Champs Come Home: The San Francisco Giants’ 2011 Home Opener

Opening Day in Major League Baseball is my favorite day of the year.

Every team thinks they can win it all, the fans are 1000% into the game and excitement is at an all time high. Add in the reigning World Series Champions, the San Francisco Giants, and you’ve got the makings of an epic game.

 

A pregame flyover above the American Flag during the 2011 San Francisco Giants MLB Home Opener
A pregame flyover above the American Flag during the 2011 San Francisco Giants MLB Home Opener

Photographing AT&T Park

During the game, I spent a few innings wandering around AT&T Park, home of the San Francisco Giants since 2000, taking photos from all areas of the upper deck. My favorite shot was taken from the very last row in right field, which is generally the best place to take a fisheye photo of a baseball stadium. You can clearly see the San Francisco skyline and the Bay Bridge in the distance.

 

AT&T Park - San Francisco Giants - Opening Day 2011
AT&T Park, the home of the San Francisco Giants, from the last row of right field during the 2011 home opener.

Starting the MLB Season with a Close Game

The game was a wild one and went back and forth until the bottom of the 12th inning, when Aaron Rowand finally hit a game-winning shot off the left field wall. Needless to say, the remaining fans went absolutely nuts in celebration of the Giants’ win after nearly 4.5 hours of baseball.

 

AT&T Park - San Francisco Giants - Opening Day 2011
Aaron Rowan gets the game winning hit in the bottom of the 12th inning during the San Francisco Giants’ 2011 home opener.

Raising the San Francisco Giants’ 2010 World Series Flag

By far the highlight of the pregame ceremony was when Brian Wilson, the Giants’ eclectic closer, raised the 2010 World Series flag. It started when the entire team, lined up between home plate and third base, passed the flag from player to player until it would up in Brian Wilson’s hand.

Wilson then proceeded to sprint across the outfield and enter the centerfield bleacher section, hi-fiving everyone as he proceeded up into the standing room only section.

From there he made his way through a sea of orange and black route to the flagpole where he would attach and raise the flag. All the while, the 42,000 fans in attendance screamed on top of their lungs and that glee didn’t abate for the rest of the game.

Take a look at the video I shot from the second to last row of left field.