Results tagged ‘ the baseball collector ’

Could this be the end of the 2008 season in LA??

With tonight most likely being the last baseball game in Los Angeles for the 2008 season it seems that last weeks ALDS games were the last for me in 2008. I was hoping to make it to at least one NLCS game but things just haven’t allowed that. What is even worse is the fact that there have been great seats available at FACE VALUE for each game in LA!

As I heard all the time growing up in Chicago ….. THERE”S ALWAYS NEXT YEAR!!

I just hope that the Angels sign Teixeira and the Dodgers sign Manny since that will make “Ballhawking” much more fun in 2009!!!

The beginning of the year was slow for me because again I was working for a minor league baseball team. Finally in July I was able to get out to a few more games! I am definitely looking forward to next year because I think it will be a great year!

Right now I am working on my first book! I can’t let the details out right now but it is about 65% complete. I just need to add a few things and then shop it around. It should be pretty easy to get it picked up by a publisher as there have only been a few books of it’s kind ever published! So look for that to come out sometime after the first of the year!

It has been a tough year for me and everyone for that matter with all of the financial mess that the country is in thanks to former Rangers owner GEORGE W. BUSH. I don’t want to make this a political blog but THANK GOD he is on his way out!

During the winter I plan on Blogging a lot more here on MLBlogs and I will be going to the Winter meetings in Las Vegas and will be taking a lot of pictures and letting you know what goes on down there!

So keep coming back! I will definitely have a lot to say during the World Series and the Off Season!

Major League Ballhawk

JW

On my way to the Tonight Show to see Zack Hample!!

Hey everyone I am leaving right now to head over to the Tonight Show. It will be really cool to not only see the show but to finally meet Zack!

If anyone tapes the show let me know. I would love to get a copy!

I will let you all know what goes on when I get back!

Later

ALDS Game 2 Red Sox vs. Angels with “Ballhawking 101″ client David Y.

This is going to be short since the Angels are out of the playoffs and I am still frustrated that Aybar couldn’t get the damn bunt down!

I again arrived early in the morning at the stadium around 8am to find that only 7 other people were in line for tickets. After waiting a while and growing very impatient I found a pair of Field Box tickets. I then ran to McDonald’s and grabbed lunch and headed back to the stadium for autographs. 
Unfortunately it was basically a waste of time for autographs since all of the Red Sox players went in the back tunnel. The only guy to come in the front was Mark Kotsay. Awesome guy and really nice in fact on the workout day before the series started he even gave us some pointers on where the guys would come in. Although we already knew that info it was cool that he was trying to help us out!
Around 3:30 David called me and we met up in front of the stadium just before the gates opened. David had all of his camera gear with him so he could take pictures at the game. He even got a little video footage of me that I hope to get and put up here at some point.
As we got in I went down to my regular spot in the right field corner. Within the first 10 minutes of BP I snagged a ball hit by the Angels Kendry Morales. I am guessing that he has hit at least 3 or 4 of that balls that I have caught this year. David who was standing next to me was the recipient of that baseball. The next 35 minutes were very slow with hardly any balls being hit by the Red Sox into the corner. 
One thing that people have to learn is that once a ball is hit near you and you don’t get it turn around because another could be on it’s way towards you! Well it seems that I should have followed that rule because when BIG PAPI was in the cage he hit one ball over our heads and as we all watched the scrum for the ball another was hit and one hopped the wall right in front of me. It would have been an easy catch for sure!
The next time in the cage Ortiz sent a sinking liner into the right field corner that came right to me. I did have to lean way over and fend off some crazy kid that kept trying to push me out of the way. I basically boxed him out like a basketball player and scooped up the baseball.
So it was an OK night with me catching two baseballs. David took a lot of photos and learned a lot over the two days about how to position yourself to get baseballs and a lot about getting autographs. He seemed to be very pleased with the experience!
As we were about to leave I also snagged an autograph from former Angels pitcher Mark Langston!
Again I still have space available for National League Championship Series ( NLCS) GAMES 3, 4 & 5 of the NLCS for my “Ballhawking 101″ Ballhawk experience at Dodger Stadium. For just $399 you will learn all the tips and tricks of Ballhawking, get a $100 GUARANTEE that you will get a ball one way or another and I TAKE CARE OF TICKETS FOR THE GAME out of your fee!!

For more information email me at MLBALLHAWK@GMAIL.COM

Game 1 – ALDS – Red Sox vs. Angels @ Angel Stadium with “Ballhawking 101″ client David Y.


ALDS-1-2 026.JPG
On the Monday before the start of the ALDS I received an email from a baseball fan from Northern California. David contacted me because he wanted to go to the 2 ALDS games in Anaheim since he was going to be attending a conference down here.

We met up on Tuesday night to discuss the details of the week and to also head over to the Red Sox team hotel for a shot at getting autographs. While David had been to several Giants games he really had not chased autographs or baseballs. From what he told me his son had acquired a few autographs and baseballs but he was looking for a few more tips.

We spent about an hour and a half at the hotel and mall and we saw a handful of players however only a couple signed and they only signed one or two autographs. David did learn a few things that you should not do such as yelling foul and abusive names at a player just because he doesn’t sign and running after players like a crazed maniac. This is what a few of the autograph seekers did and it only hurts the chances of getting autographs.

ALDS-1-2 010.JPGWednesday morning about 8:15 I arrived at the ballpark to get us tickets. I expected to be far back in the ticket line however when I got to the ticket line there was only 1 person ahead of me! WHAT??? The ALDS against Boston and only 1 person in line for Day of Game tickets? That is CRAZY!! Oh well it worked out very good because we ended up with SUITE tickets. YES A SUITE!! It seems the Angels sales staff had not sold 2 Party Suites so they decided to make one avaialbe to individual ticket buyers.

On Wednesday night David had to be at the conference until 6pm. I was on my own for batting practice and and it was pretty bad. The Angels who usually hit a few balls down the right field line in the last 2 groups hit only 2 and they were not anywhere near me. The Red Sox came up and I was lucky enough to make a play on a slow roller hit down the line by J.D. Drew.

ALDS-1-2 005.JPGAs BP ended David called and said that he was outside the main gate. I walked over there and we met up and headed up to the Suite. Once we got to the Suite we were suprised to see food inside. I was told that there would only be food at an extra charge if we wanted it. Obviously before we started to eat anything we double checked to make sure it was complimentary and it was! HOW COOL!

We had Pizza, Hot Dogs, Popcorn, Cracker Jacks, peanuts and other cool things however there were no drinks :-(

The game was a pitchers duel until Jason Bay broke it open with a Home Run. After that is was just boring simply because the Angels could not do anything to get anymore runs across the plate.

In the 8th inning we headed down to the Field level to get behind the Sox dugout to try to get a ball after the game. Here are a few pics from the inning and a half we waited down there:

ALDS-1-2 035.JPG  If you look at the enlarged image of this photo the ball is just under the Umpire’s feet. It is hard to tell but I can assure you that is where it is!

ALDS-1-2 037.JPG

This is a picture of Paplebon coming in to Save the game for the Red Sox. At the end of the game he walked in with the final out ball in his glove and tossed it to the guy right next to me!

UGH!! I hate when that happens! Oh well tomorrow is another day! 

 

Thumbnail image for ALDS-1-2 042.JPGOn the way out we saw former Angels and Yankee pitcher Jim Abbott. Abbott signed some autographs, posed for a few pictures and then took off. Shortly after that we did the same!

On Thursday I spend a few hours at the stadium trying to get some more autographs for David and was lucky enough to get a few. Mark Kotsay, Justin Masterson, Gil Valasquz and one other autograph.

I will be posting my entry for Game 2 of the ALDS shortly! Keep watching!

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN TAKING PART IN MY “BALLHAWKING 101″ day at the Ballpark which INCLUDES TICKETS to an NLCS GAME check out the post below or go to http://mlballhawk.com and check out the link for “LET’S GO TO A NLCS GAME!”

Major League Ballhawk on MYSPACE

I am now on MYSPACE at http://www.myspace.com/majorleagueballhawk

For all of you that read my MLBlog please feel free to add me if you also have a MYSPACE account!!

I am new to MYSPACE so be patient with me as I am learning all the in’s and out’s as I go along! I will approve friend requests and comments as fast as I can!

Thanks

John

Mariners / Angels – Angels Stadium – 9/11/08 – 5 balls

337345.jpgAnother great night out at the BIG “A” for me!

Since the Angels clinched the division on Wed. tickets for the rest of the year are almost less than Minor League prices. $3 for almost every seat in the upper deck and $8 for most of the seats in the lower deck. I chose to simple go out and pay $3 to get in but I was only going to stay for BP (Batting practice).
The gates opened at 5:00 and I went to my usual spot in the right field corner. In the first 10 minutes of BP every choice I made was a bad one. Someone had beaten me to my regular spot. Instead of just staying in the spot to his right I moved around. Every time I changed my positioning a ball went to the spot I was just in. The kid that got my usual spot got 2 balls that I could have easily snagged. Then it was my turn with a roller hit down the line I leaned over the wall and stretched out to snag ball #1 hit by Kendry Morales. 
Shortly after that ball Morales hit another ball that slowly rolled towards the wall. It sat about half a foot from the wall and easily within reach if I leaned over the wall. I went over to the spot where the ball was and leaned over and scooped up my 2nd ball of the day. Shortly after I got it the Security guard comes over to me and says “You can’t lean over that far.” 
I responded to him with “Look, I have been coming here for 20 years and I know the rules.” He then proceeded to tell me that some things have changed. I had about a million things that I could have said but you don’t want to piss off a minimum wage security guard! Anyway, I have to admit he was cool since he gave away quite a few balls to fans both young and old. I know that he could lose his job for that but I won’t tell anyone that he did it. 

ichiro.jpg

Ball #3 came off the bat of Ichiro as he hit in the first group for the Mariners. Ichiro hit a nice fly ball into the corner near the foul pole that hit on the warning track and bounced into the seats where it hit a chair and rolled away from the guy chasing it and right to me.
About 3 swings after ball #3 was snagged Ichiro hit another fly ball down the right field line. For those of you that don’t know Angels stadium during BP in the right field corner you are looking directly into the sun. As this ball went up not only did I have to deal with the Sun but it was headed right at the foul pole. As it started to come down I lost it behind the pole and then in the sun. I stuck out my glove but the ball sailed past it, hit a seat and flew back onto the field.
Ball #4 was my second of the night hit by Ichiro and it came in his final round of BP. Ichiro launched another fly ball towards the foul pole in right. I was back a couple of rows in the seats and as it got closer I knew that it was going to hit close to the wall. The guy that had snagged a couple of balls that I should have had was right next to me as the ball came down. We both reached for it and thankfully it ended up in my glove!
My 5th and final ball of the day came off the bat of Tug Hullett. Tug is the son of former Major Leaguer Tim Hullett who played for the White Sox and Orioles. In fact some of the baseballs I caught in my younger days were hit by his dad at Old Comiskey Park in Chicago. Anyway, the ball that Tug hit went well over my head and I was just about to give up on it when all of the sudden I see it flying right back at me. It had hit a seat back and rebounded right at my head. I stuck up my glove and made the grab!
So for $3 and just staying for BP I did pretty well. I ended up with 5 baseballs of which 3 are almost brand new and good for autographs!
On a side note on Wednesday I went down to the stadium to get autographs. I hung out by the Angels parking lot and the only guy that stopped to sign was Chone Figgins.

  • 3 consecutive games with 4 or more baseballs

Stand Up To Cancer – Ralph Witt 09/15/1937 – 12/04/1985 – My father and My Hero!

A few nights ago all 3 of the major networks
participated in Stand Up 2 Cancer. The opening of the show came from US
Cellular Field in Chicago however to me it is still the New Comiskey Park. It
was probably one of the most emotional hours of my life. On December 4th,
1985 my father died of stomach cancer. The hardest part was the fact that he
had only found out he had cancer in late August of that year.

 

As a child I grew up going to baseball games in Chicago with
my family. It was thanks to my father that I became a “Ballhawk.” My father,
Ralph Witt, was a freelance photographer and a huge baseball fan. He was well
liked by the players that he came in contact with on the field and was friends
with some of them off the field.

 

In the mid 70′s he would take us to baseball games in
Chicago and Milwaukee. In fact my first memory of my father getting a baseball
was at County Stadium in Milwaukee. He caught a ball during BP off the bat of
Hank Aaron while holding onto my brother!

The bad part of that story is that a couple of years later
my brother and I needed a ball to play with and we new right where a baseball
was. We got the ball off the top shelf from our parent’s bedroom and took it
outside to play with it and then proceeded to lose it.

Fortunately our father was not that mad at us and only
yelled for a few weeks about it!

 In 1977 our family started going to White Sox games every
weekend as my father bought the weekend plan of season tickets. My father also became with Mike Veeck who was the son of White Sox owner Bill Veeck. Mike got my father press credentials so that he could take photos on the field. With that we were going to a ton of baseball games every summer.  That is when my obsession with baseball and chasing baseballs really began. Old Comiskey Park
in Chicago was truly our second home with us spending anywhere from 40-50
days/nights a summer there during the late 70′s and early 80′s. Then we ended up getting season tickets on both sides of town. At that point we were attending 65-90 games or more each year!

In August of 1985 my father was diagnosed with cancer and began his chemo and radiation treatments. He did not attend another game even though the White Sox made a gracious offer to him. The White Sox extended an offer to my father and our family to sit in the owners box however my father simply said no thanks. It seems as if he was afraid to go back to the stadium. 

I remember late in the 85′ season getting a ball hit by Darryl Strawberry at Wrigley Field. After the game I went to the hospital to see my father where he was undergoing some more tests and his treatments. I said to him, “Hey Dad, I brought you something for your birthday!” His birthday was only a few days away and I handed him the ball that I caught. I could see the tears well up in his eyes and it broke my heart to know that he might not ever see another game in person. 

As the time went by he got sicker and sicker, but the notes and letters that came in were awesome. At one point, Murray Cook, the GM for the Expos sent him an actual Major League Contract that had him on the disabled list. The reason given for him being on the DL was the torture of Chicago baseball teams coming so close and then falling apart. Murray Cook was a relative of our 5th grade teacher and he became friends with dad after setting him up with media credentials in 82 in Pittsburgh where he worked at that time.

On December 5th, 1985 my father passed away and a few days later we held the funeral. It was truly amazing to see all of the people that turned out. Well over 200 people came to the funeral and probably more to his wake. For the family the great thing was knowing so many people loved my father. Another really cool thing was the fact that the White Sox sent a wreath for his funeral as well as a couple of MLB front office executives. My father was 48.

My Dad is truly my HERO! It was really hard seeing him go through the ups and downs of treatment. He felt great one day and like crap the next but he knew that he had lived a good life and that if it was his time to go then that is the way it was!

 If you know someone with cancer take the time to find a charity to donate something to. Whether it is money or just taking the time to visit kids with cancer I hope that everyone realizes that Cancer affects everyone in some way!

For the rest of the season I will personally donate $10 for every ball that I catch and $50 for each Home Run that I might catch. I will make the donation in my fathers name to SU2C.org

I CHALLENGE ANYONE, players, MLBloggers, Front Office executives and even my friends and family to even make the smallest pledge of $1 for every ball that I catch the rest of the 2008 season!! I will add your donations to mine and it will all be sent in memory of my Father!!

Thank you and STAND UP TO CANCER!!


Fans Selling Milestone Home Run Balls Instead of Returning Them – What did I have to do with this?

Recently I was asked about selling home run balls. Actually the reporter, who is working on a story, asked me if I felt responsible for the boom in fans selling home run balls for cash and not  returning them to the players that hit them.

For a minute or two I looked at him like he was crazy. How can he ask me if I was responsible for this? He then pointed out that when I caught Sosa’s 61st Home Run on September 13th, 1998 is pretty much when the recent boom in selling Milestone Homers’ began. I though he was crazy and then I looked back as he told me about other milestone HR’s before I got Sosa’s 61st.                   

Tim Forneris, St. Louis Groundscrew member, got McGwire’s 62nd home run ball in 1998 he returned it. Deni Allen caught McGwire’s 60th home run that year and he also returned it. Allen did get to take BP with the Cardinals but still no cash.

A few of Sosa’s early home run balls were also returned for memorabilia or tickets or just the chance to meet him.

Then came September 13th, 2008 when Sammy Sosa hit his 61st and 62nd Home Runs. I will save the story about getting the ball etc for early September as the 10th anniversary of getting the ball is coming up. Anyway, Sosa hits #61 in the 5th inning off of Bronswell Patrick and it literally rolls right to my feet. I pick it up and the Chicago Ballhawks shove me into Moe Mullins’ van for safety.

dave_HRball.jpgShortly thereafter a local sports memorabilia dealer tells me that another sports collector wants to buy the ball for $10,000.  Are you kidding me?? So I head up to the firehouse to the payphone  and I call him. As I am talking to him there are a couple of reporters right there listening in on the conversation. In the newspapers the next day there it was …… Sosa’s 61st HR sells for $10,000.

The only problem was Sosa hit #62 later in the game and the guy that bought 61 from me had a message on his answering machine from the guy that ripped it out of Moe’s hands. He wants to sell it!! So now they don’t know what it might be worth. There wasn’t really any hesitation on my part to sell the ball even when they offered me $7,500 because I had gone to the game with only $8 in my pocket. Better than that I didn’t have to pay for a ticket of for parking!

A couple days later I was in St. Louis when McGwire hit #63. When John Grass ended up with the ball he immediately proclaimed that he was going to sell it to the highest bidder! We all know that there was a bounty of $1,000,000 dollars on the last home run he hit but would someone give the ball up for that? Obviously they did when it sold for over $3,000,000.

Yes, there was a bounty of 1 MILLION DOLLARS put out on the LAST home run that would be hit in 1998 long before it happened. However I was the basically the first person to sell a home run ball that season for a sizeable amount. After me almost every fan that caught another milestone home run ball has tried to make some money off of it.  

To me it was just funny to be contacted about this just after Griffey hit his 500th and essentially being told that I was partially to blame for fans becoming greedy when they catch a milestone home run ball.

The obvious arguments will come up on this one, I would love to hear everyones thoughts on this!

FIRE AWAY!

News and Notes – Closing in on 3,000 MLB balls, 5,000 total baseballs and that 100th Game HR

So my birthday was pretty much uneventful, no game, no ballhawking and not much else. So we are coming up on the end of the Minor League season and it looks like I might make 1 or 2 more games. Most likely Independant Golden Baseball League games but they are still professional baseball games so the balls count.

I am just 187 balls away from 3000. That could come next season as I have made the choice to NOT work in baseball in 2009. Ok so that may change and with the right job I might work in baseball but as of right now I intend on getting a job where I will be able to “Ballhawk” on a regular basis and reach 3000!

I am 83 balls away from 1000 at spring training games. That could be reached in just a week of spring training games. We will have to see if there is a trip to spring training next year.

I don’t really have any MiLB milestones coming up so I am working on figuring out the number of game home runs I have collected at Minor League Games. I do know that it is around 80 or so. I just have to check an old website where I kept track of all of that up to 2005. I have the totals from 2005 on. That number should be up in the next week or so!

I am just 148 baseballs away from 5,000 in my 31 years of Ballhawking! That is another one that should come next season. To me that is the biggest milestone to hit next year!

Last but not least there is the ever elusive 100th game home run. I got close on August 13th at Dodger Stadium so hopefully that is a sign that it is going to happen soon!

As of today here are my career totals

Career Totals
MLB Balls (RS)     2,813 
MLB Balls (ST)        917 
MLB Total             3,730
MiLB Balls            1,122
31 year total –      4,852 

MLB Game HR balls *99

 

Happy Birthday to ME – At 39 I am still a Kid at Heart!

So today is my 39th Birthday, nothing to get really excited about for sure. It just means that I am 1 away from the 40! Yes I know some of you might think it is a little crazy for a grown man to chase baseballs but it’s always good to keep that “KID at HEART” alive inside of us.

The great thing is that now I truly appreciate the smile on a kids face when you give him a baseball. That is a big reason that I still run around getting baseballs!

It’s funny to think that it was almost 32 years ago that I caught my first baseball at Old Comiskey Park in Chicago. Maybe this will be the week I catch game home run #100.

It’s got to happen sometime …… doesn’t it?

It would be nice to get it soon, who knows maybe I can retire … AGAIN?

 

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