Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Arizona Fall League Photos and Videos


Dustin Ackley


Dustin Ackley



Tony Sanchez Pittsburgh Pirates


Jason Rice - Boston Red Sox

Jason Rice Boston Red Sox


 


Jason Rice Boston Red Sox




Rice Pitching Video






Jose Iglesias Boston Red Sox SS



Jose Iglesias Boston Red Sox SS








Jose Iglesias Boston Red Sox SS





Jose Iglesias Boston Red Sox SS

Jose Iglesias Boston Red Sox SS


Jose Iglesias Boston Red Red Sox SS















Sunday, December 12, 2010

AFL and Mattingly's Impact

The summer ended and I thought that was where my baseball adventure would come to a screeching halt until spring.   Unknown to me at the time, you can watch baseball in Arizona almost 12 months out of the year.  I had heard about “Fall Ball” in Phoenix but had no details about where to get information about it or if it was even accessible for fans.  I remember searching the internet for several days until I stumbled across Arizona Fall League (AFL), an off-season league owned and operated by Major League Baseball which operates during the fall in Arizona. 

The first league game kicked off on Tuesday, October 12, 2010, just 6 weeks after the Tucson Toros season ended.  Six teams made up the league and I was enthusiastic about the opportunity to see these players at the start of their careers.  As I was still only 6 months into learning about baseball, I thought AFL was a great way to learn about baseball as I call it “from the beginning.”  In a way, I was also starting from the beginning, with a new outlook on my personal life following my divorce 7 months earlier.

I made it to 15 AFL games over the 6 weeks including several mid week night games in which I was like a rock in a sling shot up the I-10 on the 2 hour drive each way.  Making it to work at 8am at times was difficult, but as the days progressed and I attended more games, baseball was affecting my work in a very positive way.  Watching the guys play ball and imaging each of them had a dream of making a name for themselves was starting to rub off on me.  I was starting to dream big too and I was getting more clarity around my work goals and my work started to become more meaningful. 

The managers and coaches at AFL intrigued me.  With one year of managerial experience and 5 years in supervision, I was constantly thinking about what these guys were telling their own teams and I was starting to see some parallels.  How were they winning and was that the most important thing?  Don Mattingly coached a team named the Phoenix Desert Dogs.  During one of the games, he had to forfeit in the 7th inning because he ran out of pitchers.  He caught a lot of slack as you can imagine.  Forgive me, I don’t know the exact details, however I do remember hearing that pitchers in this league can only throw a certain number of pitches or should only throw a certain number of pitches so they don’t get injured.  The number of pitches had been exceeded in the game and Mattingly was not going to entertain getting a guy hurt by continuing to let him throw the ball – check out this link for more specifics http://espn.go.com/blog/los-angeles/dodger-thoughts/post/_/id/9199/the-don-mattingly-non-incident

Don Mattingly's experience forced me think more about my leadership skills and the impact I was having on my claim adjusters.  I wondered if I always put their needs first as Mattingly had for his guys during that game.  I questioned if winning was the most important thing and what was considered a win. 

Speaking of Mattingly, this is one of my favorite pictures that I took during AFL at the Scottsdale Stadium.


Photo by Tamara Swindler

Monday, November 22, 2010

At the suggestion of a new friend, I felt compelled to start a blog about my baseball story and how I came about finding a love for life again through baseball.

In April of this year, I found myself divorced after 14 years of marriage.  I was lost and for the first time in my adult life I was alone with lots of time to spare. 

I had heard an ad on the radio on a Monday in mid-May about fireworks on Friday at a local ballpark after a baseball game.  I recall thinking all week about how much I'd really like to watch fireworks, but how would I endure sitting through a baseball game!  A game I knew nothing about...a game I had cursed the previous summer because my then husband had spent hundreds of dollars on a baseball cable package where you can watch every live game as it plays out on television.

Friday arrived and as I entered the stadium at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson there was an excitement in people's faces.  There were a couple of players signing autographs in the breezeway near the entrance to the stands and I remember thinking that was really cool.  I had purchased my box seat ticket for $10 and sat behind homeplate by myself.  At the end of the game, the announcer reminded fans to stay for the fireworks show and he was excited to tell the crowd to return on Saturday night as the team was going to play again.   I had no intent to sit home alone that weekend so I purchased my ticket for Saturday's game through ticketmaster when I got home that night.

Saturday nights game intrigued me.  Lots of fans, lots of people, more so than the prior night.  But I still had no idea what was going on in the game.  I liked watching the 3rd base coach give hand signals to the runners and spent the game trying to decifer what he was doing.  I sat close enough to hear the batter exchange words with our catcher.  There was a group of people who had attended the previous night and I remembered them because an older man was telling the batter for the opposing team to take his bat and go home to his "mommy" and I thought that was funny.  

At the end of Saturday's game, an announcement was made for fans to return on Sunday - it was $1 hot dog day.  I felt compelled to return.  Sunday then turned  into Tuesday.   

I attended 24 home games this summer at our local ball park.  My interest in baseball grew as I met more people involved in the sport and the baseball experience.  I read the book Moneyball and I was hooked.  I rode the booster bus across the desert from Tucson to Yuma on one of the hottest days of the summer on July 3rd - to watch baseball who knew!  This summer I made it to Fenway, a ballpark where the excitement is so loud you can't carry on a conversation with the person next to you and it's ok, it's acceptable.  It's part of the experience.  Fenway, a place where I grew up just 20 miles outside of, yet never had a desire to step foot inside the stadium.   Fenway was a blast, but I have to admit I was anxious to get back to Tucson where I could see and hear the plays close up.  I had to learn as much as I could about this game and I was starting to recognize the local players names and the positions they played.  I started to come alive and I was on my way to finding myself again through a passion for the game.