Phillies Opening Day 2019 is finally here, with fans more excited than they have been in years with the arrival of Bryce Harper. Game time is 3 p.m. at Citizens Bank Park, but the fans are already tailgating. PhillyVoice reporter Brian Hickey is roaming the lots and checking in with fans:
For these Phillies fans, Opening Day is dress-up day
Michael Rahn and Marion Foy were dressed in their Opening Day tailgate-best. Red tutus, capes, you get it.
Foy said Rahn — the nephew of the original Phillie Phanatic — is a huge Philly sports fan. When you hear he dressed in a Chewbacca costume with an underdog mask for the Eagles parade, it makes sense.
His upbringing plays into the consuming penchant. How couldn’t it?
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“I enjoy doing this because it makes people laugh, it makes them happy, they want to take pictures with me,” he said just outside Lincoln Financial Field as Meek Mill’s "Dreams and Nightmares" blared from a neighboring tailgate. “People at the parade were asking me to take photos every five minutes. I couldn’t even watch a lot of it.”
Foy, of South Philly, just laughed as her best friend posed for more pictures.
“It’s been about 12 years of this tailgate. We’re not going in. With Bryce Harper, the prices got too high,” he said. “But we couldn’t miss this. It makes kids happy ... I just want people to have fun and enjoy themselves. Weird is where it’s at.”
Are there any drawbacks for the recently turned 30-somethings?
“I just haven’t figured out how to pee in these costumes yet,” he said.
“We’ll wear these for the rest of the day,” Foy said. “We don’t change.”
DUCK FROM DELCO: 'WE SPARE NO EXPENSE'
Duck is from Delco. Chuck is from Delanco. Together, they’ve put on one hell of a tailgate. It started in 2000 with Eagles games. Thursday was their 7th Phillies Opening Day event.
“It’s evolved every year, with more and more people,” they said of an event that’s garnered second-best honors from a local TV station.
They have a private Facebook group — Jetro M5 Tailgate — through which attendees can coordinate the food and drinks they’ll bring.
Lobster. Steak. The good stuff.
They also have an “ice luge” for the harder spirits. They get the 300-pound block from Mack the Ice Man in Runnemede. It was stained with Jagermeister by 11:30 a.m.
“We spare no expense. It’s Bryce Harper Day,” Duck said while sharing his home-brewed Opening Day IPA. “We were supposed to have a divorce party today, but I don’t know if they’re coming.”
Today, as DJ Smooth’s tracks echo throughout the Jetro lot, they’re expecting 200 attendees.
“We don’t charge a penny, and we’ve never had any problems, no fights,” Chuck proudly declared.
“Peace, sports and love,” is how Chuck’s wife, Beth, described it.
And that’s the feeling in the air.
COUPLE MET AND MARRIED ON OPENING DAY
Nick and Meghan Niedosik just LOVE Phillies Opening Day – and for good reason.
They met on Opening Day. They married on Opening Day. And every Opening Day they celebrate their anniversary.
Seven years ago, Mick’s in Port Richmond ran a bus trip to Opening Day. Nick is too good for bus trips though, so he drove down to the ballpark, where he would meet Meghan.
Three years later on Opening Day, the couple would marry – though not at a tailgate in the parking lot near the Phillies stadium.
But still each Opening Day they celebrate their wedding anniversary. Meaghan has only missed two home openers because she was pregnant with their children. She doesn’t mind that, since she said she is most certainly not about drinking while pregnant.
“We went back to Mick’s after the game,” said Nick recalled of the day they met.
“He walked me home. We kissed and started dating,” added Meghan.
The rest is Phillies Opening Day romantic history.
“We love Opening Day,” she said with a smile bright enough to light up the ballpark.
HARPER HOOPLA AND FIREBALL FUDGE
The Jetro lot was about two-and-a-half hours away from its 10 a.m. opening, but Gina Lucano, Michelle Mellor and Kathy Nolte had more important things to do than wait.
So they loaded up carts and brought tents and chairs and Fireball-soaked pineapple slices along with Fireball-prepared fudge and pineapples hollowed out to serve as drinking cups.
“When we were out here setting up, all the men were sitting in their cars watching us,” said Lucano, of Fishtown. “We were the first ones in here. We are women. Hear us roar.”
The three friends have been coming to Opening Day since the days of Veterans Stadium as well. They’ve seen the crowd size rise and fall with the fortunes of their team. They get the sense that this year is going to be bigger than ever.
“There’s a lot of Harper Hoopla. I came up with that phrase myself,” Lucano laughed. “Everybody watched us setting up like we were crazy, wheeling our carts around the lot, sliding the tents through the fence, but it didn’t take too long for them to start doing it, too.
“Do you want to try the Fireball fudge?” Mellor asked. “It has a real kick at the end.”
NEVER TOO YOUNG FOR OPENING DAY
Stephen and Austin Barcoski are having a catch with a tennis ball behind the Jetro lot just before 11 a.m. Even though they’re nine and eight, respectively, their parents Steve and Jackie estimate it’s their sixth or seventh Opening Day tailgate.
“We learned a hard lesson about bringing baseball. Too many cars hit,” said Steve.
They couldn’t be happier about Thursday's beautiful weather, heartening back to drearier days and Albert Pujols dingers
“A little bit, ya think?” said Steve when asked if there’s more excitement this year.
The conversation was cut short when a tennis ball went sailing past him and into a neighboring tailgate. No cars were damaged.
THE TENT BEFORE THE CARS
Just before the gates to the JETRO lot were opened, Julie Innamorati and Tom Hufford were setting up their Phillies tent with a birds-eye view of Citizens Bank Park.
They had left Wilkes Barre at 7:20 a.m. and their friend is waiting in line in a car but they wanted to get inside first to get set up before the cars came rolling through the gates.
They’ve been tailgating on Opening Day for three or four years and were asked whether they sensed more excitement than previous years.
“I’m hoping so,” Hufford said. “They made some very good additions this off-season."
“He’s very excited,” Innamorati noted.
FILET AND SHRIMP FOR A HISTORIC DAY
Stumpy Coles packed his truck up in Bucks County and hit the road around 6:30 a.m. Thursday.
That’s how he came to be the first person in line outside a still-closed parking lot an hour later. He’d soon be joined by his buddies Mike Costello and Matt Bendzyn.
They started their Phillies tailgate tradition some 17 years ago when the team still played at the Vet.
“When we started out, it was a few guys and a dream. We had a hibachi and that was about it,” said Bendzyn, some 40 minutes before the lot outside Lincoln Financial Field would open, a line stretching west on Pattison Avenue behind them. “Now we’re up to about 40 people each year.“
They could barely contain their excitement as they prepared to set up a barbecue spread that would include filet and shrimp, pulled pork and mac & cheese, and so many other offerings that it became difficult to even write them down as they spoke. There’s good reason for this.
“It’s exciting. This is a historic day in Philadelphia,” Coles said of a group that comes from across the region.
Bendzyn recalled the Opening Day when Roy Halladay pitched against the Nationals. Costello said the only two home openers topping the anticipation of today's game were the last one at the Vet and then as defending World Series champs.
“Today just feels special,” added Costello. “I can’t wait to get inside and start setting up.