Daily Press (Sunday)

Faces in the crowd: Cutouts provide virtual MLB audience

- By Steve Megargee Associated Press

Gabby Adamo loved the Chicago White Sox so much, it influenced how she dressed and even how she drank her favorite beverages.

“She didn’t despise Cubs fans, but she despised anything to do with red and blue,” said her father, Vince Adamo of Frankfort, Illinois. “She would not wear anything to do with red and blue in case people thought she was a Cubs fan. From a young age, she never wore red and blue together. She never held anything red and blue. She wouldn’t even drink out of a red-andblue straw.”

Gabby Adamo rooted for the White Sox even during a three-year battle with leukemia. But she never got to attend one of their opening-day games.

Eight months after she died at the age of 22, her parents are doing what they can to rectify that. With no spectators permitted at stadiums due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the White Sox are among Major League Baseball teams giving fans the opportunit­y to fill some seats with their photograph­s on cutouts.

So when Chicago opens Friday against the Minnesota Twins, a cutout featuring a smiling Gabby wearing a White Sox jersey and cap will be in the stands. “We’d always talked about going to opening day,” her father said. “She just always talked about the next time she’d go to a game.”

The Chinese Profession­al Baseball League also put cutouts in the stands when it started playing games without fans in April. But the example MLB teams have cited as they offer this promotion is a German soccer club that put about13,000 fan cutouts in the stands when the Bundesliga resumed play in May.

“The idea resonated with us,” said Rick Schlesinge­r, the Milwaukee Brewers’ president of business operations.

The Brewers sold out 500 cardboard cutouts in 90 minutes. They promptly put another 500 on sale. Now they’re also planning a “Pets in the Park” section for cutouts featuring photos of fans’ dogs or cats.

Cutouts at Miller Park will be placed in the back rows of the uppermost level behind home plate, where there is also a statue of Bob Uecker.

Other teams, such as the San Francisco Giants, want virtual fans closer to the action. The Giants will put up photos of fans alongside cutouts of Bay Area celebritie­s such as Tony Bennett and Joe Montana.

“I think it’s kind of fun,” Giants manager Gabe Kapler said.

Some teams will raise money for charity in the process.

The Oakland Athletics offer a wide range of prices, but fans who pay $149 will have cutouts of their likenesses placed on the first-base side of RingCentra­l Coliseum and get an autographe­d photo from outfielder Stephen Piscotty. Proceeds benefit the Piscotty family foundation that’s seeking a cure for ALS, the disease that killed Piscotty’s mother.

If a foul ball happens to hit a cutout, the owner receives a baseball signed by Piscotty.

“I’ve already got a bunch of texts saying, ‘Ooh, I want one!’ ” said Piscotty, who indicated the promotion was his father’s idea. “Obviously, we’d love to sell that section out. That would be really cool.”

 ?? KYLE SKINNER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fan cutouts fill the stands at RingCentra­l Coliseum, the Oakland Athletics’ home field, on Wednesday. Some proceeds of the sales are helping fight ALS.
KYLE SKINNER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Fan cutouts fill the stands at RingCentra­l Coliseum, the Oakland Athletics’ home field, on Wednesday. Some proceeds of the sales are helping fight ALS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States