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    Carpinteria's Bill Connell shows his Yankee pride with five caps and a souvenir wooden baseball.

    Paul Wellman

    Carpinteria's Bill Connell shows his Yankee pride with five caps and a souvenir wooden baseball.


    Baseball Drama

    When the L.A. Dodgers Play the S.F. Giants, Wackiness Ensues


    Thursday, July 29, 2010
    By John Zant (Contact)
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    Whenever the Hot Dog Man, aka Bill Connell, visits Dodger Stadium, things seem to get stirred up. He was there late last month when the Dodgers took a 6-2 lead over the New York Yankees into the ninth inning. “All the L.A. fans went home,” said Connell, an ardent Yankee fan since his boyhood in New Jersey. “The Yankees scored four runs against [Jonathan] Broxton to tie it. In the 10th inning, Robinson Cano hit a home run to win it. The only people in the stadium were wearing Yankee caps.”

    Not only were Connell’s hot dogs a hit with the crowd—to the bewilderment of the gourmet chefs at the party—but Jacobs, impressed by the vendor’s evident passion for baseball, gave him temporary custody of a genuine 2009 World Series championship ring, encrusted with 119 diamonds.
    Click to enlarge photo

    Courtesy Photo

    Not only were Connell’s hot dogs a hit with the crowd—to the bewilderment of the gourmet chefs at the party—but Jacobs, impressed by the vendor’s evident passion for baseball, gave him temporary custody of a genuine 2009 World Series championship ring, encrusted with 119 diamonds.

    Connell recently wore quite another Yankee adornment. He was among the caterers at a party hosted by Jeff Jacobs, a Montecito denizen with lofty connections in entertainment and sports. Guests included Chris Bosh, the newly minted center of the Miami Heat, and Academy Award winner Jeff Bridges. Not only were Connell’s hot dogs a hit with the crowd—to the bewilderment of the gourmet chefs at the party—but Jacobs, impressed by the vendor’s evident passion for baseball, gave him temporary custody of a genuine 2009 World Series championship ring, encrusted with 119 diamonds. “There I was, handing out hot dogs, with this New York Yankee ring glittering on my finger,” Connell said. “Can you believe it?”

    Only a couple days later, Connell hit the trifecta—another memorable trip to Dodger Stadium. This time, he took 50 people with him on a chartered bus from his Surf Dog stand in Carpinteria. We expected to see a low-scoring duel between two of the game’s best young pitchers, Tim Lincecum of the Giants and Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers. Instead, we were treated to an evening of wacky incidents that stoked up the L.A.-San Francisco rivalry.

    Much to our surprise, the Dodgers got to Lincecum for five runs in the first three innings. Kershaw was in command until the fifth inning, when the Giants got a break, thanks to Xavier being Manny—rookie Xavier Paul, subbing for the injured Manny Ramirez (more slug than slugger these days) in left field, had a flyball drop out of his glove. Three runs later, the Giants trailed just 5-4.

    In the bottom of the fifth, after brushing back Matt Kemp with a pitch, Lincecum nailed him with another. A smattering of boos was directed at the Giants hurler. When relief pitcher Denny Bautista threw a fastball under the chin of L.A.’s Russell Martin in the sixth inning, the natives grew even more restless. They rose to their feet—almost a third of them to boo, the rest to get more beer. The home plate umpire took offense to an animated scolding by Bob Schaefer, the Dodgers’ bench coach, and ejected him.

    Kershaw’s first pitch leading off the seventh inning squarely hit the Giants’ Aaron Rowand. Next to “It’s not about the money,” the most laughable sentence in a ballplayer’s repertoire is when a pitcher says about a retaliatory delivery, “It just got away from me.” That was Kershaw’s unconvincing explanation for his last pitch of the game. After he was ejected, along with manager Joe Torre, reliever Hong-Chih Kuo retired the next six San Francisco batters, preserving the Dodgers’ one-run lead.

    I could not understand why people were leaving the stadium in droves. I guess they got what they came for—a James Loney bobblehead—but they missed a deliciously bizarre scene in the ninth inning.

    Broxton, L.A.’s massive closer, made his usual dramatic entrance to the thundering sound of Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man” and promptly loaded the bases. Then Don Mattingly, filling in as L.A.’s manager for the departed Torre, made an ill-fated visit to the mound, which technically became two visits when he stepped off and back on the dirt, which prompted Giants manager Bruce Bochy to remind the umpires that was a no-no. They ruled that Broxton, who had begun pitching to Andres Torres, must immediately be replaced (their interpretation was later called into question). Out of the bullpen came George Sherrill, whose first pitch was hammered by Torres to the wall in left field for a two-run double. The Giants went on to win, 7-5.

    Connell and his busload, predominantly Dodger fans, stayed to the end. “We got our money’s worth,” the Hot Dog Man declared cheerfully.

    A few spectators were confounded during the ninth-inning comedy of errors. It occurred to me that in years past, we would have heard Vin Scully describing the incident via hand-held radios throughout the stadium. But now the iconic announcer spends most of his time on television.

    The next best thing to being at a game is hearing Scully talk about it. If the late Bob Sheppard, longtime public address announcer for the Yankees, was the “Voice of God,” then Scully is the “Voice of the Seraph.” He’ll have plenty to say this weekend when the Dodgers and Giants resume their hostilities in San Francisco.

    GAME OF THE WEEK: The Santa Barbara Foresters will be packing up for the NBC World Series in Wichita after playing their last home game of the season versus the Santa Maria Packers, 5 p.m. Saturday, July 31, at the UCSB diamond.

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