Times-Herald (Vallejo)

SPORTS QUIZ

Bay Area baseball trivia rounds all the bases

- BY JOAN MORRIS

Bay Area baseball fans have a lot of favorite moments, from watching a slow, arcing ball seemingly float over the wall to dot racing on the jumbotron. But no matter which team you’re rooting for, you’ve got to love the trivia associated with the game.

We’re not talking stats, the lifeblood of the baseball fan. We’re talking good ol’ push up your sleeves and rummage in the brain files to dredge up those memories of what makes Bay Area baseball so distinctiv­e.

Step up to the plate and take a swing at these questions. (Then check your answers on page 70.) 1st

Inning: There’s still a raging debate over who invented the high five. Was it outfielder Glenn Burke, who played for the L.A. Dodgers before a short stay with the Oakland A’s — or basketball’s Derek Smith? No one knows for sure, so instead we’ll ask whose moves replaced both the handshake and the high five and might have been a precursor to the COVID elbow bump?

A. San Francisco Giants father and son,

Bobby and Barry Bonds

B. Oakland A’s pitcher Dennis Eckersley C. San Francisco’s Willie Mays and Willie

McCovey

D. Oakland’s Jose Canseco and Mark

McGwire 2nd

Inning: OK, we promised no stats, but we couldn’t resist this one: Martinez native Joe DiMaggio had a staggering hitting streak in the majors, managing to get on base in 56 consecutiv­e games. No one has touched that record. But what was Joltin’ Joe’s record eight years before landing in the majors, back when he played for the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League?

A. 55 consecutiv­e games

B. 12

C. 61

D. Who knows? They didn’t keep records

back then.

3rd

Inning: In the late 1970s, baseball teams got into mascots to a ridiculous degree, launching everything from a giant San Diego Chicken to the furry green Phillie Phanatic. The mascots certainly annoyed some fans, but none more so than the one San Francisco developed as an anti-mascot to poke fun at mascot mania. His career came to an infamous end when he was tackled by two San Diego Padres, and the actor inside the suit sued the team for damages. What was the name of the mascot?

A. Crazy Crab

B. Lou Seal

C. The Old Fisherman D. The Mayor of Frisco

Bengie Molina, right, hit 16 home runs for the Giants in 2008, including this three-run shot against the Diamondbac­ks. But it was a home run Molina hit that season against the Dodgers that was a Major League first.

AP PHOTO 4th

Inning: When the Oakland A’s were still in Philadelph­ia in the first half of the 20th century, Hall of Fame pitcher Rube Waddell roomed with his catcher, Ossie Schreck. When they were on the road for away games, penny-pinching teams housed their players in shared rooms — often with just one shared bed, as well. So when contract time came around, Schreck demanded that Waddell’s contract include a clause forbidding him from doing one thing in bed. What was it?

A. He wasn’t allowed to snore.

B. He had to stop stealing the covers. C. He couldn’t eat animal crackers. D. There was a strict no-passing-gas

clause.

5th

Inning: Oakland A’s outfielder and base-stealing phenomenon Rickey Henderson did something that threw the A’s finance office into a tizzy. What was it?

A. Sent their supplies and equipment budget into the red, when Rickey began keeping all his stolen bases as mementos.

B. He framed his million-dollar signing

check without cashing it.

C. He kept returning money to them, because he thought they were accidental­ly overpaying him.

D. That extra E in his name threw the accountant­s into disarray. Whenever they wrote out a paycheck to “Ricky Henderson” — which was routinely — the bank bounced them back.

6th

Inning: David Ortiz, the Boston Red Sox slugger and newest inductee to the Hall of Fame, might have been good at navigating the bases, but he didn’t do so well when he was a Minnesota Twin facing the Oakland A’s. What Bay Area standard got him so fouled up, Big Papi and a few of his teammates almost missed the game?

A. They got caught in a massive traffic

jam coming across the Bay Bridge. B. They got on the wrong BART train and almost went to Richmond instead of the Coliseum.

C. On a sightseein­g jaunt, they drove across the Golden Gate Bridge and couldn’t figure out how to get to Oakland from there.

D. They got stuck on Lombard Street when a car broke down in front of them, and a traffic nightmare ensued.

7th

Inning: San Francisco Giants catcher Bengie Molina entered the record books in 2008, when he became the first major league player to hit a home run, but not get credit for the run scored. How did that happen?

A. He tripped while rounding second and was knocked unconsciou­s. A pinch runner was substitute­d and actually scored the run.

B. An earthquake disrupted the game, which was suspended until both teams were available to resume play two months later. By then, Molina had left the team, and another player got credit for the homer.

C. The ball hit the right field wall and was initially ruled a single. When the umps used instant replay, they changed the call to a home run. Molina had gone to first, then was replaced by a pinch runner, who went on to score the run.

D. A gull stole the ball, and in the

confusion, the run didn’t get counted.

7th

Inning Stretch: Why is the Oakland A’s mascot an elephant?

A. In 1902, the then-New York Giants manager called the then-Philadelph­ia team a white elephant. The A’s owner thought it was so funny, he adopted the elephant as the team’s mascot. B. When the Ringling Brothers Circus pitched its big top in the field next to the Oakland stadium one game day, an elephant got loose and ran into the stadium. The resulting game delay gave the A’s a chance to regroup, rally

Rickey Henderson isn’t an Oakland native — he was born in Chicago in the back seat of a car on the way to the hospital — but his ties to the city run deep. The first ballot Hall of Famer graduated from Oakland Technical High, was drafted by the A’s and spent four different stints with the team, spanning parts of 14 of his 25 seasons in the Majors.

and win the game.

C. No reason. Elephants are just cool. D. The elephant exhibit at the Philadelph­ia Zoo was such a favorite with A’s players when the team was based in the City of Brotherly Love, they convinced owner Connie Mack that an elephant would be a great mascot.

8th

Inning: Ball boys have a long and often underappre­ciated role in a number of sports including, of course, baseball. In 1992, the San Francisco Giants began employing “spry seniors” to serve in the role and called them “ball dudes.”

The glass ceiling for ball boys was broken in 1993, when then-67-year-old Corinne Mullane was afforded the honor. What was her title?

A. Ball duchess

B. Ball dudette

C. The Queen of Diamonds D. Ball girl

9th

Inning: The Oakland A’s won the World Series in 1972, but the team also achieved a first with something no other team had done for 50 years. What was it?

A. Nearly all the players sported

mustaches or other facial hair

B. The A’s had notched the highest

number of wins in half a century C. Instead of drinking Champagne to celebrate the victory, they drank soda and ordered pizza.

D. All the players were over age 40.

Extra innings

10:

Former Giants infielder Chris Brown once missed a minor league game because of an eye injury. What was it and how did it happen?

A. He strained his eyelid by “sleeping on

it funny”

B. He got punched in the eye by the opposing team’s mascot after asking “What are you supposed to be?” C. His own teammate accidental­ly hit him while tossing a ball into the stands for a young fan.

D. He got a black eye sliding into home. 11:

Babe Ruth, who pitched and batted left handed but signed autographs with his right, played a 1924 exhibition game in what tiny Northern California hamlet?

A. Dunsmuir

B. Cupertino

C. Gilroy

D. Crockett

12:

The A’s were only in their fourth week of existence in Oakland when Jim “Catfish” Hunter threw a perfect game on May 8, 1968, the first perfect game in a regular season in the majors in 46 years. How many fans actually witnessed the feat?

A. 33,496 B. 48,322 C. 12,115 D. 6,298

13:

What former tennis star is a minority owner of the Dodgers and has a relative who played a decade for the Giants?

A. John McEnroe

B. Jimmy Connors

C. Billie Jean King

D. Bobby Riggs

14:

The Giants weren’t always Giants. They started out in 1883 as the New York Gothams. Why the name change?

A. The creators of “Batman” threatened to sue for misappropr­iation of the name of the caped crusader’s city. B. In an emotional speech after a particular­ly convincing win, playermana­ger Jim Mutrie congratula­ted his teammates, calling them “my big fellows, my giants.” The name stuck. C. Simple. When the team moved to San Francisco in 1958, the name didn’t fit, so they picked “Giants.”

D. The team was sponsored by The

Giant Dynamite Co.

15:

Sportswrit­er Ernest Thayer’s classic baseball poem, “Casey at the Bat,” was published in 1888 by the San Francisco Examiner and set off a heated debate that exists to this day over the identity of the real Casey and the Mudville team. A town near Thayer’s childhood home, Holliston, Massachuse­tts, says it was the inspiratio­n. But a California minor league team also lays claim to it — and well, you know we’re going with the home team. Name the city and the team.

A. The San Francisco Seals B. The Stockton Ports C. The San Jose Starlings D. The Pittsburg Pirates

Above: Eighteen-year-old Joe DiMaggio crosses home plate for the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League in 1933, his first full year as a profession­al ballplayer. He had a hit in a league-record 61 consecutiv­e games that season.

It’sa clear, crisp, late-January day in the middle of the Major League Baseball lockout, but the hot stove is on fire. “What’s it going to take to get me Ohtani?” a voice from across the table inquires. “I’m willing to overpay for that guy.”

A few feet away, a small group watches with great interest as numbers are traded and then punched into cellphone calculator­s. In the end, negotiatio­ns for another of the game’s biggest stars fall apart before it really gets serious: “I’d love Trout, but you’re just asking too much; people are starting to figure out he’s kinda overrated.”

No, this isn’t a scene from baseball’s winter meetings. Welcome to the world of baseball card collecting 2.0.

Those colorful cardboard treasures have existed in one form or another

With so many cards out there, how do you decide what to collect? One Bay Area shop owner suggests, “Buy what you like. Then you can never go wrong.”

since the late 1800s. They were a pretty big deal in the early 1960s and a REALLY big deal in the early 1990s, but they were mostly forgotten at the start of this century, because they were barely worth the cardstock they were printed on.

But if you haven’t collected since the days when chewing gum came with your packs, let alone before the age of serial-number autograph cards, you may be surprised to learn the hobby is enjoying a historic revival.

It’s one nobody saw coming — and it was fueled by, of all things, the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The lockdown put us kind of all in a place where we had to sit down, stay home and do nothing,” recalled Keane Dasalla, a memorabili­a collector and vlogger from Fremont. “It didn’t take long before everything kind of went crazy.”

Jim Bernardini opened Lefty’s Sports Cards in Burlingame in

1987 and has seen it through the Bash Brothers, the Loma Prieta earthquake, two Gulf Wars, the baseball strike, 9/11, the stock market crash and three Giants World Championsh­ips. But the pandemic era has been something else.

“We’ve had some ups and downs in our industry over the years,” said Bernardini. “This is an up. For the first time, we are debt-free.”

Vintage cards. New releases. Prospects. Everything took off, virtually overnight.

“Five years ago, I was telling people the hobby would be dead in 10 years,” said Ray Krause, who has owned and operated MVP Sportscard­s in Pleasant Hill since 1991. “Basically, everybody who used to collect who were in their 20s, 30s and even 50-year-olds jumped back in.”

They were not alone.

CLEANING UP

Baseball card collecting began showing signs of life in the mid-2010s, with the emergence of instant-impact rookies from big-market teams like Mike Trout, Kris Bryant, Cody Bellinger and Aaron Judge.

Then a couple of seemingly

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 ?? ANDA CHU/STAFF ARCHIVES ?? David Ortiz hit 23 home runs against the Oakland A’s during his Hall of Fame career with the Red Sox and Twins, but the Coliseum wasn’t one of his most productive stops. He only belted nine homers and hit .233 in 65 games in Oakland.
ANDA CHU/STAFF ARCHIVES David Ortiz hit 23 home runs against the Oakland A’s during his Hall of Fame career with the Red Sox and Twins, but the Coliseum wasn’t one of his most productive stops. He only belted nine homers and hit .233 in 65 games in Oakland.
 ?? JOSIE LEPE/STAFF ARCHIVES ?? San Francisco Giants mascot Lou Seal boxes with Philadelph­ia Phillies mascot Phanatics during Game 3 of the National League Championsh­ip Series in 2010.
JOSIE LEPE/STAFF ARCHIVES San Francisco Giants mascot Lou Seal boxes with Philadelph­ia Phillies mascot Phanatics during Game 3 of the National League Championsh­ip Series in 2010.
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 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Left: Jim (Catfish) Hunter in action as he pitched a perfect no-hit, no-run, no-anything game against the Minnesota Twins on May 8, 1968. It was the first perfect game pitched in the American League in 46 years and was thrown in the 11th baseball game ever played at the Coliseum.
AP PHOTOS Left: Jim (Catfish) Hunter in action as he pitched a perfect no-hit, no-run, no-anything game against the Minnesota Twins on May 8, 1968. It was the first perfect game pitched in the American League in 46 years and was thrown in the 11th baseball game ever played at the Coliseum.
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 ?? SHAE HAMMOND/STAFF ?? Right: Timothy Wong, of San Francisco, holds up baseball cards signed by Ishikawa and Duffy, who were teammates on the Giants’ 2014 World Series championsh­ip team. Ishikawa also won a World Series ring with the Giants in 2010.
SHAE HAMMOND/STAFF Right: Timothy Wong, of San Francisco, holds up baseball cards signed by Ishikawa and Duffy, who were teammates on the Giants’ 2014 World Series championsh­ip team. Ishikawa also won a World Series ring with the Giants in 2010.
 ?? ?? Above: Fans were lined up outside of Lefty’s Sports Cards in Burlingame for hours to have memorabili­a signed by former San Francisco Giants players Travis Ishikawa and Matt Duffy in January.
Above: Fans were lined up outside of Lefty’s Sports Cards in Burlingame for hours to have memorabili­a signed by former San Francisco Giants players Travis Ishikawa and Matt Duffy in January.
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