September 20, 2008

A night with Coors (the stadium, not the beer)

Last night Elizabeth and I went to a Rockies game (the Rocks won 3-2) for free (a friend bought tickets for a group of us and wouldn't let us pay him for them).  It was a lot of fun.

We sat in the Rock Pile (the cheap bleacher seats way out beyond center field).  Usually that's where Elizabeth and I end up, because when we're paying for tickets, that's what we can afford.  It gets a little irritating out there for me, though, because the people you're sitting with are often much more interested in starting "the wave" than in what's happening on the field.  Or it's a collection of teenagers who would rather flirt and talk about their social lives than notice that David Eckstein and Matt Holiday are really enjoyable players to watch.  The highlight came sometime around the 5th inning.  There was a guy about three rows below us who had knocked a few back and who was desperately trying to get the Rock Pile fans to help him get the wave to go all the way around the stadium.  He would turn and face us and yell, "One!  Two!  Three!  YEEEEEEEAAAAAHH!" as he'd get people going.  Then he'd repeat it.  Not long into this spectacle, we noticed that his zipper was down.  Not just a little bit, but all the way.  We laughed for a few minutes as we tried to get his attention to tell him.  I guess he just thought we were excited about doing the wave.  Eventually my friend Mark was able to point it out to him and he turned red and zipped it up.  We all laughed for about 15 minutes.

The really cool part was when the game ended and we were invited out onto the outfield to watch the post-game fireworks.  The grass on the field was, I swear, softer and cleaner than our carpet.  We laid on the grass and watched the best fireworks show I've ever seen a baseball team put on.

Last year at this time Denver was buzzing about the Rockies because they were in the middle of a huge win streak that would eventually lead to a World Series appearance.  This year the Rockies are way out of the playoff race.  Still, being a part of the team's last home stand of the season was really fun.  When I've been to other baseball games that have fireworks afterwards, it seems that about half of the fans leave before the show.  Last night I would guess that 90-95% of the fans stayed right where they were.  A baseball crowd watches fireworks the same way they watch a game -- with cheers and applause, rather than the oohs and aahs you usually hear at the 4th of July.  Before they started sending fireworks up above the scoreboard, they played an end-of-season tribute on the video screen that was made up of Rockies highlights from the season.  It was weird to me how intimate the whole night felt.  Last year everyone in town was on the Rockies bandwagon, because they were pulling off a historic run to the playoffs and then the World Series.  Last night I got the feeling that the only people in the world who were interested in the Rockies were the few thousand of us sitting there at Coors Field, celebrating the last 6 months with a 3-2 win, a video, and some pretty sweet fireworks.

We're going to the game tonight too, but there won't be fireworks after the game.  It should still be fun.

September 17, 2008

Cheap baseball rules

This weekend Elizabeth and I are going to two Rockies games (one Friday night and one Saturday night) for a total of $2.  That's an average of $.50 per ticket.  Be impressed.

New Cowboys blog

I've started a new blog (linked to the right as "Valley Ranch" under "Blogging Buds") for football (specifically Cowboys) posts. I understand that for many of the two or three people who read this blog, all the football posting I'm likely to do in the coming months might be annoying, so I'll write about football in a separate place where you don't have to be notified all the time.

September 16, 2008

Romo moment

One of the most amusing parts of the Cowboys' big division win last night over the Iggles was the post-game interview Tony Romo did with ESPN's on-field reporter.

Reporter:  Early 2nd quarter fumble in the endzone, what are you thinkin' when that happens?

Romo:  Darn it.

September 12, 2008

Super-Amazing Girl!

She's smarter than you.  She's been to more places than you.  She knows more famous people than you.  She gets more free stuff and therefore owns more than you.  She's had more experiences than you.  She's played more sports more competitively than you.  She's won more awards than you.  She's been in more clubs and organizations (and probably held leadership positions in all of them) than you.  She's accomplished more and overcome more adversity than you.  She has higher aspirations and worthier dreams than you.  And she's done all this while having been alive fewer years than you.  If you ever forget any of this, never fear, she'll always be there to remind you -- usually right in the middle of any sentence you attempt to squeeze into a conversation, lest you actually complete saying anything regarding that on which she cannot best you.  Who is she?

SUPER-AMAZING GIRL!

September 8, 2008

AFC/NFC debate

I think I'm just about ready for people to stop the "the AFC is so far superior to the NFC" talk.  Last year in NFC/AFC games, each team won the exact same amount.  Oh, and it was an NFC team that won the Big One at the end over the "immortal" Patriots.  After week 1 in 2008 the NFC leads 3-1.  And those NFC wins were over two of the AFC's top contenders (San Diego and Indianapolis) and the third was over an almost certain playoff team (Cleveland).  All three games were also played in the AFC team's home stadium.

I'm not going to argue for the dominance of the NFC, but it's not quite as clear cut of a line as most AFC fans would like to think it is.  Don't forget that the toughest division in football by FAR is the NFC East.

September 7, 2008

Pretty Pissed

For about three weeks now I've been jazzed about the NFL season kicking off. I've been even more jazzed that the Cowboys' week 1 game against Cleveland is what's called a "nationally televised game," which means that everyone gets to see it unless you actually live in one of the other cities who have teams playing at the same time (in this case, San Diego, Charlotte, Phoenix, or San Francisco).  Today at approximately 2:21 pm MT when FOX was supposed to cut away from the end of the Seahawks-Bills game to the Cowboys-Browns game (as had been advertised for more than a week)... they instead cut to the Chargers-Panthers game.  Considering that a) Dallas is closer to Denver than San Diego is by more than 300 miles and b) Foxsports.com reported a story on the NFL's biggest fan bases which included both Dallas and Cleveland in the top 10 (but said nothing about San Diego or Carolina), I'm wondering why my team's game is not being shown.  It's ridiculous.  If you're not going to show it, fine, but you damn well better not advertise for a week that you are.

September 1, 2008

Obama's at it again

Obama likening getting pregnant with contracting an STD.  Apparently, babies are "punishment."