I’ll have to preface this by tipping my cap to the St. Louis Cardinals. I’ve never rooted for a team other than the Padres, never had more than one team. Though I did root for the Giants (or to be more specific, Bruce Bochy, Tim Flannery and a handful of dear friends who love the Giants just as much as I love the Padres) during the 2010, 2012 and 2014 playoffs.
Yet there was a time where I was on the verge of buying a Cardinals hat. No excuses, but this was during the Werner-era fire sale AND Axl Rose had also taken to wearing one on stage. Looking back, I think Tony Gwynn was the ONLY reason I didn’t just go ahead and do it. And it should come as no surprise that #19 factored in the massive respect for the Cardinals organization and fans. Just one hit away from 3,000 and on the road, Tony stepped to the plate to a standing ovation every at bat.
These weren’t trash talking, fair weather idiots at Busch Stadium, these were BASEBALL fans who cherished all that is good in the game. In later years I looked forward to the Cardinals coming to town. I can’t count how many times we had swept a team and some of their fans would get in my face and say “Padres suck!”.
I had heard it from nearly every team in the league after we had just beat them. And of course, the fans of teams who may have won a World Series or two would start a conversation only to interrupt every reply with “How many rings you got?!” much like the semi-literate Raider fans used to back when I actually gave a crap about football.
Never once heard such a thing from a Cardinals fan. Yet more than once I heard “good game” after a rare occasion in which we beat them. Also resonating tonight is the conversation I had at the 2016 Home Run Derby with a kid half my age, wearing a Stan Musial jersey. And of course I’ll never forget the good-natured ribfest between myself, two elderly female Padres fans and two Cardinals fans; each of whom were about the size of two offensive lines. Not two linemen, two lines. Just good fun at the old ballgame and St. Louis fans knew and still know how to do it better than most.
HOWEVER, there was always a small part of me that would cringe when I would hear about the Cardinals. What self-respecting Padres fan wouldn’t? It was Cal Ripken breaking Lou Gehrig’s record which brought me back to Major League baseball and it was the Moores/Lucchino/Towers trifecta which brought me back to Padres baseball in 1996. Ironically, it was a Cardinals fan who literally got me into the game in 1998 and another Cardinals fan who led me for many years after.
But until tonight, my rear end still stung from that sweep in 1996. I think I still have broom marks from 2005. And even though we finally won a playoff game against them, 2006 wasn’t much better.
So began the drought. Until now. As little as we are used to being in the playoffs, we Padres fans are historically not used to being regarded as one of the best teams in the majors. Yet that’s exactly where we find ourselves this weekend.
And of course, we can’t be there. At least, not in person. But that’s the great thing about being there in spirit. Because when you’re there in spirit, you can be everywhere.
Earlier today I thought of Ken “Chicken Man” Olinger; who was such a fixture along the first base line at the Murph he became part of Tony Gwynn’s daily routine. Of Frank and Barb Glenski; who traveled so well they toured the Great Wall of China with Kevin Towers when our local nine played an exhibition series in Beijing. I thought of Opening Day 1996; when Ken Caminiti knocked me over and picked me up in one motion as he was walking out of McGregor’s, neither of us looking where we were going. I shudder to think how many of my bones would have been broken had he been walking a little faster. I think of the night in that same bar as I sat with Bruce Bochy and Goose Gossage; drinking Coors Lights and talking duck hunting on the Rio Grande.
I think of my fellow 1998 rookie coworkers Carly, Courtney and Kerry; who acted like giggly little schoolgirls when Archi Cianfrocco walked by. And yes, I think of how I was ten times goofier than all three combined when moments later; Tony Gwynn, Steve Finley and Davey Lopes rounded the corner.
I think of master tailgater Akira Edamitsu, who used to show up for games at six. AM! Also of Dave “Faithkeeper” Moore and Al “Batman” Price, who had such a flashy tailgate spot set up, I think it led to them holding the record of drinks bought for them at McGregors from visiting players.
And yes, I from time to time I unfortunately about my first solo on field assignment; which involved a grass skirt, coconut bra and a hairy chested man. Of course, not all the memories were glamorous. Some of them were downright enchanting. Like the time I got on the elevator and wondered why the hell they were playing the Dodgers broadcast, only to look behind me and see Vin Scully stepping onto the elevator behind me. Or a few years later on the very same elevator; where on my left stood Junior Seau and on my right stood Tony Gwynn.
Yes, this kid from Chula Vista has some memories and some stories. Some of the stories are warm and fuzzy; like the many times I made the day for a family; one moment they’re in the upper deck, the next moment mom and dad see their kids storming the field with the Pad Squad. Getting paid every day to create memories that will last a lifetime. And best of all, the knowledge of how one kind act could resonate for years, even decades. Such things happen in baseball; so many things off the field only preciuous few are even aware of.
On the surface, it appears that a love for the game is what drives people like me; the few who are in the position I held for over a thousand games. But at least for myself, it’s the love of the game that gets me there. What really drove me was discovering the ability to create such memories for others, and having literally thousands of opportunities to do it every night.
I often wonder about those fans; the ones I met only once. The family who was having a bad day because the youngest was having an even worse day; and the smiles on all their faces after a quick radio call to the Swingin’ Friar changed the day for them all. The elderly woman who showed up three hours early for an event, on a 95 degree day; who ended up spending most of that time in the ticket office, a small cooler of water bottles by her side courtesy of some kid from Chula Vista. Or the little one who looked like the Pepsi girl with the Joe Pesci voice. What was her name again? Anyway, if anyone sees her, tell her Brown and Gold is a little more stylish than Black and Orange. Even in October.
I know this might sound a little rambling, but give the kid a break, will ya?! Let’s see you try and consolidate a thousand games and a million memories into a two-page blog! Seriously though, I can't recall when more memories flowed in such a short time.
Sometimes as I’m thumbing through the ol’ memory bank I wonder Where Have All The Good Times Gone…
Today, the answer is Right Now…