Friday, August 25, 2006

His Mysterious Ways

Over a month ago I decided to spend the 8th at Dodger stadium with four friends.
I bought the four tickets online with my own money.

From then on, things began to go wrong. I couldn't get the 8th off--I was going to have to drive to the Ravine after work, then come back to the hotel and work a full shift. Fine, I booked a room at the hotel. The two cars had to go into the shop. We got a rental. One of my four friends bailed on me at the very last minute. I couldn't get more than four hours sleep on Friday.

It became clear to me that instead of being a great opportunity for fun, this was going to be a real ordeal, a test of my ability to function without real sleep over a period of days. At this point, I felt like backing out of the whole thing--and would have, but I misunderstood the E-tickets to be a sort of claim check for the real tickets, requiring my presence at the stadium. (As it happened, because they were printed on an obsolete form of Adobe Acrobat, I did have to convert them personally.)

Saturday morning I hit a snag when my relief just never showed up. I could not leave the front desk until after nine in the morning. I took a 90 minute nap and then showered and set forth from Fontana for Dodger Stadium, some 15 minutes before my friends were due to leave Riverside.

I was going to take things in stages. I was going to drive to the Stadium, and I was going to drive back. How much time I spent actually at the Stadium would depend on how I felt. I would measure myself constantly and bail before I became unable to drive back to Fontana.

Actually, my friends left Riverside an hour after I headed out. I got to Dodger stadium a hour before they did, and it was a good half-hour after that before we met and distributed the tickets.

In that ninety minutes, I nearly died.

I was wearing jeans and a knit dark-blue short-sleeve and the Dodger hat. I stood in front of Dodger Stadium in the noonday sun for a half-hour, and then I figured I'd get out of the sun and sit in the car with the windows down and the fan on. Ten minutes of that made me so hot that when I stood up outside the car I felt cool and refreshed in the triple-digit sunshine as if I'd walked through a shower.

I've been that hot before, quite often ten years ago as I biked from UCR to Jurupa, 100 miles a week, and six years ago tooling around Minneapolis by bike in August. I used to enjoy feeling the onset of heatstroke, knowing that the very air was going to kill me unless my own muscles and animal cunning got me to my destination. Part of that machismo meant carrying everything from tire patches to a quart canteen, so I always made it.

I had no canteen at the Ravine, only a $5.50 1-liter ice cube of a frozen waterbottle I sucked at as it slowly melted. I was melting with it.

Finally my friends arrived, took the tickets, declined the orange bedsheet with the 5-foot black asterisk we planned to fly for Barry Bonds (you wimps!) and I rolled out to Fontana. The a/c had failed in my room, but 84F was nothing to me then. I got a good six hours of sleep, rising only to quaff a liter of cold water and take a cold shower.

The point of my little homily: Had it all worked as planned, I'd have spent that ninety minutes in the same sunshine, clad in the same layers of denim and polyester, and I'd have taken it. I wouldn't have seriously considered leaving before the last at-bat. I probably wouldn't even have felt the need to buy the bottle-sicle. I'd have sat with my friends, watching the Dodgers get buried by the Giants, and I'd have slowly succumbed to the heat. My faltering speech and response time would have been ascribed to the fatigues of the graveyard shift, especially since Da Laird works the same hours and had as little sleep before the game as I had.

Somebody up there likes me.

Monday, July 31, 2006

BASEBALL'S GREATEST PLAY


Sunday, April 02, 2006

dodgers-homerun-lolol new articles for Sunday, April 02, 2006MLB Team Profiles: Los Angeles Dodgers
After an exciting shot at the pennant back in 2004, the Dodgers fell hard in 2005, finishing behind the likes of the D-backs and the Giants. They have done well in the off-season, though, and they certainly have a chance to make a run ...

ESPN Pundits Predict 2006 Season Outcome
Seriously -- the Dodgers beat the Twins in the World Series? Either Neyer's trying to be funny -- in which case, stick to your day job, Rob -- or his prediction partner is Jack Daniels. Otherwise, Jason Stark, Jerry Crasnick, Rob Neyer, ...

Pickoff Moves
The Angels may be a better team, but the Dodgers will win their weak division, according to Steve Bischeff. Too bad the Dodgers' year is starting similarly to last year: with Eric Gagné marginal, and two outfielders (Jayson Werth and ...

Sylvester's takes from " Claws for Alarm"
Hello gang, here you have, for your pure enjoyement, some takes from " Scaredy Cat"'s remake, "Claws for Alarm". Look at how Chuck Jones' style changed in a few years. Yours Truly, Duck Dodgers Blog Founder and Administrator.

Today's Birthdays
Hughie Jennings BRO b. 1869, played 1899-1903, d. 1928-02-01 Mike Kekich LAN b. 1945, played 1965-1968 Reggie Smith LAN b. 1945, played 1976-1981 Don Sutton LAN,CAL b. 1945, played 1966-1988.

Braves begin quest for 15th straight title at LA Dodgers Monday
The Braves will open the 2006 season Monday at 4pm with the first of three games against the Dodgers. Tim Hudson gets the honor to start the first game of the season, an honor that has previously been given to John Smoltz, ...

Spring Training Fever: Tony Jackson On The Threatened End Of ...
Tony Jackson writes that the Dodgers are thinking about leaving Dodgertown:. As the 2006 Grapefruit League schedule winds down, the Dodgers have yet to ... No other team in baseball travels as far for spring training as the Dodgers, ...

Two Games, Dodgers Split-Squad Edition
Certainly, the Dodgers' offseason couldn't have gone any less catastrophically: ... Having fired DePodesta just in time for the winter meetings, the Dodgers sent ... Then the Dodgers started looking for a GM; the candidates came down to ...

NL West Preview and NL Playoff Picture
I predict that the NL West champ – the Dodgers – will advance past the first round in the playoffs. The one player that can sway this division one way or another is Baroid Bonds. If he plays and is in top form (whatever that means now, ...

Last pre-season comments
I see a lot of people picking the Dodgers in the West, but the Grady Little factor won't let me pick them. So I'm going with the Giants. In the East, Atlanta is my pick every year until they finally finish 2nd. ...

Pickoff Moves
The Dodgers have extended Jeff Kent through 2007, with an option for 2008. ... The Dodgers will have to be healthy to contend? You don't say! ... Tomorrow the Dodgers will play a pair of split-squad games, flying out to Los Angeles, ...

Pickoff Moves
The NL West, of course, is eminently winnable, and if the Dodgers can have Drew and his MVP-caliber bat healthy, they'll be the favorites. Without him, however, the Dodgers simply won't score enough runs to win the flag. ...

Pickoff Moves
Jon Weisman's Hardball Times Dodgers Preview. It's that time again, and Jon does the honors at THT for the Dodgers. Dodgers 3, Braves 2. Any time Aaron Sele throws three scoreless innings, you have to fear he's going to make the team. ...

Pickoff Moves, Lunchtime Edition
This is definitely a major concern for the Dodgers. Reader Bobby Bran asked me about something Jon pointed out yesterday: Kevin Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus was concerned about Matt Kemp's home and road splits: ...

Pickoff Moves, Bedtime Edition
The unseasonable late spring rain, I think, provided a nice metaphor: for the Dodgers, washing away the old, awful memories of 2005; and for the Angels, providing them with a baptism in preparation of the new year. ...

I finally get to see my Dodgers
My favorite baseball team has always been the Dodgers. ... Finally, for the first time since interleague play started, I can watch my Dodgers right here! There have only been two other series that the Dodgers and Twins played each other ...

Pickoff Moves, Lunchtime Edition
The Arizona Republic seems to think -- with some justification -- that the Dodgers and Indians would be a great fit for the Cactus League. In fact, they suggest that Baltimore and Cincinnati might also be interested, considering they're ...

MLB Preview
Los Angeles Dodgers 2. San Diego Padres 3. San Francisco Giants 4. Arizona Diamondbacks 5. Colorado Rockies ... A's over Yankees Dodgers over Brewers Cardinals over Braves Indians over A's Dodgers over Cardinals Indians over Dodgers.

Two Games
The Dodgers pounded the Mets, and amazingly, with Brett Tomko on the mound. It looks to me like the Mets put a lot of non-starters on the roster, which created the big disparity; Jason Repko went 4-4, Oscar Robles went 3-3 with a ...

Month Of Predictionary: Baseball Prospectus Offers Its Projections
NL West W L ===================== Dodgers 87 75 Giants 80 82 Padres 78 84 D'Backs 77 85 Rockies 74 88. The Dodgers borrow storylines from both the Mets and the Cubs. ... On the other hand, the Dodgers are loaded in the upper minors, ...

Sunday, February 26, 2006

The Los Angeles Dodgers are a Major League Baseball team based in Los Angeles, California. They are in the Western Division of the National League.