My favorite day
The best way to describe what Opening Day means to me is that, professionally, it's the day of the year during which I am least cynical.
I'm a sucker for all of it: The pre-game introductions of both rosters (seeing who gets booed), the ceremonial first pitch. Seeing someone pick up his first hit of the season. Being in the winning clubhouse afterward, watching the players enjoy that, for one day, they are undefeated.
It's that feeling of renewal, of a fresh start, for which we all yearn.
I'll be at Yankee Stadium today for Yankees-Blue Jays, and this will mark my 19th Opening Day, if you give me some leeway and count home openers (rather than season openers) in three instances. The first seven came as a fan, from 1988 through 1994. The last 12 have come professionally, starting in 1997.
Since it's my blog, I'm going to list my previous 18 openers and what sticks out in my memory bank from them. I'm getting the dates, of course, from Retrosheet.
1. April 5, 1988. Yankees 8, Twins 0, at Yankee Stadium. Perhaps because this was my first, I remember plenty: 1) Dave Winfield, having just published his autobiography _ which ripped a then-highly unpopular George Steinbrenner _ received a huge ovation; 2) Frank Viola, the reigning World Series MVP, got bombed; 3) Rafael Santana, in his first day as a Yankee, grounded into a triple play; and 4) When we returned to my friend Scott's car after the game, the car had a flat tire.
2. April 7, 1989. Indians 4, Yankees 2, at Yankee Stadium. Jamie Quirk was the Yankees' starting catcher. This was a bad team.
3. April 12, 1990. Tigers 11, Red Sox 7, at Tiger Stadium. All I remember is that it was freezing.
4. April 8, 1991. Tigers 6, Yankees 4, at Tiger Stadium. I recall thinking, "I can't believe Tim Leary is the Yankees' Opening Day starter."
5. April 6, 1992. Blue Jays 4, Tigers 2, at Tiger Stadium. Jack Morris won his Blue Jays debut _ against his old team, to boot. That night, Duke crushed Michigan in the NCAA men's basketball final.
6. April 13, 1993. Tigers 20, Athletics 4, at Tiger Stadium. Check out the roster of the 1993 Tigers. What a fun team they had, as this game exemplified.
7. April 4, 1994, Yankees 5, Rangers 3, at Yankee Stadium. I remember that Jimmy Key started for the Yankees, but otherwise, it's just a fog of bitterness, for that is the year I stopped being a fan.
8. April 1, 1997. Mariners 4, Yankees 2, at the Kingdome. Now a reporter, I saw Ken Griffey, Jr. go deep twice against David Cone.
9. April 1, 1998. Angels 4, Yankees 1, at Edison International Field of Anaheim. LOL on the short-lived stadium name. This was the ballpark's "re-opening," with that cheesy "Magic Mountain" thing beyond left-centerfield.
10. April 5, 1999. A's 5, Yankees 3, at Network Associates Coliseum. Roger Clemens lost in his Yankees debut, and with Joe Torre getting treatment for prostate cancer, interim manager Don Zimmer dropped his record to 0-1.
11. April 3, 2000. Yankees 3, Angels 2, at Edison International Field of Anaheim. Paul O'Neill hit the go-ahead homer, and Orlando Hernandez, coming off what turned out to be his finest major-league season in 1999, won his only Opening Day assignment.
12. April 2, 2001. Yankees 7, Royals 3, at Yankee Stadium. Clemens became the AL's all-time strikeout leader, passing Walter Johnson. With one out in the ninth inning, Joe Torre went to new setup man Todd Williams, who committed a throwing error on Mark Quinn's dribber up the first-base line. Torre immediately replaced Williams with Mariano Rivera, and I seriously think that Torre never trusted Williams again, after facing just that one batter.
13. April 1, 2002. Orioles 10, Yankees 3, at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Clemens injured his right hand trying to barehand a comebacker, and he got lit up after that. When Clemens, at an area hospital, agreed to conduct a phone interview with one reporter, I was selected as the pool reporter. I asked Clemens seven or eight questions, then said, "Okay, thanks, Roger." Clemens replied, "Okay, guys" _ confirming our belief that Clemens was just like the Chef in "South Park," who would say, "Hello, children!" to just one child.
14. March 31, 2003. Yankees 8, Blue Jays 4, at SkyDome. Hideki Matsui, making his big-league debut, was supposed to be the story, but he got overshadowed by Derek Jeter's gruesome dislocation of his left shoulder.
15. March 30, 2004. Devil Rays 8, Yankees 3, at Tokyo Dome. Mr. "I Hate Japan," Mike Mussina, got rocked. Paul Quantrill, facing his very first batter while in a Yankees uniform, collided with debutant third baseman Alex Rodriguez and had to leave the game with an injured right knee. Quantrill's knee was never right again.
16. April 3, 2005. Yankees 9, Red Sox 2, at Yankee Stadium. In Randy Johnson's pinstriped debut (as well as David Wells' Red Sox debut), the Yankees exacted the tiniest bit of revenge for the previous October collapse.
17. April 3, 2006. Mets 3, Nationals 2, at Shea Stadium. Paul Lo Duca, in his Mets debut, duped the umpire into making a bad call at home. This was also the game when everyone freaked out because new Met closer Billy Wagner had the same entrance song as Mariano Rivera.
18. April 1, 2007. Mets 6, Cardinals 1, at Busch Stadium. Deja vu of '05, with the New York team avenging a Championship Series defeat.
Okay, now it's your turn. Offer your favorite Opening Day memories. Or perhaps different images from the games I attended. Challenge my preseason predictions (previous item) some more. Do some (bleeping) thing, as Jimmy Serrano told Sidney in this movie.
Best of luck to you and your teams in this 2008 season.
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