Friday, August 19, 2011

A Trip to Wrigley Field


There are places we hope to travel to in our lifetime. For an historian, the Pyramids or Stonehenge might be a destination. For sports fans, traveling to a place like Fenway Park or Wrigley Field and seeing a baseball game is one we all put on our bucket list. With the old stadiums like Yankee Stadium and the Polo Grounds have recently or have been gone for a long time, leaving only two relics of baseball's golden age to remain amongst the 21st Century architecture of stadiums today.

My dad and I have always wanted to visit Wrigley and Fenway for a baseball game. This summer, we thought we would mark one off the list. To see a stadium like Wrigley takes you back to a simpler time of the early days of baseball with only minor alterations for the new century. As Notre Dame football fans, we see Wrigley Field as another stadium in the Midwest that displays the traditional days of sports, like Notre Dame Stadium still does for college football. As a friend of mine said, "it's like you traveled back in time."

The area around the neighborhood of Wrigleyville seems to always be abuzz when the Cubs play a home game. Regardless of the sub-par season the team is having, attendance out-does other cities with winning ball clubs. To think it has been over a century since this team has won a World Series title and the Cubs still bring out the large numbers for their games.

The view of the old-time scoreboard and the ivy wall are even more amazing than when you see it on television. The rooftop seating is a unique feature you don't see in other cities. The sound of organ music is a far cry from the recorded music you hear in most ballparks today. It reminds me of the days when Pittsburgh's Vince Lascheid would play before Pirate games at Three Rivers Stadium. The flags to display the division standings of the National League remind you of a time when the National League was the only thing that mattered to Cubs fans before Interleague came into play.

There were many people like us from out of town that wanted to see one of baseball's remaining shrines to the old days. For most of us, we hope that Wrigley and Fenway remain forever and long after we're gone. To remind those of the future about the history of this century old game.

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