Mascot race

The Milwaukee Brewers' racing sausages

A mascot race is a promotional sports entertainment competition consisting of costumed runners racing around a baseball field, usually as a form of between-innings entertainment. The racers are typically anthropomorphized inanimate objects or mascots related to local culture, a sponsor's products, or baseball culture. The outcomes of races can both be decided in a legitimate race or may be predetermined for purely entertainment purposes.[1]

Races

Major League Baseball

The Washington Nationals' racing presidents
The Cleveland Indians' racing hot dogs

The best known of this type of race is the Milwaukee Brewers' Sausage Race. Introduced in the early 1990s,[2] the race features bratwurst, Polish sausage, Italian sausage, hot dog, and chorizo characters. The race takes place before the sixth inning of every home game. Players have also been involved; during a 2003 race during a Brewers–Pittsburgh Pirates game, Pirates slugger Randall Simon hit one of the sausages with a baseball bat, causing the woman in the costume to require medical care. Milwaukee police fined Simon. The incident subsequently became known as "Sausagegate".[3]

The Sausage Race inspired the creation of the Great Pierogi Race in Pittsburgh. A rivalry has developed between the Sausages and the Pierogies, and the two groups compete twice yearly in relay races. Another well known mascot race is the Presidents Race of the Washington Nationals. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, and William Howard Taft mascots compete. As a running joke, Teddy Roosevelt did not win until the Nationals made the playoffs for the first time in 2012.[4] Like the Milwaukee Sausages, the Presidents also have a rivalry with the Pierogies.

Other teams have their own versions. The Tampa Bay Rays have a race sponsored by PepsiCo, the owners of the naming rights to Tropicana Field. Their race is between large bottles of Pepsi, Pepsi Max, Aquafina, and Sierra Mist. Before 2007, these were computer-generated. As of 2010, the race is only computer-generated for certain games.

The Cleveland Indians and the Kansas City Royals have similar races involving hot dogs. The Royals' version features live runners dressed as Heinz condiments – ketchup, relish and mustard. The live racers made their first appearance during the 2007 season, with the race being limited to the video board prior to this. The Indians also started a live hot dog race in 2007 with the racers being mustard, onion, and ketchup (who wears thick glasses as a nod to Charlie Sheen's "Wild Thing" character from the movie Major League). In late 2007 the ketchup racer started cutting the corner at home plate to win the race, and this "cheating" has led to several stage skits by players, mascots, and the ground crew to slow or trip him up during the race.

The New York Mets race cardboard automobiles. As of May 29, 2016, they include an anthropomorphized police car, fire truck, yellow cab and black limo. As of May 29, 2016, Freddie the Firetruck leads the 2016 series with 9 wins, including the two most recent Sunday races.

Texas Rangers games feature a live action version of the "Dot Race", in which three dots (Red, Green, and Blue) compete in the middle of the sixth inning. Each fan is given a coupon for Ozarka bottled water (the race sponsor) that has one of the three colors. A coupon with the "winning color" can be taken to a Texas store to purchase Ozarka (in actuality, the coupons do not feature the date they were presented, thus any coupon can be redeemed at any time prior to their expiration date). The "dots" were later joined by three action figures, all resembling figures in Texas history (Davy Crockett with his long rifle, Jim Bowie with his Bowie knife, and Sam Houston).

The Atlanta Braves race involves (Atlanta-based) Home Depot's hammer, saw (later replaced by a bucket after suffering a serious injury), paint brush, and power drill racing against each other. Before the 2009 season, the race was seen only on the scoreboard, but it now features live runners dressed in costumed versions of these tools; the race takes place on the warning track and starts in right field and ends in front of the scoreboard.

In 2009 the San Francisco Giants featured periodically a bobble head race with likenesses of announcers Duane Kuiper and Mike Krukow, but they only occasionally raced in 2009.

The Arizona Diamondbacks dress three children up in hot dog suits – one representing ketchup, one representing mustard and one representing relish. The three kids run in place in front of the Diamondbacks' dugout while the scoreboard shows a race between the three hot dogs. The winner receives a prize for their victory.

The Houston Astros' race involves Taco Bell hot sauce packets named Fire, Hot, and Mild that race from the right field corner around the outfield and up to the visitors' dugout. This race started in 2010, but starting in the 2015 season the Astros introduced their new race, the Space Race, featuring three dressed in astronauts costume; they are Apollo, Squeeze, and Doc Rocket. Also in 2010, the Arizona Diamondbacks added a "Legends Race[5]" with 10-foot (3.0 m) likenesses of Randy Johnson, Mark Grace, Luis Gonzalez and Matt Williams. The race debuted on July 2.[6] The Diamondbacks previously had a race between live runners dressed as menu items from fast-food chain and sponsor Taco Bell, including a giant cup of Pepsi. The Mark Grace figure finally won his first race August 8, 2015, on the day Randy Johnson's number was retired; Johnson let him pass him for the win. Mark Grace won another race on October 3, leading the race from beginning to end.

In 2012, the Minnesota Twins introduced “The Race at Target Field” mascot race—an evolution of their "Race to Target Field" animated video race which began in 2009 for the inaugural season of Target Field. The race features five Minnesota-inspired characters: Louie the loon, Wanda the walleye, Babe the blue ox, Skeeta the mosquito and Bullseye the dog (mascot of hometown company and sponsor, Target Corporation).

Also in 2012, the Miami Marlins added the Great Sea race featuring Bob the Shark, Julio the Octopus, Angel the Stone Crab and Spike the Sea Dragon.[7]

Minor League Baseball

The Nashville Sounds' racing country music legends

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to mascot races.
  1. "Out at the plate: Pirates dump outspoken pierogi". post-gazette.com. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  2. http://www.klements.com/racing_sausages/all_started.html
  3. "ESPN.com - Page2 - Police report: Sausagegate". go.com. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  4. "Presidents Race Standings". letteddywin.com. April 7, 2016. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  5. "Legends Race". mlb.com. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  6. D-backs Reveal Johnson, Gonzalez as First Members of Legends Race, arizona.diamondbacks.mlb.com, June 22, 2010
  7. Sports, Fox. "MLB's racing mascots". foxsports.com. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  8. Hill, Benjamin (November 13, 2008). "At Home With the Isotopes". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  9. "Wing, Cheese, Celery Race". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  10. "Ricky Relish wins Hot Dog Race". International League. June 20, 2013. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  11. "Durham Bulls Introduce "Bull Durham Racers"". April 12, 2013.
  12. "Race Standings". Lakewood BlueClaws. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  13. "Iron Pigs Racer Surprise Visit" (PDF). Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  14. "Country Legends Race". Nashville Sounds. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
  15. Hill, Benjamin (August 7, 2008). "At Home With the Ports". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
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