Trip to Trenton

Dennis and I decided to pull off our own "separate admission" doubleheader yesterday by following the Mets noontime game at Citi Field with a drive to Trenton, NJ to catch the Yankees double-A farm club.
Waterfront Park is built alongside the Delaware River in New Jersey's capital city. Nice location, easy access. 50 minutes from Staten Island!
A long-standing featuire of minor league and spring training parks -- the starting lineups written by hand posted in the concourse. (Below) We made a good choice -- this was the only night this week without heavy evening thunderstorms.
On the mound for the future Yankees, lefthander Wilkin DelaRosa. 10-3 last year but hit hard last night.
Wearing #48 and considered the top offensive prospect in the Yankee organization, 19 year old catcher Jesus Montero. Nice batting stance, hits with power (he singled in the game's first run). A later at-bat didn't work out as well. I paid special attention to him with the idea that three-to-five years from now, I might have a collection of "before he was famous" shots akin to what a fan of the 1994-95 Columbus Clippers might have taken of some "prospects" named Posada, Pettitte, Rivera and Jeter.
(Above) A face that might be familiar to Mets fans. Long-ago catcher John Stearns now manages the Harrisburg Senators, the Nationals' double-A affiliate.
I'm thinking this hand-operated scoreboard is a legacy of Trenton's former affiliation with the Red Sox.
Another reminder of the Thunder's previous life is the plaque for the numbers retired by the team -- both for products of the Boston farm system:
#5 - Nomar Garciaparra and #33 - Tony Clark.
The numbers (as well as Jackie Robinson's #42) are also displayed on the front of the grandstand.

Late-summer afternoon turns to night as the game (eventually won by Harrisburg 8-4) rolls on.

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