Prince Fielder Crowned King of 2009 Home Run Derby in Saint Louis
July 14, 2009 by emily
Filed under Fundraising & Events, headline
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Busch Stadium was packed last night for the Major League Baseball 2009 Home Run Derby, and the players put on a show worthy of the crowd. The lineup for the derby included: Carlos Pena (Tampa Bay), Joe Mauer (Minnesota Twins), Brandon Inge (Detroit Tigers), Nelson Cruz (Texas Rangers), Ryan Howard (Philadelphia), Prince Fielder (Milwaukee), Adrian Gonzalez (San Diego), and local favorite (and soon to be National League MVP) Albert Pujols.
But the derby began with a few treats for the Saint Louis crowd. From 4PM until 7PM stadium goers could watch all of the 2009 MLB All-Stars (not just the aforementioned players participating in the Home Run Derby) warm up at Busch Stadium during batting practice. These players included current greats like Ichiro Suzuki (Seattle) and Derek Jeter (New York Yankees) just to name a few.
While batting practice drew baseball fans to the stadium early, it may have been the grooming and presentation of Busch Stadium that stole the show. Stadium crews had meticulously put an image of the Saint Louis Capitol Building and Arch into the grass on the field! The field looked stunning and represented our baseball-loving town well.
As batting practice drew to a close, fans were given two more surprises. The first of which was a fly-over by two F-15 fighters in tight formation, followed by a two-song concert from American Idol Star David Cook.
Finally it was time for the derby to start. Cruz and Fielder set the bar early with 11 home runs in the first round and they would easily advance to round 2! Ryan Howard and Albert Pujols would also advance to the next round with 7 and 5 home runs respectively. Pujols almost didn’t make it; tying with Joe Mauer and Carlos Pena who had also both hit 5 home runs in the first round…it came down to a 5-out slugfest between these players, in which Pujols ended as the victor.
Unfortunately for the Saint Louis crowd, Pujols home run streak ran dry and he was eliminated by the end of the second round. Fielder and Cruz advanced to the last and final round, but not before Fielder hit a 503ft home run! Even though Saint Louis fans were saddened by Pujols performance, they could not help but applaud Fielder for the 500+ ft homer. The entire stadium rose and gave Fielder a standing ovation!
Fielder would go on to win the derby with a total of 23 home runs, and seemed as though he could have hit many more, given the chance.
All and all, it was a perfect 83 degree July day in Saint Louis, Missouri. A perfect day for fans, young and old to gather and watch the best long-ball hitters in the Leauge do what they do best. A perfect day to crown Prince, king of the home run derby.
Missouri Cares to Make It Right: Haunted by Waters
June 22, 2009 by admin
Filed under Celebrity Brand Management, Philanthropy, headline
Long before I ever pondered the blurred careers as lobbyist, fundraiser, and promoter, I enjoyed my boyhood days on our family farm in Southeast Missouri. We grew up walking soybean fields, baling hay, and adjusting to the natural seasons along the ole man river, the Mississippi. I didn’t realize back then how much our lives ebbed and flowed due to the river’s edge. Nearly every other spring, at some high water mark, we had to move our machinery and equipment out of the fields for fear of rising flood waters.
My mother, to this day, sees water as an encroachment, somehow bound to interrupt her way of life from time to time. She lobbied against anything playing in the water, mainly because she was raised managing its limiting moves. I had always heard about the great flood of 1973, when the levee adjacent to our bottom land broke under pressure to invade over 20,000 acres of crops. I remember my father describing a levee hole nearly 100 feet deep and several hundred feet wide, littered with debris. It took bulldozers months to reform the banks.
Most years, flood damage was a commercial nuisance, not an immediate threat to our lives. However, I witnessed the awesome force of flood surge truly in the Missouri flood of 1993, when an alleged 100 year event (just 20 years later) hit our entire region hard. Since our home farm was in the Ozark foothills, we helped sand-bag the levees, rescue neighbors, and manage the anxieties. However, my father was on the island the day that the levee broke. It took less than six hours to fill up an entire 20,000 acre island with nearly sixteen feet of Mississippi River.
The story of tragedy always seems easiest to tell at the climax of its terror, rather than the loneliness it often leaves behind. At the peak of Missouri’s flood pressure, armies of volunteers, Dan Rather CBS News, and the American Red Cross all joined our advocacy efforts. However, the untold story that hangs with me now are all of the community faces that chose never to return. Without a house on stable foundation, our neighbors’ heirlooms never were rebuilt. Many retirees, the keepers of our local culture’s memories, never came back to Kaskaskia Island.
One year prior to this experience, I recalled the last lines of the movie “A River Runs Through It,” that seemed to sum up the immortality of my campaign for meaning:
“Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world’s great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs. I am haunted by waters.” – by Norman Maclean
Recently, we saw the hostile water’s undertaker downstream in another town known for triumph over misery – New Orleans, LA. We toured the Lower Ninth Ward extensively with a retired New Orleans police officer. He rode out Hurricane Katrina with his dog just fine, but later had to evacuate by helicopter from his attic due to the federal flood protection failure in more than 50 places.
On August 29 this year, it will have been four years since our nation was humbled by this disaster. I was stunned to learn just how far behind the politicians, wards, and school buildings were so long after our federal government tried to respond. The pictures and video links (see video here) in this article remind me how important individuals, not institutions, are to restoring human progress. Still today, the plight of each block varies dramatically by the conditions that each plot of land were dealt. An estimated 40% of local citizens in this ward still haven’t returned.
New Orleans has never stayed completely down for too long, however. I was inspired to witness the advocacy of many celebrity philanthropists, working with local charities and neighborhood associations. At ground zero, a new concrete levee buttresses the new home construction of “Make it Right Foundation New Orleans.” Thanks to Missouri native Brad Pitt stepping forward to give voice on Larry King Live, the Charlie Rose Show, and the Today Show, new innovative storm-resistant structures are being erected. Ellen DeGeneres is running a MIR homes challenge that even has a “Missouri Cares” team.
Even with such strong celebrity brands advocating for community change, in person you can see how many battles still lie ahead. Less than five houses from Fats Domino’s personal residence, many homes remain in disarray. The conception of musicians’ village, by Harry Connick, Jr and Branford Marsalis, has shown wonderful color and progress touring down Alvar Street. However, many basic homes remain without targeted remodeling.
As an outsider to New Orleans, it’s plain to see how more celebrity giving could do more from individuals speaking candid about remaining needs on the ground. Locals will easily offer up how frustrated and cynical they are waiting for a government institution to solve the problem. To the other professional athletes, entertainers, & publicists wondering if this should be your cause, your brand advocacy is needed now more than ever.
It’s hard not to be bothered by observing such a stark gap between what America is, and what we believe it always should be. So, it’s left us thinking about small ways that we can maintain a call to action. Back in St. Louis, maybe a cajun crawfish boil meetup supporting these foundations? Already in the works in less than a month. Reaching out to educate others about today’s state of events – happening now. A return visit to New Orleans with volunteers? Definitely if we can swing it for a worthy local coalition.
Perhaps the water’s haunt can serve as our own personal reminder to always give back to others, regardless of who is watching.




