The Day That Major League Baseball Was Played Behind Closed Doors
An IBWAA contributor recalls the game in Baltimore in 2015 that was played with no fans in attendance.
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Pregame Pepper
Did you know…
. . . Between both clubs, 26 hitters and pitchers participated in the Chicago/Baltimore game on April 29, 2015. Less than 10 years later, just four are still active in the major leagues.
The two pitchers that are still active both pitched in relief on that day but have each had moments of tremendous success as starting pitchers in recent years. Kevin Gausman pitched a perfect eighth inning with two strikeouts for Baltimore, and Carlos Rodon pitched a perfect inning of relief on just five pitches for the White Sox.
The two hitters still active are Jose Abreu, who went 0-4 with a pair of strikeouts in the game for the White Sox. The lone Oriole still active is Manny Machado, who was arguably the MVP of the game for the Orioles, going 3-for-4 with a double, a home run, and three runs scored.
Leading Off
The One Pre-Covid Era Day That Major League Baseball Was Played Behind Closed Doors
By Paul M. Banks
Despite what most people think, the first baseball game played behind closed doors did not occur during the coronavirus pandemic. There was one crowd-less game a half-decade earlier, and it occurred on April 29, 2015, when the Baltimore Orioles beat the visiting Chicago White Sox, 8-2. The first two games in the series at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore were postponed due to public safety concerns and security issues. Baltimore was under curfew, as civic unrest was engulfing the city.
It all started with Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old African-American male.
Gray was apparently in good health upon his arrest on April 12. But, while in police custody, he suffered a spinal cord injury, fell into a coma, and died. Peaceful protests over alleged police brutality began on April 18. But by April 25, the protests had become violent and riots erupted within the city. First responders were needed to quell the riots. They weren't necessarily needed at a baseball game.
The first two games in the Orioles-White Sox series were scrapped and rescheduled for a doubleheader later in the season. For the third game, scheduling conflicts prohibited the league from finding another date. Logistical issues blocked the Orioles from moving it to a different venue. The Washington Nationals, located less than 40 miles away, were on a road trip. But later the organization stated that neither MLB nor the Orioles had ever contacted them about the potential use of Nationals Park.
Nor had the Nats even made an offer, and as the Washington Post reported, the two teams were in litigation with each other at the time. The dispute was over revenue from the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN) cable channel, a joint venture with broadcasting rights for both teams.
So the show went on, only with next to nobody there to see it.
The official attendance was zero, but you did have three scouts seated behind home plate. You also had team staff collecting stray foul balls in the stands and photographers scattered on the concourse. And there were a few stragglers outside the gates getting limited views. Also in attendance were both teams' broadcasting crews, and their commentary could be heard not just by the opposing side's broadcasters, but by the players themselves. Outfielder calls could be heard by everybody in the media section of the park, too.
The press box held 92 reporters that day, by some estimates, triple the normal amount of journalists who show up for a random regular-season game.
What everybody involved, players, media, broadcasters, etc., agreed was this: the experience was surreal. White Sox manager Robin Ventura told the Chicago Tribune: "I don't think we really want to play another one like this. ... I don't think (the Orioles) do, either."
There were some elements of normalcy, though. "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" was still played during the seventh-inning stretch. The stadium Jumbotron and sound system carried on business as usual for the most part.
"It was such a weird situation because there was so much going on around the city and I think so much pain and suffering that could be helped by just turning on the TV," Orioles first baseman Chris Davis told the Baltimore Sun one year after the game.
"It was a hard time for the city and I think, as players, I thought we really hoped we could be a distraction at that point. It's still tough to think about it all now.”
Paul M. Banks is the Founding Editor of The Sports Bank. He’s also the author of “Transatlantic Passage: How the English Premier League Redefined Soccer in America,” and “No, I Can’t Get You Free Tickets: Lessons Learned From a Life in the Sports Media Industry.”
Extra Innings
The highlight video from MLB.com on the game shows just how silent the game was, as you can hear clapping in the dugout in the background of the announcer’s feed: