Summary:
A humorous guide to New York City for Dodgers fans visiting for the NLCS.
Learn about the history of the Mets and Yankees, and how they've rubbed Dodgers fans the wrong way.
Discover the similarities and differences between iconic New York and Los Angeles landmarks.
Uncover the hidden baseball connections to Brooklyn, including Jackie Robinson and Sandy Koufax.
Get ready for the unique sights and sounds of New York City, from the rumble of the subway to the spectacle of Times Square.
Dodgers Fans in NYC: A Hilarious Guide to the Big Apple
Any Dodgers fan visiting New York is bound to have questions. Why is the Statue of Liberty calling for a right-handed relief pitcher? Can you trust these tacos? What's with the low rumble you keep hearing?
Fear not, fellow Dodger fans! We've got this unserious primer on the Big Apple for any Angeleno taking a quick trip east for the NLCS.
Broadway: This is the Manhattan street where the Mets had a grand ticker-tape parade after winning the 1969 World Series. Soon after, ticker tape, Shea Stadium and winning Mets seasons all fell out of style.
The Bronx: The site of the original Yankee Stadium, where the Dodgers' Don Larsen pitched a perfect game in 1956 and where the Dodgers beat the Yankees, 9-2, to win the 1981 World Series. In a later bid to blot out those memories, the Yankees leveled that stadium and built another one across the street.
Carnegie Hall: Picture the Hollywood Bowl without the hills, the stars, the breeze or bring-your-own alcohol.
Central Park: What you'd get if you flattened Griffith Park, razed its observatory, shrunk its zoo, obliterated its golf courses and let the drum circle pound away all weekend. Nice fountain, though.
The East River: A shorter, wider L.A. River, equally suitable for swimming.
Katz's Delicatessen: The Lower East Side eatery where Meg Ryan pretends to be eating at Langer's Deli in Los Angeles in the famous scene from "When Harry Met Sally."
Little Italy: Eataly, The Prequel.
Metropolitan Museum of Art: An unnecessary museum, with minimal baseball content and art that's either older than what LACMA has or younger than what the Getty Villa has. In its favor, the museum does stage the Met Gala, an annual spectacle in which celebrities dress like Mets out of uniform.
Patience and Fortitude: These are the names of the stone lions that preside over the steps to the main New York Public Library. You may find examples of the latter around town. The former, not so much.
That low rumble you keep hearing: Don't worry. It's not Pete Alonso rounding third. It's the subway.
Times Square: New Yorkers gather here each New Year's Eve to shiver, hear Anderson Cooper filibuster and distract themselves from the fact that the Yankees haven't won a World Series in 15 years and the Mets haven't won one in this century.
U.N. Headquarters: These are the people responsible for bringing peace to the world. After that they're going to sort out the Dodgers' starting rotation.
Brooklyn: Well, this is awkward. Jackie Robinson is buried here. Pee Wee Reese spent 94% of his career here. Sandy Koufax grew up and made his first major league start here in 1955. Notable locations include Ebbets Field Apartments, a 1,300-unit complex built in 1962 on Bedford Avenue, where a ballpark used to be.
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