Before I forget, from Nathan’s cap night, a hot dog vendor showed up in our section in the top of the seventh. Kind of late, but not unheard of…though it seemed to me he was intent on being not heard. Softly he made his pitch:
“Hot dog, anyone? Hot dog, anyone?”
There were no takers. I don’t think anyone knew he was there.
Seventh-inning stretch arrives stealthily. Quick-moving 0-0 game combined with “Take Me Out To The Ball Game” duties being handed over to two Greek Heritage Night instrumentalists kept me from realizing we had arrived at our ritualistic juncture. When I saw Joe rise, I asked him if he needed me to get up so he could get by. No, he said, it’s time to stretch.
So it was.
We stretched, we sang of our desires to be taken out to where we already were (because the Greek fellas didn’t), we Lazy Mary’d, we monitored the flight of t-shirts, we sat down and then we enjoyed the hell out of the five-run bottom of the seventh and the ensuing shutdown half-inning that followed.
Bottom of the eighth rolls around, and guess who else does…on little cat feet.
“Hot dog, anyone? Hot dog, anyone?”
Anything can happen. A five-run lead is no guarantee of a happy ending [1]. We’ve seen the Met bullpen ignite calamity and implode precipitously. But the Braves have only three outs left with which to wreak havoc. No matter how many unnecessary pitching changes Terry Collins will make in the top of the ninth (one), it’s unlikely we’re going to be here much longer. I don’t get overconfident but I was willing to allow myself confidence that a five-run cushion in the bottom of the eighth was going to prevent evening-extending discomfort in the top of the ninth.
In other words, none of us was going to need a hot dog to tide us over this — literally — late in the game.
And if we were going to be convinced otherwise, this guy…
“Hot dog, anyone? Hot dog, anyone?”
…wasn’t going to be the one to do it.
I grew up in Madison Square Garden enthralled by strolling cries of “BEEAH HEEAH! BEEAH HEEAH!” When I moved on to Shea, I loved being asked, in a bellowing fashion, “WHO’S DRINKIN’? WHO’S DRINKIN’?” even if my tastes ran more to “ICE COLD SODA! ICE COLD SODA!” As recently as last Saturday, a vocal vendor (a.k.a. “hospitality attendant”) marketed his wares so effectively — “HOT PRETZELS! THEY’RE HOT!” — that I topped off my Gold Glove supper [2] with a salty $6.50 dessert.
Salesmanship is everything. It’s the difference between deciding, “Nah…” and “Yeah, OK.” Rarely have I needed what’s being sold. Only sometimes have I desperately wanted what’s being sold. But if I can be sold on the contents of those trays and bins, then buddy, you’re making your quota and collecting your commissions and getting out of your job what you put into it. We are a captive audience. All you need to do is captivate us.
“Hot dog, anyone? Hot dog, anyone?”
That’s not gonna do it. That, in fact, didn’t do it. Our introvert drew no more business and probably even fewer glances in the eighth than he did in the seventh.
Pedro Beato and Tim Byrdak set down the Braves in order of the top of the ninth. We all cheered and left. I wonder if the world’s least-suited hot dog vendor came back out to start the tenth.