{"id":41,"date":"2021-09-26T15:59:06","date_gmt":"2021-09-26T15:59:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elevengames.pressbooks.com\/?post_type=chapter&p=41"},"modified":"2021-10-02T12:42:26","modified_gmt":"2021-10-02T12:42:26","slug":"game-four-a-boys-first-game","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/elevengames.pressbooks.com\/chapter\/game-four-a-boys-first-game\/","title":{"rendered":"Game 4: A boy\u2019s first game"},"content":{"raw":"
My first memory of baseball is reading the NY Daily News account of Gene Bearden\u2019s heroics in the Cleveland Indians\u2019 defeat of the Boston Red Sox in a one game playoff to get to the 1948 World Series. The following year I was a Yankee fan, listening to games on the radio, reading game accounts for all the teams, the box scores, and the stats, again in the Daily News, with all the devotion of a religious acolyte. Sometime that summer, Dad suggested we go to a game. My father was also a devoted Yankee fan (I believe because of his great admiration and identification with Lou Gehrig\u2014both Gehrig and my father were of German descent, raised in New York City, and attended Columbia University), so there was a total united family front on who to root for.<\/p>\n
Our routine that day was as it would always be over the following five-six years. Dad drove into the Bronx and parked the car north of the stadium on the Grand Concourse; we then got on a D Train to the stadium. This, I came to understand, was to avoid the clusterfarg that was parking by the stadium (and its attendant exorbitant fees).<\/p>\n