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Ben takes you to a historic Triple-A gem

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Plus, would you try Puff the Magic Popper in Columbus? October 19, 2023 Welcome to the 77th edition

Plus, would you try Puff the Magic Popper in Columbus? [Ben's Biz Beat]( [By Benjamin Hill]( October 19, 2023 Welcome to the 77th edition of the Ben’s Biz Beat Newsletter. It will be largely focused on the Columbus Clippers, an International League team established in, you guessed it, 1977. This pleases me. I hope it pleases you. Let’s talk about Minor League Baseball.   THE ROAD ENDS ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON IN COLUMBUS [Welcome to Ohio] Everything ends eventually, excepting eternity, and so it was with my 2023 ballpark road trips. My final stop of the season was Huntington Park, located in downtown Columbus, Ohio. It opened in 2009, which was also the first season of the Clippers’ ongoing affiliation with the Cleveland Guardians. I arrived at Huntington Park on the late morning of Sept. 10, having driven there from Indianapolis following a breakfast of beef jerky, hardboiled eggs and Red Bull. My first glimpse of this auspicious facility came from the beyond the outfield. No ticket needed, you can just peer on in. [Views of Huntington Park from the outside] For the first 31 seasons of their existence, the Clippers played at Cooper Stadium. This ballpark opened in 1931 as Red Bird Stadium, but its name was later changed to honor local baseball hero Harold Cooper. He grew up in Columbus, and on two occasions helped bring Minor League Baseball to the city (the Jets in 1954 and the Clippers in ’77).  Today, Harold can be found greeting fans outside of Huntington Park’s center field entrance. [Harold Cooper, in statue form] The Clippers are one of three professional teams in Columbus’s sensibly-named Arena District, along with the Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL) and Columbus Crew (MLS). The views from within the ballpark provide a great sense of the city’s downtown. Note, also, that the standalone multitiered structure in left field possesses an architectural aesthetic that is very much in line with the neighborhood. [Columbus skyline] That building in left field is brick. The exterior façade is brick. The concourse walls are brick. There’s a lot of brick in this ballpark, is what I’m trying to say. Perhaps more bricks than any other Minor League stadium, with the notable and obvious exception of Oklahoma City’s Bricktown Ballpark.  [The Columbus concourse] On the concourse I came across the Clippers’ Victory Bell, marking the second time in some 16 hours in which I’d laid eyes on one (Indianapolis’ Victory Field is also home to a Victory Bell). [Columbus' Victory Bell] The Clippers’ bell has some serious history behind it, as it was originally used in a Columbus fire house. In the 1950s it was donated to the Columbus Jets, and it then resided in the Jets Stadium press box (Jets Stadium being yet another name for the facility also known as Red Bird Stadium and Cooper Stadium).  The Victory Bell means a lot to the team, to the extent that their long-running theme song is a chipper, polka-style ditty called “Columbus Clippers Ring Your Bell.” This season, the team gave away cowbells to the first 500 kids through the gates at Sunday games. [A downtown backdrop] Since I’m on the topic of metal objects: It’s not publicly on display, but Huntington Stadium is currently the home of the Governors’ Cup. This trophy was given to the International League champion in every season from 1933-2019, and then sadly discontinued. The Clippers won it in 2019, so here it still resides.  I’m a Minor League guy, so this is my version of hoisting the Stanley Cup: [Ben and the Governors' Cup] I could go on a long tangent regarding the Governors’ Cup, which was instituted as part of a groundbreaking playoff format (in which the top four teams in the International League competed in a multi-round tournament). One thing I do want to mention, before moving on, is that the Governors’ Cup seen above only dates back to 2009. The previous cup was [destroyed earlier that season]( by an irate Scranton/Wilkes-Barre fan. True story.  Historical tangents are inevitable when writing about Columbus. Professional baseball in the city dates back to 1877, and the Clippers do a great job documenting it throughout the ballpark. (I wrote about [team historian Joe Santry]( the last time I visited Columbus, as his knowledge base is, in a word, gargantuan.)  The bar located within the left-field building is lined with memorabilia, and there are photos and baseball cards arrayed along the bar itself. [Columbus' ballpark bar] On a staircase in said building, one can view Clippers murals featuring players of various degrees of recognizability. [The '95 Clippers] More perspective can be found by chatting up ballpark regulars. Prior to the game I spoke with longtime team president Ken Schnacke as well as longtime employee Marvin Dill (pictured below). Marvin started with the team as a Jet Stadium visiting clubhouse attendant and now mans a reception area used by all manner of gameday personnel. [Meet Marvin Dill] On this beautiful Sunday afternoon, the Clippers were facing the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. It was the opening day of the NFL season, but a solid number of Columbusans came out for the National Pastime instead. You love to see it. [Gametime in Columbus] As for this guy, I’m not sure how you feel about seeing him. But, per usual, he insists on making himself seen.   JOSH JACKSON INTERRUPTS [Josh Jackson Interrupts]( Don't take off! This is Josh Jackson coming at you as direct as the crow flies. You and I are already birds of a feather if you recognize me as host of Ghosts of the Minors, The Show Before the Show segment in which I ask you to pick out the historical Minor League team or player hidden between a pair of phonies. Last time, we grumpily laid the groundwork with old outfielder Grimm Mason This week, I ask you which of these tasty teams took a bite out of the Minors of yesteryear? - The Battle Creek Graham Slammers - The Montpelier Goldfish - The Newton Fig Munchers For the answer, check out last week's Ghosts of the Minors on [The Show Before the Show](   OK, LET’S EAT While waiting for Josh to conclude his spiel, it occurred to me that you might like to see pictures of ballpark food. I have the pictures but didn’t eat the food, as that task went to Designated Eater Austin Cull. [Meet Austin Cull]( Austin, a Daytonian, is an Ohio University alumnus who now works as a quality improvement manager for the American Cancer Society. He’s also a fantasy baseball expert who produces and co-hosts the [Fantasy Baseball On Deck]( show. He’s got skills, he’s got passion and his khakis and Clippers polo shirt made him look like a member of the Clippers front office.  Before eating, Austin and I stopped at The Mooler -- a walk-in cooler sponsored by a the Moo Moo Express Car Wash. Austin’s a big fan of Ohio’s breweries in general, and of Land Grant in particular. He chose Land Grant’s Oh Surf, which he called “not overly hoppy” and “more fruit forward.” [Oh Surf] We then walked up to the highest level of the left-field building, as an outpost of Columbus-based Dirty Frank’s Hot Dog Palace is located there. The menu is filled with specialty dogs, and we ordered two of them.  First up was the Strikeout Dog, topped with tots, jalapeños and cheddar cream cheese on a poppy seed bun. [Strikeout dog] You can watch Austin eat the Strikeout Dog [HERE](. In sum, he said the jalapeños provided a good kick and elevated “the mediocrity of what a hot dog is” before concluding that the “texture of the tater tots really brings it home.”  The next dog was a bit too similar to the Strikeout Dog, which was my fault for not reading the menu thoroughly. Puff the Magic Popper is topped with cheddar cream cheese, jalapeños and bacon bits. [Puff the Magic Popper] Austin liked this one a tad better, saying bacon bits provided a more savory base than did the tater tots. He scarfed it down alongside Dirty Frank himself. [Austin tries a Dirty Frank] Temporarily bidding adieu to Austin, I scurried down to the broadcast booth (more like a shed, really, placed in the middle of a seating section behind home plate). The vantage point: [The view from the booth in Columbus] I joined Ryan Mitchell for an enjoyable inning on the radio, talking largely about -- you guessed it -- Minor League Baseball. [Ben in the booth with Ryan Mitchell] Austin and I then procured a final item: chicken wings and mac ‘n cheese from the Wings and Yuengs kiosk in right field (Yuengs being Yuengling beer, pronounced “ying-ling”). [Austin and wings] This batch of wings and mac and cheese was procured late in the ballgame, so it wasn’t as good as it would have been in the first inning. Austin, coughing from the Buffalo sauce, noted as much while calling it an “enjoyable combo.”  From our spot in right field, I noticed a man with a prodigious collection of bells. His name is Gordon Walton, and he comes prepared. [Gordon Walton and his bells] There would be no ringing of the Victory Bell on this afternoon, however, as the Clippers lost to the RailRiders by a score of 13-2. Shortly before the ballgame concluded, I learned that my flight home to New York City was cancelled. Long story short: If you’ve never seen the sun set from a Columbus airport hotel, I’d highly recommend it. Beauty is everywhere, baseball is everywhere, and I’m looking forward to being back on the road in 2024.  Thanks, as always, for reading. [ [READ THE HUNTINGTON PARK BALLPARK GUIDE HERE](   [IF YOU KNOW SOMEONE INTERESTED IN RECEIVING THIS NEWSLETTER, TELL THEM TO SUBSCRIBE HERE](   Contact [Benjamin Hill](mailto:benjamin.hill@mlb.com) [Twitter]( Online]( © 2023 MLB Advanced Media, L.P. MLB trademarks and copyrights are used with permission of Major League Baseball. [Visit MLB.com](. Any other marks used herein are trademarks of their respective owners. Subscription required. Blackout and other restrictions may apply. Please review our [Privacy Policy](. You ({EMAIL}) received this message because you registered to receive commercial email messages or purchased a ticket from [MiLB.com](. Please add info@mail.milblists.com to your address book to ensure our messages reach your inbox. If you no longer wish to receive commercial email messages from [MiLB.com]( please [unsubscribe]( or log in and [manage your email subscriptions](. Postal Address: [MiLB.com]( c/o MLB Advanced Media, L.P., 1271 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

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