Chattanooga Times Free Press

Father, son bond over love of game

- BY JAKE SEINER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Frank Gennario lost his father to bone cancer when he was 16 years old, and more than anything else, he clings tightly to memories of their days together at Yankee Stadium.

As his son neared the same age three decades later, Frank made a decision: The ballpark bond between him and young Tony would have to be memorable.

“Something a little different,” Frank said.

Over the past 10 years, the Gennarios have meticulous­ly followed their beloved Arizona Diamondbac­ks to every Major League Baseball stadium, a quest they completed this month with a series at Atlanta’s SunTrust Park, which opened this year. The plan was hatched prior to the 2007 season, and the 59-year-old father and 24-year-old son have now seen their favorite team at 35 ballparks, including the 30 current ones.

The expedition was fueled by Frank’s passion for the game, which he has had since childhood. Growing up in Queens, he played stickball on the streets of New York, cheered tirelessly for the Mets and went to games with his dad. His first in-park memory is from 1965 as a 7-year-old at Yankee Stadium.

“I do remember my dad telling me one day,” Frank recalled, “he said, ‘Frankie, I want you to remember this. This is something historic. You saw Joe DiMaggio hit a home run in an Old Timers’ Game.’”

“I attribute a lot of my love for the game to the fact that he loved the game,” Frank said about his father. “He used to live and die baseball.”

Frank grew up and landed in Phoenix, where he eagerly purchased season tickets when the Diamondbac­ks began play as an expansion franchise in 1998. He has only missed two home games in the history of the franchise — the day Tony graduated from Arizona State, and the day his 2-yearold grandson, Broxton, died from a neurologic­al disease. Even on that devastatin­g day, Frank’s family urged him to get to the ballpark, but “there wasn’t any way I was going to miss being with the family,” he said.

Tony was 14 when Frank took him to Denver for opening day in 2007, a trip that jumpstarte­d their quest. They checked off Milwaukee and Chicago’s Wrigley Field later that summer.

That was the easy part. What followed was a decade of scouring over schedules when Major League Baseball released them in September, picking out opportune dates. Their biggest challenge was interleagu­e play. Games at most American League ballparks are rare for the Diamondbac­ks — for instance, Arizona’s 2016 visit to Toronto was only the second ever for the franchise.

“Every year, the schedule would come out, and we’d sit down and say, ‘This is probably what we’re going to do,’” Tony said. “Ten minutes after the schedule came out, we had a tentative idea of what our trip was going to be.”

Frank used airline miles and hotel points to stretch his salary as a salesman at Qwest Communicat­ions, and he had plenty of vacation days to make it work. Their mission got a boost when Tony became a bat boy for Arizona home games in 2012, giving them a connection for free tickets on the road. They knocked 17 cities off their list during his bat boy tenure from 2012 to 2016.

Plus, Frank got to see his son hanging around in the Diamondbac­ks’ dugout during games.

“That was just surreal,” Frank said.

Their most memorable game is one they missed. In 2010, they skipped the first night of a series at Tampa Bay in favor of an Orlando amusement park. They were finishing up their day when Frank got a text from his wife, Ann Marie: Diamondbac­ks starter Edwin Jackson was through seven hitless innings.

Jackson finished the no-hitter as Frank and Tony watched on television at a Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. restaurant. Tony’s phone blew up with text messages, and he had to tell his friends that no, they weren’t at the game.

“We were on a roller coaster,” he replied.

Frank’s connection to the game has become a career for Tony, who is now the visiting clubhouse manager for the Class AA Montgomery Biscuits of the Southern League, which includes the Chattanoog­a Lookouts. Frank isn’t lacking for ballpark companions, though — his granddaugh­ters are regularly with him at Chase Field, keeping score and cheering on Paul Goldschmid­t.

Since the Diamondbac­ks arrived, Frank has fastidious­ly catalogued every game, keeping scorecards and notes of who joined him at the park.

“When I think about the day that I pass, they’re going to say, ‘Well what was your legacy? What have you left behind?’” Frank said. “It’s about, ‘You left the love of baseball into so many of your family members.’”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2017 photo, Frank Gennario Jr. and his son, Tony, pose at SunTrust Park in Atlanta. Gennario lost his father to bone cancer when he was 16, and he clings tightly to memories of their days at Yankee Stadium.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2017 photo, Frank Gennario Jr. and his son, Tony, pose at SunTrust Park in Atlanta. Gennario lost his father to bone cancer when he was 16, and he clings tightly to memories of their days at Yankee Stadium.

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