Daily Archives: July 26, 2008

Getting Schooled

I like this! The Saints fans are coming in full force (OK, there’s just two of them so far, but that’s a good start) and calling me out for my last blog, in which I may have insulted them because I said they’re only casual baseball fans.

Let me just clarify a couple things:

1) Yes, I did sit in general admission. But one of my major hang-ups is on people who arrive to baseball games late and spend the first three innings getting up for concessions, to use the restroom, etc. I just can’t stand that. It doesn’t bother me at movies or concerts or anything else — just baseball games.

2) The Eagle did not send me to St. Paul. I came on my own for a little vacation/work experience. I wanted to see what this St. Paul Saints thing was all about.

I’m a baseball elitist, what can I say? I tried to get people around me talking about baseball by calling my friend and talking about Cliff Lee’s performance Friday night against the Twins. There were people in Twins gear around me, but they wouldn’t bite. I just wanted to talk about baseball. With somebody. Anybody. But I guess I didn’t look in the right places.

By the way, the commenter aabfan runs a great American Association website, appropriately named aabfan.com. Definitely worth checking out if you have time. I go there a lot and I’m sure all the Saints fans are ripping me on the message boards there for calling them casual fans. But I like that we’re talking about this, I like that I have some out-of-state readers, and I’m glad to be talking baseball with somebody.

Keep it coming, Minnesota. But keep it casual.

Misadventures in Minnesota

It’s 12:28 a.m. Minnesota time (I’m assuming we’re still dealing with Central time), and I’m sitting in Room 224 of the Super 8 in St. Paul trying to hold onto the slight bitterness I developed after attending my first-ever St. Paul Saints home game. I want to make sure my true feelings come across in this post, even though I’ve been awake for the last 19 hours and I’m running on empty.

First of all, let me get this out of the way: Whatever the Saints are doing — it works. People pack their park, Midway Stadium, and it’s a better parking-lot atmosphere than the Wingnuts or any Wichita pro sports team could possibly ever imagine or attain.

I came with my boys Jeremy and Asa, making the 10-hour trek today from Wichita for a couple weekend games before the Wingnuts return home on Sunday. I don’t think we knew exactly what to expect, but it’s safe to say that we didn’t expect a parking lot full of tailgaters. Not just a parking lot — most of the stadium’s surrounding area was filled with people playing games, cooking out and just chilling out. It was amazing.

So that’s out there. The Saints are the flagship, marquee independent baseball franchise. No one can take that from them and no one probably ever will grasp that title away. I just want to make that perfectly clear.

But there’s a reason I qualified the good atmosphere by limiting it to the parking lot. My friends, when I got into the stadium, I realized that this was not baseball. This was a circus that happened to also be hosting a baseball game. No one in the crowd, I don’t think, was actually there to watch baseball. Overheard in my section: “This is the St. Paul Saints, right?” and “Oh, it was a hit-and-run” after a 3-2 pitch with two outs. No, it wasn’t a hit and run. It was a full-count two-strikes pitch.

I’m all for on-field promotions to draw in the casual fan. But there are two problems with how St. Paul approaches this: 1) there’s a promotion EVERY SINGLE HALF INNING! And 2) I don’t think St. Paul has anything but casual fans. I sat in a bleacher section full of people and didn’t hear a single conversation about the game going on or about baseball in general. People came in late and didn’t know where they were supposed to sit, and the couple in front of me took PDA to a very annoying level.

I’ll admit to being a baseball purist. I love THE GAME — it has always outweighed the people playing it, the fans, the atmosphere — everything. Nothing is bigger than THE GAME. So yeah, I’m coming from a place probably not very many people can relate to. Am I saying I didn’t enjoy myself? No. I did. Because I watched the game and blocked out all the shenanigans around me.

What’s wrong with just marketing baseball? I realize it’s “just” independent baseball and St. Paul is dealing with a major league team right up the road in Minneapolis, so the Saints have to do something to set themselves apart. So they go for gimmicks. They’re owned by Mike Veeck who has showmanship in his blood. I get it. I really do. But I’m going to remember Blake Gailen’s 7 RBI performance more than I am a chicken-toss during the middle of the 3rd inning.

And while we’re at it, what’s the point, St. Paul, of dogging a player on the opposing team when that team is laying a 12-2 whipping on you? Chris Colton got the “Participant of the Game” award after going 0 for 5 with a strikeout on Friday, but his performance didn’t really affect the game too much. And it would have been 11-2 if a Saints outfielder hadn’t dropped an easy pop-up hit by Colton, which allowed him to reach base and later score. I’m just saying.

I had fun. I really did. I realize baseball games aren’t really about baseball anymore. That’s sad to me, but I’ll get over it. I’m keeping my pure heart, though.