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Showing posts with label Don Newcombe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Newcombe. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Dodgerpalooza - My Dodger Birthday Day One

May I just say that I have the best wife out there.  Mrs. Cora secured some tickets to the dugout club for my ... uh ... 21st, yeah that's right, my 21st birthday.  I have never been "down below" before so I was so excited.  I even fasted for two and a half days in order to enjoy the all you can eat food selections.  The food was pretty good, a lot better than the fare upstairs.  Don Newcombe and Ron Cey were down there too.  We had 3rd row tickets next to the visiting club's warm up circle.  I couldn't believe that there were people down there that looked like regulars saying hello to each other.  Amazing that they could afford the tickets, even if they were from a corporation.  That game itself moved WAY TOO FAST for someone wanting to be down in the dugout club FOREVER.  It ended on a Ellis walk off sacrifice fly.  We loitered in the dugout club after the game for a bit and watched the players walk by us.  Then headed home with dreams of Dodger Blue in my head.  Below are some pictures.  Enjoy!

I SHALL Pass!

Going down the stairs - Couldn't convince the wife to place this in our house. 

Lots of gold gloves

Dad's glove

Jackie sliding home

Ebbets field home plate

All you can eat snacks.

Ate dinner next to Don Newcombe

A nice fellow on the field took my camera to get this shot of Yasiel
Thanks Yasiel!
I loved this cartoon

Bam! Pow! Bang!


Kids lining up to take the field

The players are a lot bigger up close

Candy cotton sky over blue heaven

Sat near Rob Reiner

Matty up to bat

The drink menu for my fellow sons

More drinks

Better get more room on the wall for this guy

Orel's award

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

At-Game Recap: Jackie Robinson Day

The choir from Magic Johnson's home church, West Angeles Church of God In Christ, performs the national anthem.


The Bison and Han Solo share a laugh.


Harrison Ford hugs Sharon Robinson, Jackie's daughter.


Rachel Robinson is introduced to a standing ovation as Magic Johnson, Sharon, Don Newcombe and two of Roy Campanella's children look on.


Take a bow, Rachel.


Magic, ever the facilitator.


Ford gets ready to throw the first pitch.


Acknowledging his catcher, Don Mattingly.


Ford engages Tommy.


Kareem Abdul-Jabbar after announcing "It's Time for Dodger Baseball!" When was the last time he smiled like that?


This...this thing should be a felony.


Attention scoreboard operator: Gotta space out those first three Ks. Please.

photos and video by SoSG Orel

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Don't Call It a Bobblehead

From a Dodgers press release:

In celebration of Jackie Robinson’s 94th Birthday, the Dodgers have unveiled a Jackie Robinson, Don Newcombe and Roy Campanella Statue. The statue, which features Robinson and his teammates, Dodger legends Newcombe and Campanella, will be given away on Monday, April 15, 2013 at 7:10 pm vs. San Diego, the 66-year anniversary of Robinson breaking MLB’s color barrier. The giveaway item will be distributed to the first 40,000 fans with a ticket.

WOW this looks awesome. Last year it was the Vin bobblehead, this year it's this: the must-have SGA of the season. Good work, Dodgers.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

A Word from the Grand Marshal

Thursday, May 10, 2012

At-Game Recap: May 7 vs. Giants - Magic in the Air


This was the third home game I've attended this season. The first game was marred by parking gate woes that deprived me of a sweet giveaway, and the second ended early thanks to my rambunctious two-year-old. So, I was looking forward to taking in a game from start to finish.

I definitely did not want to miss the heavily-promoted pregame ceremony with Magic, Rachel Robinson, and Don Newcombe, but again, the slower-than-Rod-Barajas-to-home-plate pace of the parking gates posed a serious threat. I'm guessing the slowdown stems from the fact that the gates now accept credit cards, which I'm pretty sure is new for this season. (That, and not all lanes were open, causing some drivers to make their own lanes.) I think I know the subject of my first Fanbox email.

Thankfully, I squeaked through and made it in time for the ceremony. And what a ceremony! What made it extra special was Vin's narration. I'll tell you right now, there is NOTHING better than the voice of Vin Scully on the PA, his well-crafted words dancing through the twilight air. To top off a great opening act, the Dodgers took the field to "No Sleep 'Til Brooklyn," which served as a nod to both the departed MCA and the Dodgers' rich history.

The game itself was fine. It was a a nice little pitcher's duel until ErrorFest 2012 broke out. It's always nice to see the Giants get stomped.

--

A few other notes of interest:


  • Bobby Abreu, seen playing left field above, hit a double in his first home at-bat as a Dodger. A lot of people near me were still razzing him about his time as an Angel.
  • The vibe in the stadium was very positive, as you'd expect. Even the jabs between Dodger and Giant fans, at least in my section, were good-natured. Police presence was VERY visible though, even more than usher presence.
  • Magic got two monstrous reactions: Once when he announced "It's Time For Dodger Baseball!" and again when he appeared on the Dance Cam (set to "Do you Believe in Magic?", natch) before the eighth. It made me wonder what the general crowd reaction would have been if Cohen or Kroenke had gotten the team.
  • Food lines were short and moved briskly, at least on the Field level. I'm not sure if that had anything to do with the new ownership, though.
  • A Giant fan in front of me asked an ice cream vendor about the Cool-a-Coo comeback. The vendor (who's been working at Dodger Stadium since 1974!) said the new guys are working on it, but thinks the contract with Dreyer's might cause a problem.
  • The intro video about Dodger Stadium's 50th Anniversary is PHENOMENAL. (I missed it the last two games.) I hope it shows up online sometime.

--

All in all, a great (home) start to the Guggenheim era. I'm really looking forward to where they go from here.

Monday, May 07, 2012

Game 29 Thread: May 7 vs. Giants, 7p

Ted Lilly (3-0, 1.38) vs. Barry Zito (1-0, 1.76).

Opening day is here! That is, the home opening day of the Guggenheim Era. Now everyone can stop pretending to like Frank McCourt, and it's time for the Dodgers to start kicking ass for Magic & Co. Appropriately, the Dodgers (18-10) will be taking on the second-place Giants (14-14) for the first time this year. And, in the first of what is sure to be a series of endlessly classy moves, Magic Johnson will escort Rachel Robinson onto the Dodger Stadium field for pre-game ceremonies, and Dodger great Don Newcombe will throw out the first pitch. Beating the Giants to start this new chapter in Dodger history would be only fitting.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Vin Scully, on the Trials of Jackie Robinson

Vin Scully returned to the broadcast booth on Jackie Robinson Day.

Vin Scully, from yesterday's game:

Jackie Robinson Day.

And I've been thinking, since I traveled with Jackie for about, oh, a little more than seven years. He was sensitive, as you can certainly well imagine, having gone through all of the insults, everything else that went when he played.

For instance, one of the managers, when Jackie first played, his name was Ben Chapman, who was kind of a volatile character. Anyway, in his playing days, Jackie came up to hit. Chapman threw a black cat out onto the field.

And there were a lot of words. Jackie had the feeling that guys would try to cut him if they could if he were covering the bag at second or first.

I mean, it was extremely hard. Plus, fans were difficult.

And I remember one time, Dodgers were playing in Philadelphia. It was a very, very, very hot day. And a gentleman, a good-natured soul, as it turned out, was just outside the one door at old Shibe Park, where the visiting team would come out that one door, the bus waiting for the team would be right at the curb. And all you'd do is you'd go out the door, step on the bus and eventually when the bus was full, go to the hotel.

And it was really hot. This man had brought a small folding table — he was a big Dodger fan. He had several huge watermelons.

And as each player would come out through that door, the man would cut a nice slice of ice-cold watermelon. And I'm telling you, it was wonderful.

In the old days, those clubhouses really didn't have much air conditioning. A player would shower and by the time he'd get to the bus, he'd be wringing wet again.

So anyway, as a player would come out, this man would hand him a piece of watermelon, and the player would get on the bus.

And Jackie was always trying to be late because of the huge crowds that he drew wherever he went — talking about pressure. I saw a beautiful beige suit — Don Newcombe wears a similar suit to this day — destroyed by pen marks.

That's going to go foul down the line.

Anyway, Jackie stopped. And I'm not saying people did it on purpose, but there were an awful lot of clumsy people to scar that suit. But they, but they would do it.

Anyway, Jackie waited and waited and waited, and finally came out the door and the man handed him a slice of watermelon.

Well, especially in those days, if you were black, they always tied you in with a slice of watermelon. I don't know where that first started, but that's the way it was.

And the man handed Jack the watermelon, and Jack was about ready — although he had remarkable self-discipline — but he was really going to blow his top at this good-natured soul.

And only after several of the players realized right away, Uh oh, Jack— So they were hollering at Jack, It's okay, it's okay.

And he looked at the guy and looked at the watermelon, and then the other guys on the club were holding up rinds, saying, See? We all have it, it's good.

And Jackie said, Well, okay, and he took the watermelon and got on the bus.

But that was just a small insight into the world in which he lived, trying to get in to the world where, quote, "they" lived.

Remarkable. And he did, and did it so well.

Nick Hundley, infield single, grounded to third, one for two....


photo by Jon SooHoo/Dodgers

Friday, November 18, 2011

Scenes from a Coronation

"These baseball cards are huge."


"We winners gotta stick together."


Cy Youngsters: Fernando, Newk and Kershaw.

From "Clayton Kershaw's Cy Young is a connection to Dodgers tradition" by Bill Plaschke at the LA Times:

Clayton Kershaw was preparing to walk across the diamond and into Dodgers history Thursday afternoon when he spotted a man standing alone, staring at him like a father would stare at a son.

It was Dodgers scouting boss Logan White, tossing his phone from hand to hand, rocking on his heels, trying to act composed, failing miserably.

"What are you doing over there?" Kershaw shouted. "You need to hug me!"

On the infield dirt they embraced, the new Cy Young Award winner and the man who was responsible for scouting, drafting and signing him.

"Thank you, thank you," whispered Kershaw.

"A great day, a great day," whispered White.

If you understand baseball scouts, you will understand why White views Kershaw as his child.

You will also understand why, after they hugged for a long minute, White's sunglasses could not hide a long trickle of tears.

"It's like watching somebody grow up," said White. "What a wonderful day."

1&2: AP; 3: @Dodgers

Monday, September 26, 2011

Reflections on Kemp, Kershaw

My favorite part from "Composed Kemp getting help from unlikely mentor" by Tim Brown at Yahoo! Sports:

Newk took two more shuffling steps and wrapped Kemp in a hug. With his left hand, Newk stealthily reached down and reinserted Kemp’s inside out and flapping back pocket.

There's a way to wear the uniform, the gesture said, a way to present yourself, a way to be a pro's pro.

And my favorite part from "Clayton Kershaw can enjoy moments" by Tony Jackson at ESPNLA.com:

Most of the pitchers already were there that day, when Mattingly revealed to us he already had settled on Kershaw as his opening-day starter. Never known for my patience or for playing it cool, I immediately broke away from that informal gathering and headed for the clubhouse, where I found Kershaw crouching low in front of his locker with a catcher's mitt on, peering out across the carpeted expanse toward an imaginary pitcher on an imaginary mound.

"I got a new position this year," he said as I approached.

Ignoring his comment, I came right out with what I was there to talk about.

"Donnie just told us you're the opening day starter."

Nice to see sportswriters, both local and national, turn their spotlights on the future of the Dodger franchise. Not since the Mike Piazza days have we been blessed with such well-rounded stars.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Wrapping Camelback

Clayton kickin' it.


Dioner Navarro: have lizard, will travel.


Matt Kemp gives a shout-out to Juan Pierre.


Davey, Newk and the Bison.


Who is that masked man?

photos by Jon SooHoo/Dodgers

Monday, May 10, 2010

Dontown

Don Mattingly, Don Newcombe and Don Baylor before Friday night's game. After the game they would don street clothes and go to Don Antonio's for Mexican food.

photo by Jon SooHoo/Dodgers

Friday, April 16, 2010

Time of Game: 3:42

No symbolism in this picture at all. I mean, why don't they just nail a torch to the wall?


Frank Robinson, Matt Kemp, Don Newcombe and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.


"Sweet Lou" Johnson, Tommy Davis and Newcombe.


Kareem throws a highball.


Mr. Miracle. Endre. Mr. Walkoff. Andre Valkoff. Squeethier.

Newcombe honors his idol Jackie in LA (Dodgers.com)

1-4: Jon SooHoo/Dodgers; 5: Juan Ocampo/Dodgers