Archive for April, 2024

The Boys of Summer – Our Florida Adventures at Spring Training – Part 4

The Boys of Summer – Our Florida Adventures at Spring Training – Part 4

Our fourth day involved packing up because we would be moving up the coast later that morning.  Our hotel luggage cart looked like we were running away from home.  With cool nights and hot days, it was a challenge to pack light.  To support our four road days, there were also bags of cookies, nuts and peanut butter pretzels as well as a cooler with luncheon meat, cheese and bottled water.  After the last haul to the car, as I waited for the elevator, a tall guy sprinted past me and down the hallway with a tall drink container in his hand.  The elevator arrived.  I peeked around the corner.  The guy was in the final stages of the fill.  “Would you like me to hold the elevator?”  Despite, the short ride, I did find out the telling athletic frame was indeed a player for the Minnesota Twins organization.  Alec Sayre was at the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels, the A affiliate of the Twins and on a rehab assignment from a right thumb fracture.  

Within ten minutes, Rick and I were on the road to Bradenton.  It was a beautiful day for the ride up the Florida Coast.  As we passed the exit for Port Charlotte, spring home of the Tampa Bay Rays, I remembered the years we attended spring training when the Texas Rangers were there.  Those were fun times especially the year I took my mom and she got to meet Nolan Ryan and Craig Reynolds.  When we got to the Bradenton area, we witnessed several intermittent groups of law enforcement vehicles thankfully going the opposite direction.  Things finally calmed down and the count was at fourteen which had passed us with sirens wailing and lights flashing!  Throughout that day, I asked around including a policeman on duty at the ballpark what might have been going on.  No one knew.  Maybe it was a practice drill for spring break the following week.

Our first stop was Pirate City, practice fields for the Pittsburgh Pirates.  Unlike most of the teams we visited, the ballpark for the games was five miles away.  We were welcomed by a couple of staff members and a security guard.  On the card table were handouts about the team.  I explained to the three that I had a friend that was coaching in the minors for the Pirates.  The security guard motioned us towards a walkway.  The complex had four practice fields that were named after Pirates Hall of Famers Roberto Clemente, Pie Traynor, Honus Wagner, and WIllie Stargell.  To my right was a group of players gathered around a picnic table studying a laptop and watching batting practice while another group of players rotated in the batting cage as two coaches looked on.  Neither of the coaches was Gary Green, former Olympian and shortstop for the Texas Rangers.  I paused near the table.  “Do any of you know which field Gary Green is on?”  I must have looked official with my coiled notebook dangling from my neck as I got an immediate answer.  “He’s at LECOM today for the game.”  I glanced at my watch.  The gates were opening in about forty-five minutes.  Since we weren’t sure about where the ballpark was or the parking situation, we headed to the ballpark. 

When we arrived at LECOM Ballpark, a line of fans was already wrapped around the building and we still had to find parking.  We did the block once and settled on fifteen dollars parking behind the left field fence.  “We’ll be fine unless someone hits a homerun,” I thought to myself.  As we stood in line, we people-watched the photographers and scouts going in an early entrance.  One fan walked by the line saying he was most impressed with the set-up at “Steinberger Stadium.”  I thought to myself, “George Steinbrenner must be rolling over in his grave.”  Once the gates opened, the line moved quickly since the stadium was no bags of any kind even clear ones.  I was getting quicker at the magnetometer with my “life” in four pockets and my baseball cap. 

According to an usher, the Pirates players would be coming in from a building outside right field.  When I got there, several fans of all ages were already gathered so I squeezed in by an elderly couple.  It was a good location as their grandson was a pitcher for the Pirates.  The odds were that he would be coming over to see them.  After several minutes, the players started trickling out from a building behind right field.  It was as though someone stepped on an ant hill as fans infiltrated the right field corner.  “Hey Mr. Honeywell!” a little kid next to me with an open marker and a ball shouted.  My guess was right.  A player with long dark locks proceeded to the grandparents.  After a brief visit with them, I interjected, “Is Gary Green coming out?”  “Who?”  I explained he was a coach for AA Altoona.  “Don’t know him” and he walked back to the clubhouse.  It turned out that Brent Honeywell was a free agent who was under the White Sox organization last year.  His status was an invitee to spring training. In other words, he knew no one with the Pirates!

As I patiently waited for more to come out, the field staff started positioning the batting cages in front of my vintage spot!  A savvy fan by me assured me that our little area was still where players could come up.  He was wrong as more big equipment was positioned.  We had to relocate down into a narrow corner.  As players stopped to autograph for the savvy fan, I would ask about Gary Green.  He was still inside.  I was just about to give up because the game was getting ready to start when I spotted two older guys looking like coaches coming out.  When asked about Green they pointed to two guys who had walked out in front of them.  By now Gary was halfway to the dugout.  By the time I weaved through the fans blocking the aisles, he was already in the dugout.  I took the five steps down to one end of the dugout.  Murphy’s law – he was at the other end.  Thank goodness for informalities at spring training.  I called out to one of the guys near my end.  “Could you please tell Gary Green that Carlotta is here?”  Success!  Gone were the long dark curls Green had the last time I saw him.  “It’s been a while,” he said.  I laughed.  “Try early nineties.”  I had less than a minute with him, but it was long enough to get a picture and tell him how I was working for a ball club. 

Our seats were about twelve rows up from the Pirates dugout.  They were playing Toronto and as in the other spring training games, the stars played five to six innings and then were replaced by the minor leaguers.  We got to see Honeywell pitch and he did not have a good outing, giving up two go-ahead runs in the eighth inning.  I felt bad for his grandparents.  The Pirates came back in the eighth inning with three runs and escaped with a 6 – 5 win!  Remember the parking lot?  It was a correct premonition.  Three homerun rockets were launched that afternoon!   After the game, I returned to my post at right field and got to meet TSung Che Chang, who had one of the home runs.  There was another small world moment when I met catcher Abrahan Gutierrez who knew Vassalotti.  When I messaged Michele our picture, he messaged back, “AB!  He’s a great guy.”  I laughed.  He had said same thing about Vassa. 

Our hotel was east of Bradenton in Lakewood Ranch near I75 which we were taking to Tampa the next morning.  The only restaurant near the hotel was Texas Roadhouse.  The parking lot was packed.  We did not have reservations so while Rick was parking, I found myself rotating on circles across from the hostess stand until I got to one saying “On Deck.”  As Rick came through the door, I had just moved to “Now Batting.”  Dinner was pretty good.  I had grilled shrimp with garlic lemon pepper and the best seasoned rice I’ve ever had.  Rick had a rib eye steak with a huge baked potato with the works.  We texted with Vassalotti during dinner pretending he was eating with us like a year ago.  Dessert was to go.  Once again, I negated the “good” main meal with dessert!   I had the homestyle apple pie and Rick went with a cheesecake with strawberry sauce and whipped cream.  “Tomorrow I’ll be better,” I promised myself. Really.
To be continued. 

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The Boys of Summer – Our Florida Adventures at Spring Training – Part 3

For day three of our baseball adventure, we headed west in Ft. Myers to Lee Health Sports Complex which was spring training home to the Minnesota Twins and year-round to the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels. After parking in front of the stadium, we proceeded to a small group of security guys as I needed to find out their bag policy for the game that afternoon.  I had used my clear bag at the two Boston games, even though the Red Sox still had a relaxed policy of a small purse and sealed bottle of water allowed.  It was a good thing I checked at the Twins complex as I found myself in a return trip to the car.  No bags were allowed – not even a clear one.  After re-organizing, it was amazing what all I could fit in four jean pockets and under my baseball cap!  I had to laugh as sometimes Rick would pawn off his program, purchased merchandise, rain gear, ballpark peanuts and glasses to my clear bag.  Not that day!  Our ponchos stayed in the car.  

The batting cages were adjacent to the stadium.  Several fans were peering through the chain link as one batter hit balls being thrown by a coach.  I recognized my former Red Sox fantasy baseball catcher immediately.   I turned to the man next to me.  “Is that Christian Vázquez?” I inquired.  “Yeah, but he doesn’t do any autographs or pictures.”  The fan was right!  Despite the clamors for Vázquez, he ignored everyone and eventually left the cage.  “See?  That’s what happens when you win a World Series!” the fan called out.   No one else came out so we headed to the Practice Fields. 

We spotted a group of players doing stretching on a field to the left of the walkway.  Straight ahead was the area where pitchers warmed up before heading to the practice fields on the right.  We started towards the pitching area and were met by a sign on the fence “Authorized Personnel Only.”  Instead, I went back to where they were stretching and leaned on a fence by the water cooler.  I hadn’t been there long when a gal named Asja Morello, the Assistant Athletic Trainer for the Mighty Mussels and a guy with a clipboard came over to refill bottles.  I chatted with the guy briefly about my friend, pitcher Michele Vassalotti.  I shared how the Twins tried to get him in a trade last June when he was in High-A Wisconsin, but the Brewers parted with Tanner Floyd instead.  Despite very good performances in the World Baseball Classic and European Championships last year and most recently with the Cardenales who went to the Venezuelan Championship, surprisingly he remains unsigned by any US team.  The Cardenales’ only win in the finals went to Vassalotti.  The guy with the clipboard planned to share the update at their next meeting. 

A few minutes later, a player came over.   “Hi!  What level are you?”  I asked.   “I’m AA Wichita,” he replied as he filled his bottle.   “Nice.  I work for an A club – the Carolina Mudcats.”  It turned out that one of his friends he grew up with in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, played for the Mudcats a couple of seasons ago.  I knew immediately who the friend was – Joe Gray Jr!  His dad, Joe Gray Sr. and I used to share high 5s every time his son launched a homerun at our games! Also attending our games was Justin Finn,  Joe’s financial advisor out of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.  The player smiled.  “Justin is my guy too!  I’m Regi Grace, Jr.”  Another small world moment but the talk ended.  It was time for Regi to get back to stretching.  I laughed as I started back to the stadium when I spotted several fans walking by the “Authorized Personnel Only” sign and proceeding into the restricted area.  Not me!

I met up with Rick at the security checkpoint.  As I approached the magnetometer, I emptied my pockets of anything that might compromise my walkthrough.  When I collected my cell phone, Canon pocket camera, ID/wallet on a metal belt loop clip and car keys on another belt loop clip, I whispered to the same security guard from our initial arrival. “It sure would have taken less time to screen my clear plastic bag” and winked at him.   As in the previous two days, I saw a scout I knew from Mudcats visits.  This game it was Cory Melvin, former scout with the Brewers and now with the Yankees.  I also met Jose Almonte who scouted for the Marlins.

The former World Champion Atlanta Braves were the visiting team and got off to an exciting start in the top of the inning.  The third batter, Braves Matt Olson, launched a 418 foot home run which scored Michael Harris II who was on base.  The Twins answered with their own arsenal; three homeruns, two in the fourth inning by Ryan Jeffers and Will Castro followed by one in the fifth, compliments of former Guardians Carlos Santana.   Rick moaned what could have been if Santana had stayed with his team.  We also saw one of Vassalotti’s teammates from Team Italy, Braves David Fletcher. He had an infield single and a stolen base. Final of the game was the Twins edging the Braves 4-3.  After the game, we took the walkway above the bullpens around the ballpark.  Beyond center field, the walkway overlooked a small pond with an ominous sign about feeding and harassing alligators!

For our last night in Ft. Myers, Rick chose Two Meatballs in the Kitchen for dining. The place was packed since some restaurants in the area were closed Mondays and it was very noisy.  There was no doubt that they served Italian food as the place reeked of garlic.  We both had a house salad of Romaine, mixed greens, olives, cucumbers, croutons, carrots, celery, tomato with a house Italian dressing.  I decided on Luigi’s Favorite Pasta.  It was baked rigatoni, a meatball, ricotta, and Bolognese sauce, topped with mozzarella.  The plate was much larger than a dinner plate and atop the rigatoni was a single gigantic meatball resting on the pasta and sauce.  The meatball was almost the size of my knife blade!  Rick had the Linguine with Clams sautéed in fresh garlic and olive oil.  Our dessert was the other half of last night’s carrot cake.  I could feel the pounds growing on me and vowed to be more disciplined the next day! 
To be continued

Christian Vázquez in the batting cage

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