Posts Tagged ‘Yankees’

Play Ball!

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011
Mr. Met

Mr. Met

The Downtown Alliance supports the Downtown Little League, which kicks off the season this coming Saturday with a parade and carnival featuring Mr. Met and former Met pitcher Ron Darling.

Daniel Giacomazza is the Alliance’s Assistant Vice President of Operations, and has taken a special interest in the DLL over the past several years. He recently spoke with DLL parent Bridget Crawford about his involvement with the league, his athletic career and his now public (but longtime secret) childhood preference for the Red Sox while growing up in a Yankee household.

Click here to read the interview.

All Over the Sidewalk, Little Tidbits of Information

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
New York's 204th ticker-tape parade: NY Yankees in 2009

NY Yankees in 2009: New York's 204th ticker-tape parade

One of my favorite things to do in Lower Manhattan is to walk down the street and listen to what visitors say about our area. Awhile ago, I saw a couple checking out the turntables on Broad Street and react with complete awe.

This one is in a different direction. Walking down Broadway recently, I overheard someone say, “What are these little tidbits of info all over the sidewalk?”

What are these little tidbits of info all over the sidewalk?

What a great question. It’s funny, because we at the Downtown Alliance, think of them as the Canyon of Heroes markers, plaques in the sidewalk from the bottom of Broadway all the way up to City Hall, that commemorate every single ticker-tape parade New York City has held.

But the idea that the markers are “little tidbits of information” actually makes sense. Let me see if I can provide some background so you can enjoy these little tidbits yourself.

In case you aren’t old enough to remember, ticker tape was a one-inch-wide ribbon of paper on which the “ticker” machine recorded telegraphed stock quotes. Employees working in skyscrapers along Broadway realized that ticker tape sent swirling into the air created a dramatic effect.

The ticker-tape tradition started on October 28, 1886, with the dedication of the Statue of Liberty. The New York Times reported that the festivities of the day inspired so many employees to throw ticker tape out the windows that in a moment “the air was white with curling streamers.”

Almost 125 years later, we have held more than 200 ticker-tape parades, celebrating everything from the centennial of George Washington’s inauguration to foreign leaders and Olympic athletes, the first woman to swim the English Channel, soldiers returning from war and, most recently, New York sports teams winning championships.

From 1919 to the present day, the mayor of New York City has decided who will receive a parade. Before then, they were rather spontaneous celebrations. Because Downtown’s financial companies don’t use ticker-tape machines any more, New Yorkers now use shredded recycled paper.

To honor the Canyon of Heroes, the Downtown Alliance created a granite marker embedded in the sidewalk for each ticker-tape parade up Broadway—the “little tidbits” the person I overheard was mentioning. Each marker gives the date of the parade and the honoree. Unfortunately, there isn’t enough space to include a description of each parade, but you can check out our Canyon of Heroes web page for more information and use our handy brochure for a full listing if you want.

I have been at the Downtown Alliance for almost eight years, and I have had the privilege of working on many different projects, including a pilot program to track the condition of each and every one of these markers. I’ve started at the Battery and walked all the way up Broadway, making sure the plaque that was in the sidewalk matched exactly what we have in our records and checking to make sure it wasn’t damaged or defaced. If a marker gets damaged, we replace it as quickly as we can.

To this day, I cannot step on any of the markers, sometimes doing a little two-step to avoid it if necessary, even though they obviously were built strong enough to be stepped on by millions of people every single year. They are wonderful little tidbits and I don’t want to cause them any damage or make them harder for the next person to read and enjoy.

I hope you’ll take some time to enjoy these little tidbits, maybe during your lunch, or on your way home from work one day. Please comment below or let me know what your favorite tidbit is. Maybe we can help someone else enjoy these little tidbits as well.

Boy Meets World Series Champ

Thursday, June 17th, 2010
girardi

Yes, that's me, in the Yankees cap, with the Skipper

On Tuesday morning, in front of the ever-impressive Woolworth Building, the ever-impressive Yankees made yet another impression on the lives of New Yorkers.  This time it came in the form of a granite slab commemorating their victory parade last fall through the Canyon of Heroes to honor their 27th World Series victory. Thousands of New Yorkers showed up in November to hail their favorite team and to cover the players–not to mention  Broadway–in shredded papers (we don’t ask what they’re shredding).

Seven months later, a much smaller crowd gathered in front of 233 Broadway.  And that was my chance to pounce.

As a season ticket holder, I was able to watch numerous games in person last year as the Yankees battled to gain baseball’s greatest prize.  And in the end, I was able to watch Game 6 from the left field bleachers as the Bombers beat the Philadelphia Phillies and were crowned World Series champions.  I took that Game 6 ticket home with me, tucked it securely away, and thought about the day, 50 years from now, when I would show it to my grandson and tell him about Matsui’s amazing performance and how I was there when the Yankees won it all (again).

On June 15th, I went back to that hiding place, pulled out my ticket (carefully protected from harmful sun rays) and stuck it in my bag. The Yankee Skipper, Joe Girardi was coming Downtown to unveil the new granite strip, and I was going to do my best to meet him.  At first it seemed unlikely.  The press blocked my entrance from one side, and police barriers and public safety officers were guarding his flank.  And from behind?  Phalanxes of Little Leaguers were lined up to help with the show… would it be bad form to trample a 6-year-old?

Thank the Downtown Alliance for respecting an obsession.  Like herding an 8-year-old girl to meet Miley Cyrus I was ushered to the front of the pack.  My ticket in hand, palms sweaty–what would I say?  A friend saw me moving closer and pushed a baseball into my hands, “Cotz! Get this signed too!”  This was it, standing right next to him now–this guy has 4 rings!  Do you know how hard that is?

But he wouldn’t turn around!  He was too busy signing baseballs and ballcaps for the Little Leaguers!  The nerve!  OK, don’t panic.  Just get his attention somehow: “Hey Skip! The big kids need autographs too!” Wow. Did I just say that?  Totally pathetic.  But it worked.  He turned around and took my ticket. “That’s Game 6 Joe!”  No response.  I think he was too nice to say what he really thought of me.

I got the ticket back, and with the left hand I entered the baseball into the scrum.  He took it and signed it as well.  Double score!  What a nice guy, continuing to smile as a bunch of grown men acted like a group of adolescents.

When I got out of the crowd I found my buddy and gave him the ball, Hercules dropping the Hydra’s head at the foot of the king.  He turned around and handed it to a stranger.  Turns out my favor to him was his favor to someone else.   And my getting to the front was a favor to me, so I guess that’s just how the world works.

I won’t soon forget the experience.  It was great of Joe to come Downtown, and the time he spent with the kids will, I’m sure, stay with them for a long time. I know my ticket will be getting promoted from a hidden folder to a frame on my wall.  And every time I walk by the Woolworth Building, and see that commemorative sidewalk strip, it will put a smile on my face.

But ultimately there’s only one way to beat this experience–with another World Series win and another ticker-tape parade.