Friday, July 19, 2019

Los Angeles vs. Boston

Seeing the Dodgers play in Boston puts me in a little bit of a weird position.  I’m a Celtics fan and I hate the Lakers.  So being a Dodger/Celtic fan is a weird combination.  When you throw in Notre Dame, my dad, my uncle, my cousin, and I are the only four Dodger/Celtic/Notre Dame fans in the world.  Notre Dame/Celtics isn’t a weird combination, but Notre Dame/Dodgers is a little weird (my guess for the most popular baseball teams for Notre Dame fans would be the Cubs first followed in some order by the Yankees, Red Sox, and White Sox).  The last time I saw the Dodgers play at Fenway Park was two days after the most frustrating loss of my life as a sports fan.

The Dodgers have now played the Red Sox in Boston 14 times.  They lost all three games played in Boston in the 1916 World Series, but the Red Sox played their home games at Braves Field (even though Fenway Park was around by then).  The Dodgers won one out of three in 2004.  The Red Sox swept them in 2010.  And then last year the Red Sox won both World Series games in Boston.  So going into this series, the Dodgers were 1-10 against the Red Sox in Boston and 1-7 at Fenway Park.  It would be interesting to know what their record was in Boston against the Boston Braves, but I’m not going to try to figure that out.  They split the first two games of this series and I was there for the final game.

It was Hyun-Jin Ryu against David Price.  I was hoping to see Clayton Kershaw, but he didn’t pitch in Boston.  He did pitch the next day in Philadelphia.  I considered going to that one also (I would have gotten to see the Dodgers pound the Phillies), but that would have required either a hotel room or a stop at home (which is out of the way if I was going from Boston to Philadelphia) just to take a shower and get some sleep and stuff.  Anyway, the game got off to a good start with former Notre Dame baseball player AJ Pollack blasting a three-run home run in the top of the first (it went like 322 feet and it only would have been a home run at Fenway Park and Yankee Stadium).  The bottom of the first wasn’t fun.  The Red Sox got five hits and scored two runs.  Three of the hits didn’t leave the infield.  One of them might have been a double play if not for the shift (I’ve called for the rule that the first and second baseman need to be on the right side of the infield and the third baseman and shortstop need to be on the right side of the infield).  There was a play at the plate that the Dodgers challenged and lost.  It was really too close to tell.  If he had been called out, I don’t think the Red Sox would have gotten it overturned.  So Ryu gave up two runs and five hits, but he really pitched much better than that.

A panoramic shot with my view for most of the game

Ryu pitched six solid innings after that.  He only gave up three more hits and no runs.  AJ Pollack drove in another run with a single in the fifth.  Then the eighth inning happened.  Pedro Baez gave up a lead off home run to Xander Bogaerts.  Then he gave up a home run to JD Martinez (I saw that one coming).  Dave Roberts came out because apparently he was tipping his pitches (which brings back bad memories of Yu Darvish in the World Series).  Then he struck out the next three guys.  Baez has been their best reliever other than Kenley Jansen (who has been shaky at times), Julio Urias (whose innings are being tightly controlled after missing most of the last two years with a shoulder injury), and Russell Martin (a catcher).  Even though he’s been pretty good, I don’t trust Baez.  The Dodgers are really good, but they need some bullpen help before the trade deadline.

The Dodgers brought Kenley Jansen in with runners on first and second with one out in the bottom of the ninth.  I was expecting to lose at this point.  Jansen got Rafael Devers to line out and then struck out Bogaerts (the title of this post was going to be X Gave It to Us if he had gotten the game winning hit).

As I said in my last post, “Megabus had a 1:00 am bus to New York and the game was at 7:00.  What could go wrong?”  Well, the game went 12 innings.  It lasted five hours and 40 minutes.  That’s what went wrong.  Much like my trip to San Francisco last year, I had to leave the game early because of travel arrangements when I would have been fine under normal circumstances.  In that game, I saw the Dodgers take the lead in the 14th and then left (in my mind, that’s how the game ended).  This time, I saw Max Muncy draw a bases loaded walk in the 12th to give the Dodgers the lead.  They tacked on two more runs.  I heard the crowd react to the next one and as I was walking outside the park I saw a TV through a window showing a replay of Alex Verdugo driving in a run with a single.  The Dodgers held on in the bottom of the 12th and won 7-4.  The Red Sox have a really good record with me in attendance.  They were 8-1 with me in attendance before this game according to my Ballpark app, but it's possible that I'm missing games at Shea Stadium (I don't think I ever saw the Red Sox play at Shea Stadium) or old Yankee Stadium (more likely than Shea Stadium).  The Dodgers improved to 4-2 with me in attendance this year.  I once went on streak of 15 games where they started every game that Kershaw won and lost every game started by anybody else (off the top of my head, Ryu pitched at least two of those).  But this year they're 3-0 with Ryu and 1-2 with anybody else (1-1 with Maeda, 0-1 with Buehler).

The stadium was gradually clearing out.  I moved down to watch my last half inning or so before I had to leave.  That's Max Muncy at the plate about to drive in the winning run with a walk.

I’ve now been to eight events at Fenway Park:  baseball games in 1995, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2017, and 2019; Frozen Fenway for hockey in 2014; and the Shamrock Series for football in 2015.  The last four times I’ve been there, I had standing room tickets or John snuck me in and I didn’t have a seat.  Standing room is a good option if you’re in the right spot.  I could have gotten a cheaper seat, but it would have been in the bleachers or way out in right field.  Either way, you’re really far away from home plate and there’s a good chance that you’re facing some weird direction.  I went with first base pavilion standing room, which was something I hadn’t done before.  That was pretty good.  I like being at a little bit of elevation for baseball because it gives you a good look at the shape of the field and the positioning of infielders and outfielders.  I was as high up as possible at Fenway Park, but Fenway Park doesn’t go very high so it’s definitely not too high.  For the last couple of baseball games I was at, I stood on the lower level behind home plate (you can’t stand behind home plate on the pavilion level because that’s where the press box is).  It’s nice being behind home plate, but we’re way under an overhang and you can’t see fly balls and there’s a decent chance that you won’t be able to see a home run land.  So I really liked the first base pavilion standing room, but he only tricky thing is that there’s not a big height differential between the standing room and the rows in front of it.  So people’s heads in front of you might be an issue (check out the first picture in this post).  I was able to position myself in between people so that I always had a good view.

The food and beverage selection is good.  I had a Fenway Frank and a Sam Adams Summer Ale.  I drink by mood so when the Dodgers played the Red Sox in the World Series, I refused to drink any Sam Adams until it was over.  If they didn’t have Summer Ale, I probably wouldn’t have had any Sam Adams beer at the game, but I love Summer Ale and baseball and I hadn’t had one yet at a baseball game this season.  I’ve got some minor league games coming up, but my next Major League game might not be until September so this might have been my last chance to drink Sam Adams Summer Ale at a Major League game this season.

I’m going to finish by comparing Dodger Stadium and Fenway Park.  This season I’ve seen the Dodgers play at my four favorite current stadiums.  Wrigley Field and PNC Park are really good, but I have Dodger Stadium and Fenway Park ahead of them by a pretty good margin.  I had Fenway Park first and Dodger Stadium second in my rankings (check this post for my most recent stadium rankings), but let's see if that holds up.  As I said, I’ve been to eight events at Fenway Park.  I’ve been to 10 games at Dodger Stadium plus three stadium tours.

Location
First, let’s start with the cities.  I love Los Angeles and I love Boston.  There’s plenty not to like about both (pretty much like there is with any big city), but I focus on all the good stuff.  Boston has the history, the Celtics, Fenway Park.  Los Angeles has fantastic weather (unlike Boston, you pretty much never have to worry about cold weather or rain affecting your experience at the game), amazing scenery, the Dodgers, and Dodger Stadium.  Obviously it’s a lot easier for me to get to Boston.  Within the cities, the location of the stadiums is very different.  Dodger Stadium is surrounded by parking lots.  Fenway Park is definitely not surrounded by parking lots.  So that helps Fenway, but Dodger Stadium does have the San Gabriel Mountains in the background so that's pretty cool also.
Slight edge:  Fenway Park

Stadium Design
You might think this is an easy win for Fenway Park.  Fenway Park is wonderfully weird.  The Green Monster is iconic.  You have the Pesky Pole.  Dodger Stadium is symmetrical.  Symmetry can be bad for baseball stadiums when it’s boring (like when the Phillies, Pirates, Reds, and Cardinals played in different stadiums that were all the same, seriously open those links in different tabs, they were all the same).  But Dodger Stadium is beautifully symmetrical.  The colors of the stadium are classic and you have the wavy roof over the pavilion.  The way the stadium is built into a hill is really cool.  You can enter the stadium on any level of the stadium.  It’s also the biggest baseball stadium in the world (Fenway Park is 30th).  Also, I think my favorite play in baseball is seeing somebody leap to take a home run away.  The Green Monster (37 feet) is great.  But then you have the wall in center that’s 17 feet.  The right field wall is 3-5 feet, shorter than the players.  At Dodger Stadium, you have the short walls in the corners at 4 feet, but most of the outfield wall is 8 feet, requiring leaping catches to take away home runs.
Edge:  Even

Seating
There’s no terrible view at Dodger Stadium.  You can get seats with a great view for a reasonable price.  You can’t get seats with a great view for a reasonable price at Fenway Park.  Many seats have views obstructed by poles.  There are lots of seats out in the center to right field areas where you’re facing some weird direction.
Big edge:  Dodger Stadium

Food and Beverage
The Dodger Dog is iconic.  The Fenway Franks are good, but I’d rank them behind Nathan’s and Dodger Dogs.  But as I’ve covered before, Dodger Stadium needs to revamp its beer program.  Give me reasonably sized craft beer options for a non-crazy price.  You get that at Fenway Park.
Edge:  Fenway Park

Atmosphere
Fenway Park is pretty much always sold out.  The fans are into the games.  Dodger fans are much better than their reputation.  They easily lead the league in attendance with an average over 48,000 (more than the capacity at most other ballparks).  They also lead in average road attendance and that’s due in part to Dodger fans living in other cities and/or traveling the country and going to games (there were a lot of Dodger fans in Boston with Pantone 294 and they were loud).  But it’s tough to beat Fenway Park.
Edge:  Fenway Park

History
Fenway Park is 50 years older than Dodger Stadium, but Dodger Stadium is the third oldest stadium in baseball.  The Red Sox have played in 10 World Series at Fenway Park (they played the World Series at Braves Field in 1915 and 1916).  The Dodgers have played in 10 World Series at Dodger Stadium.  It’s Ted Williams, Carl Yastrzemski, Jim Rice, Carlton Fisk, Pedro Martinez, and 14 no hitters (they lose points for David Ortiz) vs. Vin Scully, Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale, Tommy Lasorda, Fernando Valenzuela, Orel Hershiser, Kirk Gibson, Clayton Kershaw, twelve no hitters (with two perfect games), the 1984 Olympics, the invention of the high five, Pope John Paul II, and the Naked Gun.
Slight edge:  Dodger Stadium

Final verdict:  It’s too close to call.  If you want to say Fenway Park is the best, I’m fine with that.  Obviously I’m biased, but I think I made a pretty good case for why Dodger Stadium is right up there with Fenway Park.  I’m calling it a tie.

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Nobody Knew My Name

I recently went up to Boston to see the Dodgers play only their third regular season series at Fenway Park.  I’ll get to that later because I decided my Boston trip should be two posts.  This post is going to be about everything other than the game and Fenway Park.

But first, what led to this trip to Boston?  I knew I wanted to go up to Boston to see the Dodgers, but I didn’t know what day until I saw the Dodgers’ rotation after the All Star break.  I was hoping to see Clayton Kershaw, but it turned out that he wasn’t going to be pitching in Boston.  The other desirable pitchers to see were Hyun-Jin Ryu or Walker Buehler.  Since all three of those guys pitched in the All Star game, the Dodgers wanted to give them all some extra rest after the break, so Ryu was the only one to face the Red Sox and that was in the last game of the series.  So Sunday it was for my trip to Boston.

Ordinarily, John is my guy in Boston, but he was on vacation with his family.  So I was on my own for the day.  I originally figured I’d get a hotel room, but I realized I could save some money by just taking the bus home after the game.  Megabus had a 1:00 am bus to New York and the game was at 7:00.  What could go wrong?

Anyway, I got into Boston a little after 2:00.  My first stop was Cheers.  I recently watched all of Cheers.  It was a good show, but it’s kind of amazing now to think that people once had it on the same level as Seinfeld.  The outside looks like what you would see on the show.  The inside does not.  You go down the stairs and there’s a little bar there that doesn’t look like the show.  You walk down a hallway and there’s a dining room.  Then there are stairs that go up to the Cheers set bar.  That one does look a little like the show (it’s nowhere near as big as it looked on the show), but considering it was a bright day and it was above ground, it definitely didn’t have the feel of the show.  I was going to get a beer, but both bars were so crowded that I decided to just leave.  That turned out to be fortuitous.

As it turns out, nobody knew my name.

My next stop was the Boston Burger Company, which was on Man vs. Food and a few other shows as well.  I had what Casey Webb had on Man vs. Food, the Pilgrim.  It was a turkey burger with cheese, stuffing, and cranberry mayo.  It’s Thanksgiving on a bun.  Not getting a beer at Cheers was fortuitous because my plan was to drink two beers during my day in Boston and one was going to be at the game.  If I had a beer at Cheers, I would have passed on one at the Boston Burger Company.  Not getting one at Cheers allowed me to order a Sam Adams Summer Ale.  And as you may know, that is my traditional Thanksgiving beer (just like it was for the Pilgrims).  How was the burger?  Pretty good.  I would definitely recommend it.  But if I were going back, I’d want to try one of their other options.  A lot of them looked a little too crazy, but there were some that I’d be interested in.  Hopefully the next time I’m enjoying turkey, stuffing, and cranberry I’ll also be a couple days away from watching Notre Dame finish a good regular season with a win over Stanford (it’s been far too long since we’ve won there).

It wouldn't be Thanksgiving without Summer Ale.

I had some time until the game.  I stopped at the mall at the Prudential Center.  There’s a chapel at that mall that I’ve made use of to go to mass twice before, but I had taken care of that with a vigil mass on Saturday.  I was really just there to find a place to charge my phone and do some reading.

What was I reading?  I recently listened to one of the many Notre Dame podcasts I listen to and they interviewed Jamie Reidy.  He recently wrote Need One! A Lunatic’s Attempt to Attend 365 Games in 365 Days.  Not only was he going to attend an event each day, he was going to travel around the country and get to at least one event in each state.  You can see why this would appeal to me.  It’s pretty close to what the original idea of this blog was.  I bought the book right away, but I hadn’t starting reading it yet.  I debated bringing it with me since I wasn’t bringing a bag and it might be annoying to carry around a book all day.  As it turns out, it was a good decision.  It was about 25 hours from the time I left on Sunday morning to the time I got back on Monday morning.  The book is almost 300 pages (pretty easy reading, but still, it’s not short) and I read the whole book.  From beginning to end.  In that order.

I’m not spoiling much because it says it right on the back cover, but Jamie didn’t make it the entire year.  But he did plenty of traveling and going to sporting events.  He didn’t get to Hawaii and Alaska (he planned on going to the Midnight Sun Game in Fairbanks), but he might have seen an event in the other 48 states (I’m definitely not sure on that one, there were many days that he didn’t detail, but he went from coast to coast and did plenty of stuff in the middle).  I attended at least 3.5 of the same events that he did.  His Sports Year started in September 2013 and he was at Notre Dame-Oklahoma (no blog post because that was miserable), Notre Dame-USC , and the Pinstripe Bowl.  I said 3.5 because he also went to Frozen Fenway, but he only stayed for the first game of the doubleheader.  He was just there because hockey at Fenway Park was interesting and he wanted to count it as an event that he went to.  Kyle and I went because hockey at Fenway Park was interesting and because we wanted to see Notre Dame.  Notre Dame played the second game of the doubleheader and we didn’t feel like sitting through the first game in the cold.

As one of the maps in my last post showed, I’ve been to sporting events in many of the 50 states, but not all.  So I was thinking about what sporting events I would want to attend that I haven’t before and what events I would want to go to in the states where I haven’t been to sporting events.  Here are some North American events I’d want to go to:

World Series at Dodger Stadium
World Series at almost any other stadium
NBA Finals in Boston
Super Bowl
Rose Bowl
A game at Lambeau Field
An SEC football game
Final Four
US Open tennis
The Masters- I don’t care about golf at all, but this is the one golf event I’d have some interest in doing.
NHL game in Canada

Even if I wasn’t limiting it to North America, no soccer event would ever be on the list.  Baseball in Japan or any other country where it’s popular would be pretty cool.  A number of Olympic events (winter or summer) would be cool.  Aussie Rules Football would be interesting.  I’d go to see cricket because I would love to understand how cricket works (I have no idea other than it involves hitting a ball).  I can’t really think of any other international events I’d want to go to since I’ve already been to Wimbledon.  What events on that list are realistic?  If the Dodgers and Yankees play in the World Series this year, I’ll definitely look at tickets.  I’m not saying I’m definitely going, but I’ll look.  In 2009, the Dodgers were three wins away from making that match up happen and I was ready to go.  Now, it would definitely depend on the price.  If it had happened in 2009, I would have been more willing to spend the crazy money because it would have been the first World Series for the Dodgers since 1988.  If it happened this year, it would be their third straight World Series appearance.  Of course, they lost the last two years.  If they had won one of those, I think I definitely wouldn’t spend the money on the World Series.  Of course, a lot has to happen before we have a Dodgers-Yankees World Series.  I don’t really care who the Dodgers play in their next trip to the World Series (hopefully this year) as long as they finally win it.  I definitely hope to make a game at Lambeau Field happen in 2020 since Notre Dame is playing there.  The US Open is always a possibility since it’s in Queens (I really should go one of these years).  I wouldn’t rule out the Masters if I knew somebody that wanted to go and it lined up with my Easter vacation.

Now how about the states where I haven’t seen a sporting event?  Here’s what I’d want to see in each state:

Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island- Minor league baseball, I guess

West Virginia, Mississippi, Iowa, Oregon- College football

North Carolina- College basketball, but only if I could guarantee seeing Duke or North Carolina losing at home

Kentucky- Again, college basketball, but only if I could guarantee seeing Kentucky or Louisville losing at home

South Dakota- Sioux Falls has an independent league baseball team so I guess that would be my choice

Kansas- Kansas basketball, I don’t despise them so I don’t need a guaranteed loss

Oklahoma- You were expecting college football, but I’m saying minor league baseball as long as the Dodgers have their double-A and triple-A teams there

Wyoming- I guess Wyoming football, it’s one of three states that doesn’t have a professional baseball team (Alaska and Hawaii are the others)

Hawaii- Hawaii Football or the Hawaii Bowl

I am going to the Notre Dame game at Duke in November so I will cross North Carolina off the states to see a sporting event in list.  I might get to a Pawtucket Red Sox game before the end of the summer (we’ll see on that one) so that would be Rhode Island.  There’s a decent chance I’ll never see a sporting event in many of those states.  I’m fine with that.  I would kind of like to go to a football game in Hawaii, but that might never happen.  I’m unlikely to be in Hawaii for the Hawaii Bowl on Christmas Eve.  A regular season Hawaii game doesn’t work because of school, unless Hawaii has a home game during Week 0 (the week before Labor Day).  I don’t anticipate seeing college football in any of the states I mentioned unless they host Notre Dame (even then, it wouldn’t be easy to get tickets for a price that wasn’t crazy).  Sure, I could just go to some random game, but that would involve spending a Saturday not watching Notre Dame.  Even if it was a Notre Dame bye week, that would involve spending a Saturday not watching all the other games.

My real sports fan goal was to get to every Major League Baseball stadium and I did that (but the Rangers will have a new one to get to next year).  Jamie Reidy didn’t accomplish his goal, but I still recommend his book.

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Our 49th State, My 50th

The final frontier for me was our biggest state.  When I started the blog seven years ago, I had been to 21 states (and four of those had been added less than a year before I started the blog).  I had been sitting on 49 states for more than two years after visiting South Carolina.  I have wanted to go to Alaska for a long time.  I had my eye on the Alaska Baseball League.  It’s a league for college players to play in during the summer.  The event that I was interested in was the Midnight Sun Game played in Fairbanks the day of the summer solstice.  The problem was that I’m usually not out of school by the time of the summer solstice.  But this year, not having any snow days worked out well for me.  I was done on June 19.  I ended up not going to Fairbanks for the Midnight Sun Game for a few reasons.  I wanted to combine this trip with Oakland and getting to Fairbanks on June 21 would have meant going to Oakland on June 20.  But I didn’t feel like going away on the first day of summer vacation.  The NBA Draft was June 20 and I wanted to watch.  And going to Fairbanks would have been significantly more expensive than going to Anchorage.  Also it turned out that Anchorage had a summer solstice doubleheader on June 22 (which was the day after the actual summer solstice).

I got to Anchorage around 7:00 on June 22.  The doubleheader started at 8:00.  So after checking into my hotel, I walked to Mulcahy Stadium.  I got there shortly after the first game started.  I watched an inning and then went to buy food and a beer.  I got a hot dog, which was very good, but unfortunately they only had yellow mustard.  I went to get a beer and the good news and bad news was that the guy asked for my ID.  I didn’t have it.  I called my hotel and fortunately the guy at the front desk still had it.  So I walked back to my hotel to get my ID and then went back to the game (of course, if you leave your ID in the car when you go to a Yankee game, they’re not letting you leave the stadium to get it and then come back in).  Besides getting to all 50 states, I wanted to drink a beer from each one.  I’m pretty sure I have seen beer from Alaska when I’ve been out west, but as far as I know, I still hadn’t had one before going to Alaska.  So I made it official with a Midnight Sun Wolf Pack IPA.  It was pretty solid.  I watched the Anchorage Glacier Pilots defeat the Matsu Miners in the first game.  The Glacier Pilots have home uniforms that are kind of a cross between the Dodgers and the Hank Aaron Era Atlanta Braves.  The second game started at 10:35.  The sun didn’t set until 11:41.  I was really tired so I waited until after the sun set and then I left.  Even though the sun had set, it was still very bright.  They did turn the lights on though (apparently they never turn them on at the Midnight Sun Game in Fairbanks).  The sun was below the horizon for about four and a half hours at night, but it never seemed to get totally dark.


50 states and a beer from each one.


This was first pitch of the second game at 10:35.

I took this picture at 11:43, two minutes after sunset.

Anchorage has two teams in the Alaska Baseball League (by the way, the Fairbanks team is no longer part of the league, they seem to be an independent team, my guess is that it was because of high travel costs because Fairbanks is pretty far away from the other teams in the league).  Besides the Glacier Pilots, Anchorage also has the Bucs.  They both play in Mulcahy Stadium and I saw the Bucs as the home team against the Glacier Pilots on my second day in Alaska.  The two teams operate different concession stands in the stadium and have different food/beer selections.  The hot dog for the Bucs was 50 cents more, but it was much bigger (although not quite as good).  My guess is that they have different concessions and food for inventory purposes (each team buys and sells its own food and keeps the profit for themselves).  At the Bucs game I had an Alaskan Amber Ale.  I had some good beer in Alaska and that was probably my favorite one.  As for Mulcahy Stadium, it reminded me a little of Doubleday Field in Cooperstown.  It’s not really fair to compare it to any of the minor league stadiums that I’ve been to.

On Sunday, I went to mass at Holy Family Cathedral.  I did not realize that Pope John Paul II had been there in 1981.  I recalled that John Paul II had met with Ronald Reagan in Alaska, but I googled it and that happened in Fairbanks in 1984.  It seems that both of his visits to Alaska were quick stops while traveling between the Vatican and the Far East.  Besides visiting the Cathedral, there was a mass in Delaney Park in Anchorage.  I found a memorial commemorating the event.  That was the largest gathering of people in the history of Alaska.  The cathedral was smaller than any Long Island Catholic church that I can think of.  Also, Anchorage is a moderately sized city with around 300,000 people.  Alaska does not have other big cities.  In land area, Alaska is more than 12 times the size of New York, but if you could move Hicksville from Long Island to Alaska, it would be the second biggest city in the state.




One of my favorite people in history.

I saw some amazing scenery in Alaska, but unfortunately it wasn’t as nice as it could have been.  Denali is the tallest mountain on land in the world (yes, Mt. Everest has a higher altitude, but if we’re going base to summit, Denali is the tallest) and there are some spots where it is supposedly visible from Anchorage on a clear day.  I tried to see it from a couple of places, but I had no luck.  I found out later on that it was because of smoke from forest fires that had been going on since early June.  One of the coolest parts of my trip was taking a bus down to Portage Lake to do a little cruise of the lake to see a glacier.  The drive is mostly along the water of the Turnagain Arm.  Across the water is the Kenai Peninsula with lots of mountains.  Unfortunately the smoke prevented much better views.  On the lake, you see lots of waterfalls created by snow melting in the mountains.  You get up pretty close to the glacier so that was cool.  The lake is in the Chugach National Forest, which is the second biggest national forest in the country (the biggest is the Tongass National Forest, also in Alaska).  I just hope Notre Dame doesn’t decide to play a Shamrock Series game there because it was quite windy and Brian Kelly would have a game plan calling for 50+ passes.  After the glacier cruise, the bus took us to the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center.  I saw bears, moose, reindeer, bison, and other animals.  So that was pretty cool too.


It was low 60s-mid 70s in Anchorage, but it was much colder and windier on Portage Lake.


Portage Glacier


Alaska has a solid state flag.

I was much farther away from the bear than this picture would make it seem.  Also, there was an electric fence between us.





I got my best views of the mountains from the plane.

I got to some good food spots.  The first one I went to was another Man vs. Food spot, Humpy’s Alaskan Ale House.  That’s where Adam had his challenge.  I was just there for breakfast.  I had scrambled eggs with reindeer sausage.  Another stop was the Moose’s Tooth Bar.  I will usually refuse to eat pizza outside of the Pizza Belt (approximately New Jersey to Rhode Island), but somebody named this place the third best pizzeria in the country in 2015 (behind Juliana’s in Brooklyn and a place in Florida) so I gave it a try.  I got myself a small macaroni and cheese pizza with reindeer sausage.  I have a place by me that makes a very good macaroni and cheese pizza and this was right up there with it.  I liked the addition of meat.  Really it could have been just about any kind of meat that would have added something nice.  Reindeer meat was readily available in Alaska.  It was fine, but it’s not like I’m going to wish I could have it again.  They served beer from the Broken Tooth Brewery.  I had a Pipeline Stout, which was pretty good.


I would have been interested to try other pizzas, but this one was very good.

On my last day in Alaska, I had two things I wanted to do.  First was go to the Anchorage Museum, which was pretty good.  The first exhibit I saw was on food in Alaska.  They had a thing comparing the cost of food in different places in Alaska to Seattle.  Doritos cost about $7.50 per bag in Anchorage and Fairbanks.  In one of the places shown, a six-pack of Coke was around $12.  It makes sense because of shipping costs.  I remember in Australia the food was pretty expensive, but when I was going places to eat in Alaska, the prices really didn’t seem crazy (maybe a little high, but not crazy).  And the other thing I wanted to do on my last day was go to the 49th State Brewery.  I might never travel farther north than I did on this trip (I mean, maybe I’ll go to Fairbanks someday, but probably not, Norway would be another possibility to see the birthplace of Knute Rockne).  So if I never travel farther north, the farthest north that I will ever have gone will be the 49th State Brewery.  I had a king salmon burger (I figured I should have salmon in Alaska, I wanted to have crab at some point, but this was pretty much a grilled salmon sandwich, which seemed healthier than any of the crab options I was seeing).  And I had a Baked Blonde as my final Alaskan beer.  There were one or two other options that I might have liked more, but I wanted to go with a different style from the other beers I had during my trip and I ended up liking this one more than I was expecting.


I didn't even realize there was a 49-star flag.  Alaska and Hawaii both became states in 1959, but the new flag takes effect on July 4.  Alaska became a state in January and Hawaii became a state in August.  So the 49-star flag lasted for a year.

This crab was in the Anchorage Museum.


If I saw Alaskan beer out west, I avoided it so that I could drink some for the first time when I finally went to Alaska.  I will not be purposely avoiding it anymore.

I’ll finish up with some maps showing different things about my experiences in the 50 states.  Do not read anything into the colors (I strongly dislike both major political parties these days).  I used more blue as the primary color in most of these maps because the Dodgers wear blue and I strongly dislike many teams that wear red (USC, the Cardinals, Stanford, the Heat, the Diamondbacks, Louisville).


States where I've lived (sort of, I've only lived in New York other than college), states where I haven't


States where I've spent a night, states where I haven't

States where I've seen a sporting event, states where I haven't

States where I've been to mass, states where I haven't (to the best of my knowledge)

I would have thought I had been to mass in more states, but I'm fairly confident that map is accurate.  I've pretty much made a point of going to every state except for Rhode Island (we stopped there when my brothers were visiting colleges in the mid-90s and I've driven or taken the train through it several times since then), Kentucky (I drove through it on the way to and from the Notre Dame-Georgia Tech game in 2006), Kansas (I drove from Mickey Mantle's house in Oklahoma north through Kansas on my way to Kansas City in 2014), and South Dakota (after going to Nebraska for the first time, I drove north through South Dakota on my way to Fargo in 2015).  In each state, I spent several hours driving (actually I think I paid attention one time and it only took 39 minutes to drive through Rhode Island) and stopped and did something (although in Kentucky, I think it was only eating at Arby's) so they count.  Minor league baseball games in Kentucky and Kansas are possibilities in the future (Wichita is getting a triple-A team next year).  I can't really think of a reason why I'd go to South Dakota again unless I ever went to Mount Rushmore.  I'm hoping that I'll be able to get to a minor league game later this summer in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.  Oklahoma is another possibility for minor league baseball in the future, especially because the Dodgers have both their double-A and triple-A teams there.  And I will be going to a sporting event in North Carolina this year.  I'll be at the Notre Dame-Duke football game in November.  Wyoming is pretty high on the list of states I'm least likely to get back to (but I would have said that after I went there in 2012 and then I ended up driving through it with Tom in 2017).  But the 50 states are officially done.  It's been three years since I left the country.  A trip to Europe could be my big trip next summer.  We'll see.