. (Photo by Harry Cabluck/Associated Press)
Just to review, The Fan Teaser was the creation of former Ann Arbor News Sports Editor Geoff Larcom. Longtime friend and fellow Ann Arbor News alum, Pat Schutte, took it to heights previously unknown. We aim to keep it alive here at The Sports Fan Project. The cropped photo and the accompanying clue give you an idea as to who or what the image is of. We invite you to use the Comment option to take a crack at solving the Teaser and, if you’re so inclined, participate in some good-spirited banter with your fellow sports fans. The Fan Teaser will appear each Friday morning with the reveal coming to you Sunday.
The view from behind homeplate during pregame at Arlington’s Globe Life Field. (Photo by Tim Russell)
The worst part of any trip is usually the last day.
It’s the same with baseball road trips. Traveling with a few dozen people, you get to know each other pretty well and there’s a certain sense of melancholy with the realization the trip is coming to a close.
So it was when we arrived in Arlington, TX, with Coast 2 Coast Sports Tours Southern Slam tour. There was a twinge of sadness knowing it would soon be over.
But, there was also great happiness after another successful tour and meeting people like Dub and Sue Ann. This was the second tour with them. We had previously met them on the West Coast Swing in 2024.
The couple, who reside in Flower Mound, TX, was on its second bus trip this year. A week before the Southern trip, they were on the Midwest tour. During the Southern trip, they were able to meet up with their daughter and son-in-law, who reside in Houston.
Earlier in the trip, Dub treated the bus members to dinner during a restaurant stop after the game.
It’s meeting people like this couple that makes these bus trips the most fun.
Globe Life Field was supposed to open in March 2020, but since COVID delayed the start of the season, it didn’t open until July 24, 2020. It replaced Globe Life Park, which still stands across the street and was renamed Choctaw Stadium and renovated for football and soccer.
Globe Life Park was only 20 years old when it was replaced, but the Rangers wanted a retractable roof due to extreme heat in Texas during the summer months. The roof is rarely opened for games, except for very early or late in the season.
The new stadium does feel like a cavernous warehouse at times, especially whe the roof is closed.
Clockwise from upper left, the arches were a carry over from the former Globe Life Park and hold the Rangers’ retired jersey numbers; this unique clock is visible to fans along the concourse; the exterior of Globe Life Field; the odd dimensions near center field are visible here; under the left field archways; and a center field view. (Photos by Tim Russell)
Field dimensions are a bit unique at Globe Life Field, with a nod to the Rangers’ history.
It is 329 feet down the left field line, which honors recent Hall of Famer third baseman Adrian Beltre (No. 29). Just inside the left field line is 334 feet, which honors Hall of Fame pitcher and former owner Nolan Ryan (No. 34).
The left field power alley is 372 feet in honor of the 1972 Rangers, which was their first season in Arlington. The right field power alley is 374 feet, for the first winning season in Arlington.
The deepest distance is 410 feet, which is just left and right of center field for second baseman Michael Young (No. 10). Straightaway center field is 407 feet for Rangers’ catcher, former Detroit Tiger, and Hall of FamerIvan Rodriguez (No. 7).
Down the right field line is 326 feet, for former manager Johnny Oates (No. 26). And finally, it is 42 feet from home plate to the backstop, for Jackie Robinson, whose No. 42 is retired throughout baseball.
Another design element is the brick arches beyond the left field wall. It was a part of the old Globe Life Park and liked enough that they brought it to the new stadium. The Rangers’ retired numbers are posted near the top of the arches, facing the field.
Rangers’ public address announcer, Chuck Morgan, in his booth as he always is. (Photo by Tim Russell)
A visit to Globe Life Field isn’t complete without a trip to see Rangers public address announcer Chuck Morgan‘s booth, who has been with the Rangers for 42 of the last 43 seasons. He has announced 3,325 consecutive games. The microphone used for his 3,000th game is in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY.
Martin, who is in his 47th year of professional baseball, is currently second behind the Philadelphia Phillies’ Dan Baker. Baker is in his 53rd year!
During the offseason, Martin is responsible for coming up with the Rangers’ promotional schedule.
Game Result: Texas scored single runs in four of the first five innings against the visiting Atlanta Braves and eased to an 8-3 victory. The Rangers really took control with four runs in the eighth. Catcher Jonah Heim had the only home run for Texas. Ranger pitcher Nathan Eovaldithrew five shutout innings, allowing just three hits and four walks with seven strikeouts. Atlanta outfielder Michael Harris II had a home run for the Braves.
No post about the Texas Rangers’ is complete without referencing the Nolan Ryan-Robin Ventura 1993 dust up. (Photo by Tim Russell)
It’s not every year the Seattle Mariners are in the thick of a MLB pennant race.
The M’s began their 2025 post-season this weekend against the Detroit Tigers in an American League Divisional Series.
Mariners fans still fondly recall the magical run their team went on 30 years ago when future Baseball Hall of Famer Edgar Martinez roped what is still known as “The Double” to score Joey Cora and then another future Hall of Famer, Ken Griffey Jr., in the AL Divisional Series and complete a comeback from down 2-0 in the Series to the New York Yankees and win the decisive fifth game, 6-5 in 11 innings.
And, as though there weren’t enough Hall of Famers leading the M’s, a certain Cooperstown-bound Randy Johnson pitched the final three innings to earn the win in relief.
Ken Griffey Jr. is at the bottom of the dog pile after scoring the winning run in the bottom of the 11th inning of the decisive fifth game of the ALDS against the New York Yankees. (Photo by Elaine Thompson/Associated Press)
Here’s a terrific look back at “The Double” and all related events from that October 8, 1995 day in Seattle’s long gone Kingdome from the New York Times‘ Corey Brock back in 2019.
From the Interesting Facts Department, Joey Cora – who scored just ahead of Ken Griffey Jr. – is currently the Detroit Tigers’ third base coach.
Enjoy as some of the key personnel – and Mariners’ fan Macklemore! – discuss “The Double.”
Just to review, The Fan Teaser was the creation of former Ann Arbor News Sports Editor Geoff Larcom. Longtime friend and fellow Ann Arbor News alum, Pat Schutte, took it to heights previously unknown. We aim to keep it alive here at The Sports Fan Project. The cropped photo and the accompanying clue give you an idea as to who or what the image is of. We invite you to use the Comment option to take a crack at solving the Teaser and, if you’re so inclined, participate in some good-spirited banter with your fellow sports fans. The Fan Teaser will appear each Friday morning with the reveal coming to you Sunday.
The view from behind homeplate at Houston’s Daikin Park. (Photo by Tim Russell)
When you take these baseball bus tours, you meet lots of different people who root for many different teams.
On Coast 2 Coast Sports Tours‘ Southern Slam tour this past summer, we had 15 people, rooting for eight or nine different teams. But with so many different rooting interests, it’s quite easy to get along with everyone on the tour.
Apparently, baseball brings people together:-)
So after a quick trip to New Orleans, we moved down the road toward Houston for the penultimate game of the trip.
Daikin Park was first called Enron Field from 2000-2002 and then Astros Field for a few months during the Enron scandal. It became known as Minute Maid Park from 2002 to January 1 of this year.
It replaced the Astros’ former home, The Astrodome, which was the world’s first enclosed stadium and still stands today, but is not used for anything. It cannot be destroyed due to its designation on the National Register of Historic Places.
Daikin Park park features a retractable roof, which is a welcome relief to the Texas heat. Typically, the roof is only open during games in April and May.
There are unique features both in and outside the ballpark, which has a capacity of 41,168.
The first one is the Houston TogetherCommemorative Baseball Wall, which may be the first thing you see if you enter at the home plate gate. It features customized baseballs from fans all over Houston.
Houston Together is a community-based, non-profit organization that focuses on creating a healthier social environment and improving balance to the community’s livelihood.
You’ll also see a large astronaut sculpture at that entrance, signifying Houston’s Space City nickname.
Clockwise from upper left, fans are greeted by this spaceman statue as they enter Houston’s Daikin Park, an ode to Houston’s Space City monicker; the Houston Together Commemorative Baseball Wall; the Astros celebrated Christmas in July during my visit to Daikin; a look at the Crawford Boxes and Home Run Locomotive above; and a close up of the Locomotive. (Photos by Tim Russell)
Once inside, you’ll likely notice the locomotive high above left field. It is a replica of a 19th century train and coal tender, which weighs close to 50,000 pounds. It runs on an 800 foot track in left-center field.
The train keeps connection to Union Station, which stands next to Daikin Park with a nod to Houston’s railroad history.
In the early 20th century, the railroad helped create Houston with a base of wealth and culture. Union Station was built at the corner of Texas Avenue and Crawford Street and dedicated on March 2, 1911. By the mid-1940s, Union Station was handling 5,000 travelers daily.
Back to baseball, down the left field line, you can see the Crawford Boxes, which run parrallel to Crawford Street. It is only 315 feet down the left field line, one of the shortest in Major League Baseball. But there is also a 19-foot high wall in front of the boxes. The wall contains the hand-operated out-of-town scoreboard.
Here are the other outfield measurements: left-center, 366-399 feet; 409 feet to center; 370 feet to right-center and 326 to right field.
From left to right, a long view of the Astros Hall of Fame; a pair of HoF members’ plaques, Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell; the Phillips 66 Home Run Pump; and a view of left and center field. (Photos by Tim Russell)
The Astros also have a pretty extensive Hall of Fame behind the Crawford Boxes in left field. There are statues of Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio outside the stadium as well.
In the same area, you’ll see the Phillips 66 Home Run Porch. It features a classic gasoline pump that counts the total number of Astros home runs since the park opened.
When Daikin Park first opened, it had some unique features that are no longer there, namely Tal’s Hill. It was a 90-foot wide incline in center field. It was in the field of play along with the flag pole until 2016, when it was eliminated due to injuries.
Game Result: The Athletics pounded out 12 hits while Luis Severino held Houston to just two runs on four hits with no walks and eight strikeouts en route to a 5-2 A’s victory. Houston’s Taylor Trammell had three of the Astros’ six hits.
A few sights from our visit to New Orleans, from left, a building in the French Quarter; the inside of famed St. Louis Cathedral; and the exterior of the cathedral. (Photos by Tim Russell)
A ill-timed rain storm washed out our game action in Biloxi, MS, but there was still Buc-ee’s! (Photo by Tim Russell)
You don’t often look forward to a visit to a gas station.
But Buc-ee’s is more than just a gas station. So it was with great anticipation to get to this part of the Southern Slam tour with Coast 2 Coast Sports Tours in July.
For those that don’t know, Buc-ee’s is a chain of mega-sized convenience stores, based in Texas with many locations throughout the South, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri, North and South Carolina, Tennessee, Colorado, Texas, and Virginia.
They are known for many, many gas pumps. Most have between 100-120 pumps, along with electric vehicle charging stations. They also have a reputation for spotless bathrooms, even winning “Best Restroom in America” in 2012.
The stores are about 65,000 to 75,000 square feet.
It’s not every gas station convenience store that fit a full-sized pickup trick inside. (Photo by Tim Russell)
But a stop here is more than just a gas stop. You might spend anywhere from $20 to $500.
You can shop various tchotchkes, including Buc-ee the Beaver souvenirs, clothing, home décor, fishing gear, and barbecue grills.
The most popular item would be the Beaver Nuggets, which is a corn pop snack with several flavors. Other food items are the brisket barbecue sandwiches, breakfast tacos, fudge, pecans as well as jerky (either freshly made or hanging on the 30-foot jerky wall).
There is a whole wall of fountain drinks, with any combination of flavors. And there is a wall of equal length for the coffee connoisseur, with a small section devoted to tea or hot chocolate drinkers.
Despite the size, everything runs fairly smooth at the pumps and inside at the registers, with very little wait times.
It’s definitely something to experience, if you happen to be travelling down south.
As you enter or leave, you can shake hands with the Buc-ee Beaver statue outside each entrance.
The Trash Pandas and Shuckers didn’t work the day of our visit, but the Shuckers’ chef was in fine form! (Photos by Tim Russell)
An in-house chef put together a nice spread of a Banging Shrimp and Crab sauce over rice. There were also huge homemade biscuits, as well as hot dogs, fresh vegetables, and desserts.
The food was great but, unfortunately, the game never started due to rain and was eventually postponed.
Our view during dinner told it all. No baseball tonight:-( (Photo by Tim Russell)
Despite having never played a game at Truist Park, Henry Aaron’s presence looms large. (Photo by Tim Russell)
Doing these bus tours, there can be a lot of returnees, so you see a lot of the same faces.
It’s natural since most people are chasing ballparks. And it’s nice to reconnect with people you met on previous tours, but it’s also nice to meet new people as well.
On the Coast 2 Coast Sports Tours Southern Slam tour this past summer, I was able to do just that. I met Tara and Rodney, both Milwaukee Brewers‘ fans. The Brewers currently have the best record in Major League Baseball just recently became the first team to clinch a playoff spot.
Tara and Rodney are veterans of Coast 2 Coast tours. They live about an hour from Milwaukee’s American Family Field.
If you remember from Miami, Tara was the one that won the score contest, picking the exact score and beating me in the process.
So, we move on to the third leg of the trip: Atlanta’s Truist Park.
Truist Park just hosted the most recent All-Star Game in July after opening in 2017. It replaced Turner Field, which was built for the 1996 Summer Olympics.
The remnants of now-demolished Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium still offer some nostalgic reminders of its history. (Photos by Tim Russell)
Part of the reason the Braves wanted to leave Turner Field was Atlanta’s traffic congestion, making it tough to get to games on time. They also said most of their fan base comes from the suburbs, so they built Truist in Cobb County, about 10 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta.
There are cool features inside Truist, which we will get into, but one of the better features is The Battery, which is a mix of shops, dining, and livable space around the park. It is part of the trend to create huge entertainment districts, like Ballpark Village in St. Louis, Texas Live in Arlington, and Stateside Live in Philadelphia. Metropolitan Park in Queens, NY has been proposed, but not built yet.
A look at the exterior of Truist Park from The Battery. (Photo by Tim Russell)
Around the outside of the stadium are statues of former Braves players: pitcher Phil Niekro, pitcher Warren Spahn, and manager Bobby Cox.
But the nicest area would be Monument Garden, inside the stadium behind the home plate area. It is highlighted by a huge Hank Aaron statue and a 755 sculpture made out of baseballs. Aaron hit 755 career home runs which stood as the record following his retirement in 1976 until Barry Bonds broke it with 762.
Some more of the Henry Aaron mementos found in Truist Park’s Monument Garden. (Photos by Tim Russell)
Around the statue is a two-tiered walkway with Brave memorabilia on both sides, including uniforms, trophies, and the Braves’ Hall of Fame.
Inside the stadium, you have a more intimate feeling with the seating configuration. They have placed a higher percentage of seats closer to the action than any other stadium in MLB. The middle and upper bowl seating is pushed closer to the field.
More importantly, though, there is air conditioning on each level, as well as overhead fans, to help deal with the oppressive Atlanta heat.
Another cool feature inside the stadium is the batter’s eye area, which is similar to Coors Field, with boulders, three evergreen trees, and a fountain. The fountain activates during Brave home runs and victories, shooting water 50 feet in the air.
An interesting fun event only happens during weekend games. The Freeze will race a random fan for a prize package worth $100. The race is 160 meters, from left field foul pole to right field foul pole. The contestant gets a head start and The Freeze tries to catch them, which usually happens.
Some shots of the interior of Atlanta’s Truist Park. (Photos by Tim Russell)
Dimension-wise, the stadium is 335 feet down the left field line, 385 feet to left-center, 400 feet to center field. It is 375 feet to right-center and 325 down the right field line.
While Turner Field is still in use, theAtlanta-Fulton CountyStadium site is just a parking lot. Although the outline of the park is marked and the piece of wall where Aaron’s 715th home run (breaking the previous record of 714 established by Babe Ruth) still stands.
Game Result: It was all San Francisco in this one. The Giants roughed up Atlanta starting pitcher, Davis Daniel, for four runs in the second inning. San Francisco starting – and winning – pitcher Landen Roupp and three relievers combined to shutout Atlanta, 9-0. The offensive stalwarts for the Giants were designated hitter Wilmer Flores (four RBIs), thirdbaseman Matt Champan (two hits, including a run-scoring first inning triple), and Rafael Devers (two hits and two runs scored).
In an effort to hammer this clue home, you should certainly be able to touch all the bases this week.
No matter the pundit doing the selecting, Henry Aaron‘s certainly going to be among their list of the 10 best offensive players in Major League Baseball history.
Let’s take a gander at some of his statistics shall we:
He’s a lifetime .305 hitter
He’s second all-time with 755 career home runs
He’s career leader in total bases with 6,856 (second place is Albert Pujols who trails by over 600)
He also leads Pujols all-time in career RBIs with 2,297
This image of Aaron was captured during the Milwaukee Braves’ 1957 spring training in West Palm Beach, FL. Interestingly enough, he wore uniform No. 52 that spring before moving back to the No. 44 he wore each MLB season (save his first when he wore No. 5). (Photo by John Zimmerman/Sports Illustrated)
In 1957, the season from which this week’s image was captured by Sports Illustrated‘s John Zimmerman during a Spring Training game, Aaron won his only MVP Award. Though he finished in the Top 3 five other times, only in 1957 did the voters deem him a worthy recipient, what with his .322 batting average, and league-leading 44 home runs, 118 runs scored, and 132 RBIs it’s hard to argue.
What’s uncertain is why he was wearing No. 52 during that spring training. He was issued No. 5 during his rookie season but switched a season later to No. 44 which he stuck with for his 22 remaining seasons. (For what it’s worth, he belted exactly 44 homers on four times during his career.)
As I was digging into “Hammerin’ Hank’s” career numbers in preparation for this week’s Fan Teaser Solution, I noticed something previously unknown (by me, at least;-). During his 23 big league seasons, Aaron played every defensive position but pitcher, catcher, and shortstop. File that away for your next Immaculate Grid play.
Check out Aaron’s page at the National Baseball Hall of Fame here.
MLB presented this tribute to Aaron during July’s All-Star Game in Atlanta.
Just to review, The Fan Teaser was the creation of former Ann Arbor News Sports Editor Geoff Larcom. Longtime friend and fellow Ann Arbor News alum, Pat Schutte, took it to heights previously unknown. We aim to keep it alive here at The Sports Fan Project. The cropped photo and the accompanying clue give you an idea as to who or what the image is of. We invite you to use the Comment option to take a crack at solving the Teaser and, if you’re so inclined, participate in some good-spirited banter with your fellow sports fans. The Fan Teaser will appear each Friday morning with the reveal coming to you Sunday.
John Yandle in action. (Photo by Andy Kuno/SF Giants)
My guest in this episode is 70-year-old John Yandle who, rather remarkably, has been throwing batting practice to the San Francisco Giants for 41 years.
Yes, you read that correctly, a septuagenarian has been a left-handed BP specialist for a Major League Team since well, before every current player – and even current President of Baseball Operations and Giant great, Buster Posey – was born.
John regales me with stories about his time as a pitcher for the Stanford Cardinal, his time in the minors playing with an against some future Baseball Hall of Famers, what life was like playing for the Hawaii Islanders, and why he gave the life up (he has a Hall of Famer to thank for that as well). Of course, he shares some of his highlights pitching to Barry Bonds and how he even worked his way into a Cactus League game once upon a time.
If I do say so myself, it’s 50 minutes well spent listening to John share his journey as both a fan and 3-time World Series ring recipient.