2020-03-26_The_Hollywood_Reporter

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THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 80 MARCH 26, 2020


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Memorable moments
from a storied history

91 Years of THR


Baltimore Orioles first baseman Chris Davis launched a three-run home run against the Chicago White Sox in an empty stadium on April 29, 2015. Right: THR.com covered the team’s decision.

Five years ago, the 133-year-old
record for fewest paying fans at
a Major League Baseball game
was broken. It had been set
in 1882, when only six people
watched the Worcester Ruby
Legs of Massachusetts host the
Troy Trojans of Alabama. But the
record went to zero — as would
have happened with current
sporting events had the NBA,
NHL and MLB not postponed
games because of coronavirus
— when the Baltimore Orioles
played the Chicago White Sox on
the afternoon of April 29, 2015.
The fan-free day was brought
on by civil unrest in Baltimore
after the death of 25-year-old
African American Freddie
Gray, who had received a spinal

injury while in police custody.
The Hollywood Reporter said the
Orioles’ decision was made “in
light of the city’s rioting.” Gary
Thorne, the Orioles’ play-by-
play television announcer, says:
“The situation in Baltimore
was tense. There was a fear that
playing the game might create a
place in the downtown area for
more turmoil both inside and
outside the stadium.” Similar
situations had unfolded before.
For example, the Los Angeles
Dodgers postponed four games
during the 1992 riots after the
Rodney King verdict. But this
was the first time a game went
forward in an empty stadium.
Oriole Park at Camden Yards,
which has 45,971 seats, held only

the players, three scouts sitting
behind home plate and 92 report-
ers in the press box. One Orioles
employee retrieved foul balls
from the grandstands. “Ladies
and gentlemen” were asked to
stand for the national anthem.
When the announcer made the
traditional report of paid atten-
dance, he said, “Zero.” During
the seventh-inning stretch,
no one sang along with John
Denver’s “Thank God I’m a
Country Boy” (which plays in
the stadium after “Take Me Out
to the Ballgame”). The word
“eerie” was used frequently to
describe the scene. “You real-
ize how much the crowd adds
to the ballgame,” says Thorne.
“How important it is to have

that ebb and flow of excitement.”
Before the game began, Orioles
first baseman Chris Davis said,
“This isn’t the way you want to
make history.” In nine innings,
the Orioles won 8 to 2. — BILL HIGGINS

In ’15, Major League Baseball Staged a Crowdless Game


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