The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

BREAK IN THE ACTION

Teams across nation stop practice to witness solar eclipse

- By Grant Schulte The Associated Press

LINCOLN, NEB. » Baseball fans in more than a half-dozen cities from Oregon to South Carolina crowded into minor league ballparks Monday to watch the solar eclipse at game-day viewing parties.

In Nebraska, the Lincoln Saltdogs wore special black-and-white jerseys and stopped their game just before 1 p.m. to watch the eclipse darken the sky. Spectators erupted in applause at 1:02 p.m. as the moon crawled in front of the sun until the whole sky looked like a late-evening sunset. The air turned chilly and went still.

“It made me all teary-eyed,” said Robyn Mason, who watched with her husband, Greg, from a grassy embankment near the third base outfield. “It was just so momentous. Just really cool — and very pretty.”

Other teams hosting events included the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes in Oregon, the Idaho Falls Chukars, the Bowling Green Hot Rods in Kentucky, Tennessee’s Nashville Sounds and the Greenville Drive, Columbia Fireflies and Charleston RiverDogs, all in South Carolina. The Saltdogs sold game tickets

to buyers from as far away as the United Kingdom and Germany, team spokesman Michael Shively said.

One of the Germans was Theo Kleinfeld, 65, who flew to Lincoln last week so he could photograph the eclipse at the Saltdogs’ game against Indiana’s Gary Southshore Railcats.

Kleinfeld said he watched the 1999 eclipse that crossed Germany and traveled to Shanghai for another in 2009. But in Shanghai, he said, the sky was overcast.

“This is a good opportunit­y,” Kleinfeld said as he set up his camera outside Saltdogs Stadium. “If it doesn’t work today, I’ll just have to come back in 2024,” when the next total solar eclipse in the U.S. will occur.

Paul Kobs, 38, of Minneapoli­s, took a day off work and drove to Lincoln with his girlfriend. The couple started planning the trip three months ago and picked Lincoln because it was one of the places closest to their home to see the eclipse.

Kobs said they initially planned to drive down to Beatrice, Nebraska, where eclipse viewers gathered at the Homestead National Monument, but the cloudy forecast for that area persuaded him to stay in Lincoln.

“This was really the easiest place to get to that was in the path of the totality,” he said as he walked into the Lincoln stadium. “It’s a once-in-alifetime event — that minute and a half of experienci­ng something out of this world.”

Jordan Wilson and his wife, Nicole, brought their 5-year-old son, Izayah, to the game to see the eclipse. On the way down from their home in Omaha, the family sat through bumper-to-bumper traffic on Interstate 80.

“It’s probably the last full eclipse we’ll see in our lifetimes,” he said.

In South Carolina, the Columbia Fireflies celebrated a “Total Eclipse of the Park” event as they hosted the Rome Braves. The Fireflies wore special glow-inthe-dark jerseys that were scheduled to be auctioned after the game, with proceeds benefiting local science, technology, math and engineerin­g programs.

No Major League Baseball games were scheduled to coincide with the event, but the eclipse caught the interest of teams from other sports preparing for their season openers.

“We’ve been talking about it in the locker room,” Ohio State defensive tackle Tracy Sprinkle said.

 ?? PAUL BEATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Minnesota Twins players Ehire Adrianza front, and Ervin Santana back, along with other members of the team watch the solar eclipse before a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox Monday in Chicago.
PAUL BEATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Minnesota Twins players Ehire Adrianza front, and Ervin Santana back, along with other members of the team watch the solar eclipse before a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox Monday in Chicago.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Jake Flyn, from left, and Allyn Hickey join dozens of workers preparing the home of the Georgia Bulldogs, Sanford Stadium, for eclipse viewing in Athens, Ga. The university was in position to view a 99.1 percent blackout.
CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Jake Flyn, from left, and Allyn Hickey join dozens of workers preparing the home of the Georgia Bulldogs, Sanford Stadium, for eclipse viewing in Athens, Ga. The university was in position to view a 99.1 percent blackout.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States