Boston

Things started to fall into place when a pal of his had some seats available. Really good seats. Like, "look Ma, look at me waving like a buffoon while I talk on my cell phone" seats. Add that to a cheap flight from Richmond to Logan, throw in some Marriot hotel points, and you've got Labor Day Weekend in Boston.
And so it was that we found ourselves in Boston this weekend, of all weekends. Two gorgeous days in a really great city, with two boys old enough to walk around without too much whining. A truly hysterical (if not completely historical) trolley tour driver who had us falling out of our seats laughing. A smattering of actual history in the form of a stop to see Old Ironsides. And a city full of people who understand that "'R's ah fah losahs".
And the icing on the cake: Fenway Park.
We hopped the T from our hotel to the park and joined the throngs of fans descending upon the Fens. We settled in to our ridiculously amazing seats and started flagging down vendors. Ryan vowed to eat six Fenway Franks, but luckily his imagination was much bigger than his stomach. John, in a statement he would later gleefully regret, mumble-grumbled that the pitcher was some kid called up from Pawtucket. We took tons of pictures, just missed two foul balls, and chanted "Papi! Papi!" as part of Red Sox Nation.
At the start of the game, I looked at the Sox pitcher and thought to myself, "My god, he looks twelve." Long about the fourth inning, I turned to John and asked, "have the O's had any baserunners yet?" He looked at me curiously, then his face lit up with realization that the kid had pitched four hitless innings. Ok, that's cool, right?
Then, of course, came the fifth inning, when things got a little shaky, and I wondered if my veiled verbal acknowledgement had been a jinx. But after the Sox escaped that inning with the no-hitter intact, we began to hope that we were about to witness something spectacular.
And spectacular it was. As most of you know by now, Clay Bucholz pitched a no hitter in only his second major league start. With a little help from his teammates (hello, Dustin Pedroia!) and under the brilliant direction of Jason Veritek, he did what only twelve other pitchers have ever done in Fenway Park's 100 year history.
And we got to see it happen, alongside 40,000 fans on a gorgeous warm night at the greatest ballpark in the country, when the Sox called up some kid from Pawtucket.
11 Comments:
Awesome!!! that you were there.
Oh, I'm just green with envy! What an amazing game to have seen live. I was watching at home and was chewing my nails for the last three innings - that catch by Pedroia was amazing. I actually got all teary-eyed at the end of the game.
thanks for the link! you have a unique spelling, but the whole accent is pretty unique. you definitely have the feeling for it! no 'ahs' heyah!
('R's ah fah losahs)
http://bostonaccentsco.com/
Saw the last three minutes of it-my fiance was less then thrilled that they won,but he wanted me to see a genuine no-hitter.
(I don't watch much baseball)
That's cool that you were there!
thanks for the correction, boston accent company :) we picked up the R's shirt from a gift shop in New Hampshire last spring - 4 years in Virginia hasn't taken the shine of my husband's wicked thick Boston accent :)
coincidence....? dont know if your name is actually kassie, but thats my daughters name. we're happy you like your wicked pissah T! and i hope it didnt sound like a correction - thats the beauty of the lingo.
since you went to one of the legendary sox games, we hope you are one of these:
http://bostonaccentsco.com/boston-accents-sox-fan.html
have a wicked pissah day™
My first trip to Boston as a child was as a non-T1DM, but alas, it didn't last ... but I did go to college in Boston as a T1DM. Maybe in my next life, I'll go again without it! Hope your trip was great nevertheless!
That is such an awesome thing to get to see.
I had the same reaction as you when I saw it on Sports Center (it's on pretty much 24/7 in my house, that, and Spongebob). I turned to my husband and said, "He looks like he's 12".
I'm sooooo stinkin' jealous!!!!
R's ah fah lobstahs indeed.
So freaking sweet that you were there. As the rebel Sox Fan in this sad Yankees town, I'm proud of all my fellow RSNation-ers.
Go Sox!!
That must have just been awesome. What a once-in-a-lifetime type of treat.
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