Results tagged ‘ San Francisco Giants ’
Waving Flags
I guess there’s nothing else to say. I won’t sing K’naan’s biggest hit in the process, so here it goes…
2011 IN TARGET FIELD: It’s official – I’m done with the Minnesota Twins for 2011.
If you’ve followed what little I’ve contributed to this blog, you would sense my disappointment with my local ballclub. This would excuse me from stating the reasons for my disappointment.
Injuries are one thing, but the lack of intelligent moves on and off the field are frustrating. This team can be fun to watch. However, when they’re frightening – they’re embarrassing.
One bright side has been my affirmation that Luke Hughes will be a strong member of next year’s ballclub. His power is there, but what Hughes needs is to sharpen up his contact hitting and fielding. Once he gets to those spots, he will elevate himself to the level of Michael Cuddyer.
But, that’s next year. The Twins could spoil…like the Kansas City Royals often do.
MY POSTSEASON OUTLOOK (OTHER THAN THE AL EAST): It’s easier to simply punch the tickets of the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox into this year’s postseason. There are six other slots to decipher.
Perhaps the best chance at clinching a postseason berth at this point is the Milwaukee Brewers. Just when you thought the NL Central was going to be tight with four potential contenders, the Brew Crew ratcheted things up a few notches by creating a gap of 10-1/2 games between them and the rest of the pack. The talk has been of MVPs – Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun – and a cadre of strong talent across the board. Even Nyjer Moragn has been behaving himself. Perhaps being Tony Plush helped – a lot! Former Cy Young Award winner Zack Grienke has been the ace in a strong rotation, by augmenting Yovanni Gallardo, Shaun Marcum and Randy Wolf. Let’s not forget the emergence of John Axford as the name closer in the NL. Sorry, Brian Wilson.
Another so-called surprise is the Arizona Diamondbacks. I’ve already discussed how Kevin Towers had simply rebuilt this team around the leadership of manager Kirk Gibson. The proof of the reboot in Phoenix has been the dedication to a work ethic as laid out by Gibson using a no-nonsense approach to the game. Though the defending World Champs, the San Francisco Giants, are breathing down the D-Back’s neck, Gibson’s club remains running on all cylinders. What can happen in September would be if the D-Back’s motor would run out of gas long enough for yet another to-the-wire finish in the NL West. The Jints couldn’t wait for that to happen…
What’s happening in Sconnie and ‘Zona may be a surprise. Other places have not been so surprising. I expected the Philadelphia Phillies to become the most dominant team in baseball. The rotation of Cliff Lee, Roy Halladay, Cole Hamels and Roy Oswalt remain the best in the game – proof of Ruben Amaro, Jr’s ambition towards elevating the Phils to the next level. The Phils already have a comfortable lead in the NL east over the probable Wild Card, the Atlanta Braves, but they also contended with the injury bug. A healthy Phillies club is not one to take lightly. They could be beat, but not this year.
The Texas Rangers simply built upon a formula from last year. There are more claws and antlers to this year’s club that have built upon the core from the World Series debut in 2010. However, the Rangers are again being threatened by the Los Angeles Angels – a mere 3-1/2 games behind the defending AL champs. I would not call this one just yet.
As for the AL Central…um…well…
Sabean’s Throw Down
OK, no time to waste…let’s do this…
APOLOGY NOT ACCEPTED? In the aftermath of Buster Posey’s season-ending injury, the aggressor in this situation, the Florida Marlins’ Scott Cousins, called the Giants’ catcher to apologize. That call was not returned. In Posey’s defense, Giants’ General Manager Brian Sabean defended Posey’s non-reaction on a sports radio talk show in San Francisco on Thursday. Sabean even went as far to say that if he “never hear from Cousins again or never plays another day in the big leagues, I think we’ll all be happy.”
Classy.
They’re defending World Champs. They just did a video reaching out to GLBT youth for the It Gets Better Project. They supported one of their fans as he continues in a coma after the attack on him on Opening Day at Dodger Stadium. Now this?
Sabean went on to defend his comments to the point of saying that “there’s no love lost” over the “overly aggressive” play by Cousins. Is this the kind of defense a GM can justify when he lost a key championship asset and that asset is the key to his club’s future? Also, Giants’ manager Bruce Bochy did request that Joe Torre, the MLB’s disciplinarian, some changes in the rules to protect catchers. Torre is apparently looking into the request.
How much more leeway should we give the defending champs this season? I’d rather you debate this…
THE BRYCE UPDATE: Last year’s first Draft Pick, Bryce Harper, has been enjoying a spectacular season on the Single-A Hagerstown Suns with acknowledgement from Washington Nationals’ General Manager Mike Rizzo. Rizzo’s loving Harper’s progress in the South Atlantic League that there are rumors swirling of a promotion later this season. The talk is that Harper could end up with the Double-A Harrisburg Senators, skipping over Single-A Advanced Potomac.
Harper’s numbers are indeed noteworthy: He’s batting .346 with 13 home runs, 41 RBIs and a .432 OBP. Currently, Harper is tied for the lead in home runs and RBIs in the SAL. He had some heroic moments while with the Suns, including a walk-off, two-run homer on Thursday at home against Greenville.
Perhaps it is time to promote Harper, as some of his competitors in the SAL have done already. For example, Bryce Brentz already jumped to Single-A Advanced Salem in the Boston Red Sox system from Greenville. Matt Curry began the year with the West Virginia Power has been elevated to Double-A Altoona in the Pirates organization. What’s Rizzo waiting for?
Speaking of which, the Entry Draft is next week.
LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON? We’ve had over the years some father-son combinations that worked out just fine. Cecil and Prince Fielder. Ken Griffey and Ken, Jr. That’s only a couple to speak of.
How about Wayne and Trevor Gretzky?
The son of perhaps one of the greatest player in professional hockey history is getting a tryout in Arizona for the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Trevor played baseball for a private high school in Westlake Village, California with success. In October, he signed a letter of intent to play baseball for Tony Gwynn at San Diego State University. Whether Trevor gets in on the draft next week will depend on how he did in the two combines in Arizona.
If you’re scratching your head as to why the son of the greatest hockey player ever is playing a sport unlike his dad – ask Ken Griffey, Jr. about his son Trey. It appears the third generation Griff is being recruited by several colleges to play football.
LAST, BUT NOT LEAST: To follow up on my last post on the San Francisco Giants “It Gets Better” video, we now know who’s next in the MLB to do such a PSA: The Cuubbies! Oh, I have to see this one…
Photo of Scott Cousins (above) courtesy of Major League Baseball
A Pre-Memorial Day Rundown of What I Missed While Watching the St. Paul Saints Practice
Our kick-off for summer – one could argue the unofficial first day of that season – is here. We not only take this opportunity to get out of town and go crazy somewhere (especially in Chicago and Las Vegas…and not for any baseball related reason whatsoever), we also take a moment to remember those who fought for our country and lost their lives doing so.
Yet, there are some pressing issues to tackle as I was concentrating on the last two pieces involving the St. Paul Saints. At least it should put me back in the good graces with Mark and Major League Baseball…
PROTECTING THE CATCHER? The absence of Buster Posey will be a huge hole for the San Francisco Giants. He took a collision at the plate and came out of it in bad shape. While Giants fans sort out their 2011 season, the pundits were sorting out plate defense by catchers.
Let me chime in on this one. In 1970, Pete Rose knocked down Ray Fosse at the All-Star Game. Fosse was fine. In the late 1970s, there was a famous clip that showed Dave Parker slamming into Steve Yeager. Yeager was fine.
How many times have we seen plate collisions between a runner who’s brakes were gone and a catcher concentrating on getting the ball quick enough to do the tag? Yes, the impact on Posey was bad. But, it is not enough to argue about instituting new rules of protecting catchers in defending the plate? The MLB is not the NFL where all the things a defensive player got away with in the 1970s are now considered illegal.
BLAME MADOFF…NOT REYES! Another magazine runs quotes of a MLB figure that were borderline libelous. This time, it is Fred Wllpon’s mouth that made the print (or iPad…or web browser) burn.
The New York Mets owner was interviewed by New Yorker magazine over his investments through Bernard Madoff, which affected the bottom line of the ballclub. How? That was someone else’s money, or supposed to be. If the article simply focused on the Wilpon-Madoff financial relationship, they should have stopped there. No. Wilpon went on to criticize his players – his employees – on performance and contract issues. Namely, David Wright, Carlos Beltran and Jose Reyes.
Sometimes, you can brush a controversy by making amends. For the Mets, that meant bringing in a new investor, David Einhorn, for a chunk of the team worth $200 million. Everyone’s happy in Flushing. Sandy Alderson and his staff are happy – despite announcing they’ll have to trim the payroll for 2012. That is perhaps the only way this saga could come to a conclusion. Maybe.
GODSPEED, HARMON: I missed out on the memorial for Harmon Killebrew last night at Target Field. Bad me, I know. He was from my era, though I had only a slight inkling about the Minnesota Twins at that stage. I was just one year old when they played the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. But, I knew who Killebrew was when I was cognizant of the game – though it was mostly Rod Carew’s team at that time.
Still, ol’ Number Three for the Twins is a hero. As Kent Hrbek said, he was our Paul Bunyan. An Idaho-born mountain main capable of take a ball over a fence on to somewhere in the stratosphere.
Killer will continue to grace us from above. Perhaps it is an incentive for a team infirmed and in need of direction now.
The Ambulance Chaser and The Inappropriate Bat
You know, I saw it coming a mile away…
As reported in Outsports.com, two of my least favorite people have made the news together. Los Angeles-based attorney Gloria Allred filed a suit against Atlanta Braves pitching coach Roger McDowell on behalf of a fan from Fresno, California – Justin Quinn.
From what I gather from a couple of sources, McDowell was being heckled by fans at AT&T Park in San Francisco on Easter Sunday, the final game of the Braves-Giants series there. In response, McDowell allegedly threatened fans with a bat and made some homophobic epithets towards the section he threatened the bat to. I will get into specifics into what McDowell said or a subsequent act he used the bat for, but only to say that whether it is true – it’s unbelievable.
Yet, there appears to be two stories: That one and one where no homophobic remarks were made, but an actual threat of harm by McDowell. The former was corroborated in the San Francisco Chronicle while the latter by TMZ.
Now, do you believe anything TMZ broadcasts anymore?
Back to my first statement: Allred is an ambulance chasing, media hocking lawyer who gets on my last gay baseball nerve. I think after her first case back in the 1980s was fine. But after that, she’s just tired. Does she really mean anything by jumping on this case? It’s all about the money and the bandwidth she can get for this incident – alleged or not.
I’m not a fan of McDowell. Never was. I could say a few things, but it is my personal editorial policy to never call out anyone any name in the game of baseball unless they absolutely deserve it. I still call Ozzie Guillen “Mr. Inappropriate” for both his history of saying the wrong thing at the wrong time – and for being crazy. He’s one of the few exceptions. However, in all due respect to McDowell, he has apologized for his actions. But, honestly, McDowell has never shown any respect for a lot of different people in the past – and remains so.
As for Quinn’s story, was it true or not? Or, did he try to edge into EPSN’s Twitter by self-promotion via his own Tweets? Outsports did question did – and I corroborate this questioning.
My reasoning is simple: Did anyone from that section of AT&T Park corroborate Quinn’s story? Have these people gone to Allred or to the media with corroboration? No clue, either.
Frankly, I was hoping to laud Chipper Jones’ mark tying Mickey Mantle for an obscure record of the second place for most RBIs by a switch-hitter or Andre Ethier’s month-of-April longest hit streak. Or, get into Ozzie’s post ejection Tweet (gotta love him!). Then again, I did shelve my barbequing of Frank McCourt for his “cry” wanting his team back (similar to Dave Chappelle’s wanting his show back in the last episode of Season 2…). But, no. Facebook decided to interrupt my yearly photography gig chronicling the local Dining Out for Life efforts by Minneapolis’ Aliveness Project with, first a teaser, then the naming of the parties involved in this incident.
If you excuse me, I need to purge this out of my system – then get back to my duties as volunteer lensman.
Happy Birthday, Kid, You’re Being Sent Back Down!

Photo courtesy of Major League Baseball
The biggest fear of someone hitting the Majors for the first time is the moment the team asks you to head back where you came from. Just when you think you’ve made it amongst 24 teammates – all whom you looked up to through Spring Training and in the dugout (or bullpen) – your gravy train runs out.
Was it the numbers? If you’re not hitting the same numbers you had in Double or Triple-A, you really need to get more seasoning before the club calls you back up. That was the case of Matt Garza when he was on the Minnesota Twins. He was brilliant in Triple-A Rochester, but kept on bombing on the big club. The rest is history after the Delmon Young trade that sent Garza onto a World Series ballclub. Eventually, Garza would throw a no-hitter – the first in Tampa Bay Rays history.
I also felt bad for Luke Hughes when he appeared for one game in 2010 with a huge homer to his name. The Twins sent him down the next day. This season, Hughes is on the active roster in light of Tsuyoshi Nishioka’s freak leg injury. Maybe he has a chance to stay on the club for a while. Maybe, being the operative word, given Hughes’ batting average (.207) and no homers to his name.
Not everyone was so lucky to stick around the big club. On his 23rd birthday, the San Francisco Giants sent another young slugger, Brandon Belt, down to Triple-A Fresno. His numbers had not added up since his initial hype for NL Rookie of the Year. As of today, Belt batted .192 with a home run and 4 RBIs.
The Belt move came as postseason hero Cody Ross is just about to rejoin the team. The story would just end there – but, Yahoo! Sports felt compelled to make a big sappy story out of Belt’s demotion back down Highway 99 to the heart of the Central Valley.
Yes, it was Belt’s birthday. But, if you were celebrating one in your young life, would you rather have a celebration in the clubhouse of AT&T Park than a humiliating meeting with Bruce Bochy?
All reports state that Belt took the news well. I’m certain his heart was aching with disappointment. It’s like being a temporary worker – when your job abruptly ends, you have to professional enough to manage your emotions through the transition. You could do something “wrong” – steal a pen or a pad of paper as a lasting memory of the two weeks you spent being someone else’s indentured servant at a discounted wage. Would Belt do that? Nah, the t-shirts and other reminders of his time with the defending World Champions are completely his to keep (I presume).
While the Jints sort out their active roster, Belt will head back to Fresno for some more seasoning. That would be good news for those of us who love the Minors to follow his progress of heading back to the big club. When will Belt be back? Perhaps soon…
Happy Birthday, Brandon!
Majors and Minors and More Craziness
Plenty of ground to cover…I better get to it…
WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE RED SOX? I have no clue, really. I wished I had an answer as to why the Sox are coming home to Fenway with an 0-6 start. They open at home against the New York Yankees, who are 4-2, including taking two from the visiting Minnesota Twins. How long do you think this will go on? Um, well…
…AND THE RAYS? Same thing – a mystery! They’re on the South Side facing Ozzie Guillen’s team and there’s no let up. It’s puzzling when you have two contending AL East clubs winless after the first six games…
DID I FORGET ABOUT THE TUCSON PADRES? I did, I’m afraid. The former Portland Beavers opened their 2011 campaign on the road in Colorado Springs with intentions on making their temporary home a good spot to make a run in the Pacific Coast League’s Pacific South division. They’ll have some tough company with the Fresno Grizzlies and Sacramento River Cats. However, day 1 of the Tucson Padres ended on a high note: An 18-14 victory over the host Sky Sox.
HOW DID BRYCE DO? The Hagerstown Suns’ Bryce Harper – the first pick of last year’s Amateur Draft for the Washington Nationals – went 2-for-4 against the host Rome Braves. He brought in a run, but struck out once. From all reports, he certainly impressed everyone with an array of fielding skills and poise at bat (if you take out the strike out, that is). How soon do you think he’ll make the next level at Woodbridge, VA and the Potomac Nationals? No clue there…
THE INFIRMARY: The White Sox’ Adam Dunn went in for appendectomy. He appears to be recovering nicely as Dunn trotted out for the South Siders’ home opener on Thursday. Then, Tsuyoshi Nishioka of the Minnesota Twins broke his leg on a slide defensive slide by Nick Swisher at Yankee Stadium on Thursday. While Nishi sits on the Disabled List, the Bloke from Perth, Luke Hughes, will fill in for the time being. As sad as I am to see Nishi hurt, I’m happy to see Hughes up for the time being.
BACK TO THE TOP: The Texas Rangers remain the only undefeated ball club in the week of the season. That may not last long as they travel to Baltimore to meet the Orioles. The Orioles sit on top of the AL East with a single loss to their record. This could be an early series to watch. Maybe the Rangers will give Vlad his ring for his work with them from last year.
FRIDAY’S HOME OPENERS: Besides the Twins and Red Sox, there’s a slate of home openers happening on Friday. The Seattle Mariners, San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Angels, Atlanta Braves, New York Mets, Houston Astros, Arizona Diamondbacks and Detroit Tigers open up their doors for the first time in 2011. The Giants will celebrate 2010 with the presentation of the World Series championship rings, awarding Buster Posey’s Rookie of the Year nod and the hoisting of the pennant – all wrapped in gold. That could be tarnished quickly – Sammy Hagar will be singing the National Anthem.
The Minors – 2011
Thursday calls for yet another slew of Opening Days – the Minors. You think there’s a trend happening here…
Last year, the big openers featured two of the most anticipated pitchers of the time: Aroldis Chapman and Stephen Strasburg. While Strasburg began his journey to DC on the road in Altoona with the Harrisburg Senators, Toledo hosted the arrival of the Cuban phenom and his Louisville Bats. Now, Chapman is on the Cincinnati Reds 25-man roster while Strasburg is on track towards recovery from surgery.
This Minor League opener has a few big prospects to watch. Want to know where to watch them? (All times are Eastern)
7:00PM – ROME, GA: Last year’s top draft pick, Bryce Harper, will begin his journey to the Nats at State Mutual Stadium. His Hagerstown Suns will open 2011 on the road against the South Atlantic League’s Braves up in deep North Georgia. Don’t expect the fans to love him up there – Rome is a solid baseball town and they know their game. And, they know all about Harper. No worries, Harper will debut in front of the home crowd at old Municipal Stadium on Friday, April 15 against the Lakewood Blue Claws.
7:05PM – ALLENTOWN, PA: Before he was traded to the Detroit Tigers for Curtis Granderson, Austin Jackson was the big name with the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees. Now that Jackson is the lad off for the Tigers, the Yanks still have a deep farm system to supplant their former stars. This year, Jesus Montero takes his spot in Dundler Mifflin country as the distant understudy to Jorge Posada. Montero will catch for a series of Yankees prospects ready to throw down this season en route to the Bronx. The SWB Yanks will start their 2011 campaign at Coca-Cola Park against the host Lehigh Valley IronPigs.
9:35PM – ALBUQUERQUE: They’re Royals no more! The Omaha Storm Chasers begin a new chapter with a new image and a new ballpark in the suburbs. With a lineup laden with top prospects, the Chasers start their 2011 campaign at Isotopes Park with the returning Ivan De Jesus, Jr. to lead the charge for the ‘Topes. The Chasers have their own power trio: Pitcher Mike Montgomery, infielders Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas. The pundits have been targeted these three players to not only boost the former O-Royals (and newly christened Werner Park), but to hopefully arrive at the big club in Kansas City to get them out of the cellar. Keep your eyes on these three soon-to-be-Royals.
10:05PM – LAKE ELSINORE, CA: They’re talking Three-Peat in the South Bay. The San Jose Giants owned the California League for the past two seasons and everyone is pointing to them to actually take a third title in 2011. This speaks volumes as to the job the Giants have done in the draft and minor league free agency to cultivate future talent up in San Francisco. For example: Buster Posey and Tim Lincecum. The Giants, starring top draft picks Gary Brown and Zach Wheeler, open up their defense of the Cal League championship down in the Perris Valley near the shores of Lake Elsinore – at one of the best minor league ballparks I ever been to! This should be a good season in the Cal League.
I’m certain I’m missing a whole slew of prospects. But, hey, it’s a larger field that’s coming on line tomorrow. This should be an exciting year down on the farm.
A Rivalry Gone Wrong (Part 2)
I don’t know who Bryan Stow is. Yet, anyone in baseball might know of him – or someone like him. He is a true baseball fan – one who takes the road to support the team he loves.
He came down to Los Angeles with a couple of his friends to enjoy his beloved World Series champions as they begin their defense in enemy territory: Dodger Stadium.
He knew the risks of going to Chavez Ravine on Opening Day. It certainly has changed since I was a kid – people getting there early, grilling in Elysian Park prior to the game. It’s different now.
What hasn’t changed is the disrespect towards the enemy. That manifested in what I described in my last post. Stow is still in critical condition and in a coma as we speak.
Both Dodgers and Giants fans are trying to find ways to both help out Stow and his family to get through this ordeal. The Giants already contributed $10,000 towards the fund set up for Stow and have dedicated their home opener to him. His employers in San Jose will collect additional monies at the gate of AT&T Park prior to the Giants home opener.
Why am I still on this topic? Because I am asking one thing from 30 MLB ball clubs, and every Minor and Independent league team in North America one thing: Check your stadium and perimeter security plans very carefully. As pointed out by some Dodger fans, pre-game security is fine. It is post-game security that seems to be lacking in various venues. That is where you will find the most trouble – including the events of last Thursday at Dodger Stadium.
Here in Minneapolis, there are some safety concerns as close as across the street from home plate at Target Field. With a few homeless shelters either across the street or within blocks of the ball park, a Greyhound bus station attached to the A Ramp, groups of people along 7th Street down to Nicollet Mall and nearby Hennepin Avenue and other partiers in the Warehouse District and North Loop, fans coming out of Target Field may be at risk of being hassled – especially at night.
I know that the Minneapolis Police Department, along with the Downtown Improvement District, the Hennepin County Sheriff and the security working the ABC Ramps for the City of Minneapolis, has downtown covered. There is a police station on 4th Street between Hennepin and First Avenue North in case you need it! However, that is not to say things can happen – but you have access to help (including Metro Transit police who are patrolling the heavier used bus and light rail stops downtown) when it happens after you leave a Twins game.
There is simply no excuse for not having enough security and law enforcement around to protect fans and the ballpark around the clock. Again, I urge every ball park in baseball – on every level – to revisit your security plan and do something to ensure the safety of your patrons. Even if that means keeping your security detail working until the last person leaves the parking lot.
I ask you to do this in Bryan’s name. It would be appropriate to do so.
A Rivalry Gone Wrong (Part 1)
There is one Opening day story that I needed time to digest.
After the final out of the Dodgers-Giants game at Chavez Ravine, three fans from Northern California were heading back to their vehicle in Parking Lot 2. They came down to Dodger Stadium to celebrate their World Championship ballclub on Opening Day, but were coming home a bit disappointed after the Dodgers won, 2-1.
Soon, two male Dodgers fans out followed them to their vehicle. These fans could have been anyone, but they were loaded for bear – shouting at them with expletives and anti-Giants chants. What transpired afterwards was uncharacteristic of baseball fans – regardless of where they live or whom they root for.
The three Giants fans were physically attacked as they arrived at their vehicle in Lot 2. One of the trio, Bryan Stow, has been in critical condition in a coma at a nearby Los Angeles hospital. A paramedic from the San Jose area, Stow took the brunt of the physical attack by these two male Dodger fans – suffering head injuries upon impact of kicking by the attackers.
The two suspects have been identified, but are still on the loose. The Los Angeles Police Department released sketches of the suspects, two Latino males. A reward of $25,000 has been posted for information leading to the arrest of these suspects.
The story could have stopped there. It hasn’t. This is not just a story about a rivalry gone badly amongst fans. There’s much more to this than just a fan from out of town lying in hospital in a coma after a moment of stupidity concluded on Opening Day.
For one, the casual observer must understand that the Dodger-Giant rivalry is as entrenched as the Red Sox-Yankees, Cubs-Cardinals and any other rivalry in the game and throughout sports. There are people who take this particular rivalry seriously. The potential for violence have always been present between these two clubs – the Roseboro-Marichal incident, for example – and it does spill into the fan base.
However, a rivalry is no excuse for extreme belligerence. Baseball is a place where you bring the family, your loved ones and your friends. There’s no amount of alcohol, weed or any other substance taken prior (or at) the game that will stop some idiot from calling out another person in the stands and starting something that would put a mark on their future.
An unfortunate turn of events in this incident was a rash of stereotypical commentary by fans inside and out of Southern California. Since the suspects happen to be Latino, you could imagine the racism that poured out in the moments after the Los Angeles Police Department released information on them. “Thugs” and “gang bangers” are what I read and heard not only about these suspects, but also of a larger and integral fan base boosted from the days of Fernando Valenzuela’s arrival to the big club.
To set the record straight, Los Angeles was once ruled by Spain, then Mexico before the U.S. expanded to the Pacific. The Latino community remains an integral and vital part of the Southern California community – producing great leaders, artists and athletes for the world. If we allow this racial stereotyping to characterize Dodgers fans attending the games and financially supporting the ballclub – then you made a larger incident out of this than it should.
Furthermore, is Dodger Stadium safe after a game? In 1982, I attended a game there with a friend and had a Giants jersey on. I recalled the incident in a previous post earlier this year. It continues to serve an example that, truly, this is not an isolated incident (and my antagonist was Caucasian and heterosexual, BTW). It used to be that Giants fans were more violent than Dodger fans – especially at Candlestick. As we seen in various locations (namely The Bronx and Philadelphia) – a newer ballpark will do wonders to hooliganism in baseball. That is by scale, of course.
It did come as a shock when Dodger fans recently pointed out the lack of security after the game at the Stadium. If security details were prevalent on the property and the perimeter prior to the first pitch, what happens if they’re not around afterwards? Do they go home like everyone else? Is that how Frank McCourt pay these people? Keep in mind, there’s a lot of acreage to cover in Chavez Ravine, it would make sense of security remained a couple of hours after the game is over – as in most places around the country.
This has been a wake-up call for all of us who attend games and would rather have the best experience from start to finish. Would it quell the rivalry? There are still fans that will hate the other side, but understand now the line between being hooligans and manifesting that hooliganism into violence – verbal, physical or otherwise.
It is my hope that the LAPD catch these guys, that Bryan Stow recovers from his condition and the Dodgers (and any ballclub with a similar situation) address security issues at the Stadium. Perhaps a greater lesson for all of us to keep our passions for the game and the teams we love alive, but understand its limits upon our fellow fans.
It is worth repeating that violence is never the answer – no matter how it is manifested and to whom it is directed to.



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