Take Me Out To The Ballgame

Because of my recent eye surgery, I’ll have to watch the Phillies opener from home this year. But baseball season always reminds me of my Pop-Pop Waters. Born in 1908, Pop-Pop was a lifelong Phillies fan. He would listen to every game on the radio, or watch them on TV when they were televised. I clearly remember going to the old Connie Mack Stadium with him when I was young to watch the Phillies. The stadium wasn’t in a great neighborhood at the time. I remember him paying the young neighborhood kids (i.e. extortionists) when they would come up to him and say “Watch your car, mister?” He gladly gave them a dollar to make sure his car didn’t get vandalized. It was just part of going to the game. It was so exciting going to the stadium as a kid. Of course I loved all the Phillies, but I also got a thrill seeing some of the big stars of that time- Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, Juan Marichal, Bob Gibson, and Lou Brock were some of my favorite visiting players. Back in those days, I remember that Johnny Callison was my grandfather’s favorite Phillie player. Johnny lived right in Glenside, the same town as Pop-Pop, and the Glenside community loved him. Whenever I went to their house, I would bring a baseball glove, and having a catch in the backyard with Pop-Pop was part of our usual routine.

The new Veteran’s Stadium opened in 1971, and Pop-Pop and I were there for the opening game. I was 14 years old. We sat up in the upper level. but I didn’t care. We were there for the first game in the beautiful new state-of-the-art stadium, rooting on our Phillies. While my dad went to games with us on occasion, he had a busy work schedule so I went most often with my grandfather. Pop-Pop’s brother-in-law, “Uncle Nicky” DiStefano had tickets for every Phillies home game. Uncle Nicky obviously had plenty of money, and bore a striking resemblance to Salvatore “Big Pussy” Bonpensiero in the Sopranos TV show. (We could never confirm if Uncle Nicky was actually in the mafia, but I had my suspicions.) Uncle Nicky gave Pop-Pop lots of free Phillies tickets every year (Sixers tickets, too), and he always took me. I remember one year we went to over 25 Phillies games together- 5 games in one weekend alone (a twilight double-header Friday, a night game Saturday, and another double-header Sunday). We loved our baseball!

We saw many classic games over the years- the All-Star game in 1976, several playoff and World Series games, Terry Muholland’s no-hitter in 1990, and the Phillies 26-7 massacre over the New York Mets in 1985. It was especially thrilling to have my young son, Kevin, join us for an open house at the stadium not long before Pop-Pop passed away in 1991. Pop-Pop would have loved the new Citizen’s Bank Park, which went back to the old-style baseball park design. I think of him every time I go to a game.

And so begins another baseball season. Play ball! Go Phillies!

Comments

6 responses to “Take Me Out To The Ballgame”

  1. Gary Uzelac Avatar
    Gary Uzelac

    Great memories with Pop-Pop and baseball.
    I too was at the Karl Wallenda event. In between a double-header.
    I remember telling people he did a head stand…..a HEAD STAND!….above second base.
    How did I not witness my first death? No net underneath.

    “Those were the days my friend, I thought they’d never end……”

    1. Jack Leitmeyer Avatar
      Jack Leitmeyer

      Yes- that was crazy! No surprise he eventually did die from a fall off a high wire.

  2. Kate Ryan Avatar
    Kate Ryan

    Great memories of special times, Jack. It’s really wonderful you had such a close relationship with your Pop-Pop and shared the love of baseball.
    I heard and then saw the fighter jets over my house today, about 2:45. I checked the Phillies game time, and thought yep, they’re doing a fly over at CBP.

    1. Jack Leitmeyer Avatar
      Jack Leitmeyer

      Thanks! I should have mentioned all of the special promotional things I’ve seen over the years- in addition to the jet fly-overs, stuff like kiteman gliding in (or falling) with the first ball, Karl Wallenda walking across the top of the stadium, the jet pack guy flying in, the first ball getting dropped out of a helicopter, a pre-game concert by The Guess Who, etc. Lots of great memories!

  3.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    I didn’t know you had connections to Glenside. That is where I grew up. Did your grandfather go to Cheltenham High School. My dad was born in 1907! Just curious, my father was a big baseball fan.

    1. Jack Avatar
      Jack

      My grandfather went to the old Northeast High School. They lived in Philly before moving to Glenside.

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