Sunday, June 19, 2011

chicagotribune.com - Travel: This guy getaway is a home run

chicagotribune.com - Travel
Headlines from chicagotribune.com

This guy getaway is a home run
16 Jun 2011, 5:44 pm

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — You have time to think while on the road to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. And you will be on the road, because there is no airport in Cooperstown. This means driving.

You think of the game's legends who have regularly visited the small (population 2,200) upstate New York village.

You think of the thousands of fans who jam Cooperstown every summer to witness the induction of former players and executives.

You think, couldn't they have built the Hall near an airport?

But come in from the north along narrow County Highway 31 as it winds along Otsego Lake, and you'll round a curve and see in the distance the steeples of Cooperstown's churches.

Then you think, "This is great: small-town America and baseball."

The Baseball Hall of Fame may be the ultimate guy getaway weekend. Some opt for a fishing trip; others for a few days of golf or gambling. The Hall of Fame, though, is perfect for two days of total immersion in baseball.

"If you're a baseball lover, you can't beat this place. It beats Vegas," says Sandy Salazar, a waitress at the 25-seat Cooperstown Diner, down Main Street from the Hall.

She says late winter and early spring, when kids are in school, are the prime times for guys to visit. When they come in late spring, summer and fall, it's usually with the family.

"There's a lot of other things to do (in the area)," Salazar says. "But guys are here for the museum."

The Hall is home to some of baseball's greatest relics — Honus Wagner's bats, Ty Cobb's trophies, Roberto Clemente's clubhouse chair from Forbes Field, photos and documents tracing the sport's history, bricks from Hank Aaron's childhood home, Babe Ruth's bowling ball.

The mood is set with "The Baseball Experience," a 13-minute multimedia presentation in the Hall's Grandstand Theater. From there, visitors wander over three floors and 60,000 square feet of exhibit space. At every turn is something to stop you in your tracks, whether it's a showcase of baseballs used in no-hitters, a collection of World Series pins and rings, or one of the permanent exhibits, such as "Diamond Dreams," which tells the story of women in baseball, or "Viva Baseball," which looks at Latin Americans' role in the game.

"If you're a baseball fanatic, it's fantastic," says Mac Miller of Plains, Pa., who was visiting with a group of men from his church.

And as Charlie Baylor of Scranton, another group member, pointed out, "It's a guys thing. Bringing the family would have been anticlimactic. This is for the guys."

Two new exhibits this year are "Swinging Away" (bit.ly/idcu

QJ), which opened in April and examines the connections between baseball and cricket, and "One for the Books" (bit.ly/hmdbEh), a permanent exhibit that was unveiled in May and celebrates iconic numbers in the game.

The big draw, as always, will be the July 22-25 Hall of Fame Weekend, when Bert Blyleven and Roberto Alomar will become the 204th and 205th former major league players inducted in the Hall. Some 25,000 fans — a typical crowd — are expected to jam the village.

And they'll gladly make that long journey to Cooperstown, where baseball was invented. Well, that's the story — since debunked — that got the Hall built here. A commission, appointed in 1905 to determine the origins of the game, decided that Abner Doubleday laid out the first field in Cooperstown in 1839. In 1934, a tattered old baseball was discovered in a farmhouse near Cooperstown. The ball became known as the "Doubleday baseball" and was displayed in Cooperstown. The interest generated, and the upcoming "centennial," provided the push for the establishment of a true Hall of Fame, which eventually opened in 1939 in out-of-the-way Cooperstown.

"You've got to be a baseball fan to come here, to make that trek," says Mike Hemple of Blackwood, N.J., one of a group of 14 guys who came up from the Philadelphia area. "We've got guys in their early 20s to one guy in his early 70s. He's telling us his memories of some of these things. For me it's a childhood dream, memories of different World Series with the Phillies. It's a trip down memory lane."

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