The Day

AFTER SWARM INVADES STADIUM, DIAMONDBAC­KS TURN TO PLAN BEE

-

The Arizona Diamondbac­ks already have had a game rained out this season, which is quite the accomplish­ment for a team that’s located in a desert and plays in a stadium with a retractabl­e roof. And while things were dry for the start of Tuesday night’s home game against the Los Angeles Dodgers — the roof was open at Chase Field — there was one holdup, or rather thousands of very small, stinging holdups.

You see, a colony of bees had taken up residence atop the protective netting behind home plate, and they weren’t about to leave because a baseball game needed to be played.

Faced with the prospect of the first known bee cancellati­on in Major League Baseball history, the team placed a call to Matt Hilton, branch manager for Blue Sky Pest Control’s Phoenix office. Hilton left his son’s T-ball game and made the 45-minute drive to Chase Field, where he mounted a retractabl­e lift, sprayed the bees to calm them down and vacuumed them right up.

Hilton wasn’t done. After he saved the day, the Diamondbac­ks invited him to throw out the first pitch of a game that had now been delayed by nearly two hours. Hilton, still wearing his beekeeping get-up, did not disappoint.

“I thought I was just going to do my thing and cruise out, but it was fun because of the thousands of people cheering for you,” Hilton told the Associated Press. “It was a little nerve-racking, I’m not going to lie — a lot of pressure to get this game going.”

There have been a number of bee-related delays at MLB stadiums and beyond in recent years, including one at Chase Field in 2014. Last year, a bee swarm near the bullpens led to a delay at a Rockies-Orioles game in Baltimore. Games also havebee-enhalted in 2019 and 2013.

Numbers released this year by the Census of Agricultur­e showed that America’s honeybee population has rocketed to an all-time high, or at least the honeybee population that is used for commercial honey production (the number of feral bees likely also is quite high after years of environmen­tal worry about the state of the bee). That should keep Hilton and his fellow bee-wranglers in business.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States