Sportswriter of the year 2010

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SEQUIM GAZETTE

B-2 • Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Take me out to the ballparks — all of them! Baseball aficionados like to say that their sport is the national pastime. I like to claim some sort of membership in that group. However, on behalf of all of those who love the game, I’d like to clarify. It’s watching baseball that is the national pastime, not playing. We’re pretty good at talking a good game and postulating which batter or fielder or pitcher or era was better than another between innings or pitching changes. And no matter what any baseball fan tells you, where you see a ball game matters. I started my little love affair with the game of baseball back in the early 1980s when my folks took me to San Diego Padres games. I don’t remember much, only that we cheered for such baseball greats as Kurt Bevacqua (who, according to Tommy Lasorda, couldn’t hit water if he fell out of a boat) and Sixto Lezcano (who, surprisingly, had 10 toes, five on each foot) at old Jack Murphy Stadium. No longer home to the Padres, it’s now home to the NFL’s Chargers, college football’s San Diego State University football and the Big 3 Auto Parts Exchange show. When my family moved to Washington, D.C., I became an Orioles fan. Being a shortstop in Little League, my hero

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK Michael Dashiell defaulted to one of the game’s greats, Cal Ripken Jr. We’d sit in old Memorial Stadium and yell at Cal to snag grounders — and he’d comply. That stadium was demolished in 2001 and the Orioles play in nearby Camden Yards. And years later, when my family moved back to the left coast, I became a Mariners fan. Games at the Kingdome were, well, ugly in the early going. You try rooting for Rey Quinones, Ken Phelps and Scott Bradley each game. I hear they officially counted as Major League games, although a late-season, Mariners-White Sox battle typically drew fewer than than 6,000 fans per game (in 1986, Seattle was dead-last in the American League in attendance). Since then, the Kingdome’s been demolished, too. I realized every ballpark of my youth has been razed

Jim Dries celebrates his induction into the Stadium Hall of Fame with family: his wife, two children and four grandchildren, Photo courtesy of Stadium Hall of Fame/Jim Dries next to a statue of Dodger great Roy Campanella. or traded to some football organization. Yikes. A few weeks ago I got a chance to visit a couple of ballparks on a family trip to St. Louis and Milwaukee. I started to think about how tough to would be to see all of them, to be able to claim to have been to every major league park in the country. I began to wonder how many people could make that claim. I’d read about these baseball fanatics who’d race across the country and try to do a ballpark each day or all the ballparks in 50 days, and while that certainly seems like a lot of fun, it’s not really my dream. But I would like to see every ballpark I can before I die. With that in mind, I got an interesting e-mail the other day from a guy from Sequim named Jim Dries who claimed he’d done just that — visited every major league park in the land. And that he’d just been inducted into a Hall of Fame for the effort. I simply had to talk to this guy.

‘Abandoned’ fan finds a home

Hard to beat the view you can get at Busch Stadium. The arch is just a quick walk away. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell

Folks in St. Louis love their Albert Pujols. Seriously. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell

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“It was going to be an accidental goal,” Dries tells me, reclining in his sunlight-filled living room in a home not far from the cliffs overlooking Dungeness Spit. I say, sure, who can afford that? I look up at his bookcase and see rows and rows of baseball books. This is a real fan, I think, not just a guy showing that he can foot the bill for a bunch of plane tickets. Dries grew up in Iowa, where his mother and her family were big Brooklyn Dodgers fans. His father passed along to Jim a hero: Ted Williams. Dries began to follow the Splendid Splinter, too, not just for his baseball acumen but his work with children. When the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1957, Dries

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I got a note from him just last week that he got last-minute tickets to see the Mariners at Safeco on Oct. 1 and sat 13 rows behind home plate. He got into a conversation with a fan from Tokyo who was in Seattle for three games to see a Mariner — Griffey, not Ichiro. While Ted Williams remains his all-time favorite player, Dries says he likes Ichiro, the Japanese sensation in Seattle, and the Yankees’ Derek Jeter. But he’s clearly a bigger fan of the Despite a closed roof, Miller Park gets plenty of light from game. He walks me into his those muddled Milwaukee skies. The park, like Seattle’s Safeco Field, has a retractable roof option. And, like Seattle’s baseball memorabilia room and I nearly have a heart atMariners, the Brewers have a retractable offense option. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell tack. The wall perpendicular to this vaulted ceiling is litersaid he couldn’t follow them, him 13 years. With minor ally covered with hats. Yanthat he felt “abandoned” by league stadiums and fields, kees hats. Reds hats, Pirates them. Eventually Dries and he can boast of more than 60 hats. Cardinals hats. Orioles hats. You get the idea. parks. family moved to New York. I’m blown away, partly Nine years ago, Sports “The dreaded Yankees became the beloved Yankees,” Travel and Tours started a because I’m in awe of it all program with the Baseball as a fellow baseball nut, and Dries says with a chuckle. Dries and a friend would Hall of Fame to honor fans partly because I have my own take trips now and then, hit- completing the 30-ballpark stack of hats not yet mounted back at home. ting a string of ballparks on a major league gauntlet. I started collecting them “We’ve been taking fans minivacation when they had the time, but there was no hint to ballparks for many years,” to remember certain games of trying to make it to all of said Jay Smith, president of or times and it’s grown to a them. Instead, the pair would Sports Travel and Tours, “and modest 10 or 12. But this, this hit a number of ballparks, the constant comment of our is ridiculous. He’s even got major or minor league, in a travelers is ‘I want to see ev- a World Series hat from the “Subway Series’” (Yankees certain geographic region. ery ballpark before I die.’” And so, with two-dozen versus Mets, 2000) with series Dries was content with that. Working as a teacher in other fanatics, Dries was pins on it. Some hats are from New York, Dries got an in- inducted into the Baseball minor league parks. In the same room, on teresting offer one day from Stadium Hall of Fame on July a teaching colleague who 25 in the Bullpen Theatre in another wall, are scoreboard started up a company doing the National Baseball Hall of numbers from the old Busch Stadium that Dries had exactly what Dries had been Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. At the ceremony, a staff displayed, proclaiming his doing, only providing the scheduling, tickets, hotel member of the Hall of Fame wedding anniversary date. stays and a “guide” for each welcomes the inductees and Nearby, a trophy case full of Smith awards each member signed baseballs and autoexcursion. Understandably, Dries a plaque and certificate in graphed photos and plaques. took the job offer. Forty years recognition of their achieve- Everywhere I turned, a bit of later, he still works for Sports ment. Their names then are baseball’s glorious past. It’s like Sequim’s Cooperplaced in a record book kept Travel and Tours. on file at the membership stown. Beautiful. Dries and I spend a few desk at the Baseball Hall of Hall-of-Fame more minutes talking, reFame in Cooperstown. class of 2009 “This is a way to honor calling our favorite in-perMore of an adult chaperson games. He one than a tour recounts a 2-0 guide, Dries helps Yankees win at fans complete a Boston’s Fenway unique baseball ■ His favorite stadiums Park in May 1979. experience with Safeco Field, Seattle. “I love the fact Safeco can Reggie hit a home what are essenbe covered if it needs to be.” run and Tommy tially baseball Camden Yards, Baltimore. “It broke the mold John beat Dennis “road trips.” For and … brought it back to the city.” Eckersley with a a package price, Petco Park, San Diego. “It’s very familythree-hitter. fans get to see two friendly.” I recall a recent to eight games in trip to St. Louis, PNC Park, Pittsburgh up to six ballparks watching Cardiin a little more Comerica Park, Detroit nal Adam Wainthan a week. The ■ His favorite stadium food wright throw a 1-0 “Eastern Loop” Safeco Field, Seattle — for the variety shutout against trip, for example, Dodger Stadium — for the Dodger Dogs Houston. sees 10 teams in Milwaukee — for the bratwursts Dries rememfive games in five ■ Stadiums he’d want to visit if they were still bers a game just ballparks in just standing before the 2008 six days, from Ebbetts Field, New York All-Star game, a Washington, D.C., Crosley Field, Cincinnati 4-2 pitcher’s duel to Philadelphia, Old Comiskey Park, Chicago between the Gito New York (both ant’s Tim LinceYankees and Mets) cum and the Cubs’ to Baltimore. Ryan Dempster at Wrigley Other tours include the the fans,” Dries says. Each member gets to pick a Field. Baseball Hall of Fame, the “I like a great, fast game,” All-Star game, a minor league team affiliation for induction. game, the Football Hall of Dries, for years a diehard Yan- Dries says. We could do this all day, but Fame and one — the Califor- kee fan, chose to be inducted nia Express tour — includes a as a Mariner. He now owns the I had other stories to write, so honor of being the first Mari- I thanked Dries and headed visit to the Hearst Castle. Other Sport Travel and ner in the Baseball Stadium back to the office. On the way back, I can’t Tours packages include bas- Hall of Fame. “When I moved here, I (de- help but wonder if I’ll be ketball, football and hockey cided to) root for the Mariners lucky enough to see every tours. In other words, a sweet and I support the Mariners,” ballpark in the country. That, he says. “But I still have a soft frankly, is a lot of hats. gig. Michael Dashiell is a Along the way, Dries spot for the Yankees. Sequim Gazette reporter. He picked up games in every macan be reached at 683-3311 jor league park, sometimes Not calling it quits visiting cities to see newly Now that’s he’s a hall-of- ext. 113 or via e-mail at constructed ballparks. It took famer, Dries isn’t letting up. miked@sequimgazette.com.

Jim Dries’ picks


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