Please, let me tell you about playing at the Wide World of Sports in Champions Stadium at Disney.
Being a Floridian, I knew that the "Sunshine State" was really just a cover for the craziest place where the sun shines, while it's pouring down rain. Ridiculous. Good thing Mickey has a ton of money and the Wide World of Sports field took the terrential downpour without blinking an eye.
I think everyone understood where I was coming from having called it the "liquid sunshine state" when our 12:05 start time turned in to a seven hour, forty four minute game! That has to be some sort of an NPF record, right?
The game started as planned, under beautiful Florida skys on a ridiculously hot day. The stands were packed (just around 10K people in attendance), and people were happy. Great names were in attendance like Stacy Nuveman, Lisa Fernandez, Jennie Finch, Stacey Nelson and, of course, the one-and-only Cheri Kempf (president of the NPF). Best of all, the game was turning out to be a good one as early as the first inning with a 2-1 score!
Then... came the rain.
At 12:45, the bottom of the third inning, it started POURING, and it continued until 6:30 that evening. The teams took cover in the dugout, the dugouts that started flooding that is. Eventually they evacuated which was a sight to see as they had to make their own path (which looked like an obstacle course) to stay above the calf-high water.
This is the part that I think is cool: Despite the rain, the heat, the delay and eventually the 12 hour day they put in, neither team was above reaching out to the thousands of girls that were in attendance. As the rain turned on and off like a fire hose, the travelball teams would make their way down to the dugout for autographs. There was a friendly game of catch from the stands to the dugouts as balls and Sharpies were exchanged.
With all the time I don't think a ball went unsigned, every camera in the place has a memorable picture and no girl left without a smile--except that the game left the stands dry of people. I thought it was cool how many players took the time to mingle with the girls too. I saw a lot of one-on-one conversations. Not just in passing conversations either, talks where each player really made a connection with either parents or younger players.
I think a special thing about the NPF is the willingness of players to reach out to their fans. There is a newness and an unfamiliarity of being an influence to someone that these women are taking to heart, and are really excepting their position. I think it will change the game for the better. I have personally felt the impact of an encouraging word from someone I idolize, and with the reach of this league to the fastpitch teams around the country, the idea of "paying it forward" is spreading.
Everyone knows that women are endearing and powerful, and there's not a player in the NPF that doesn't exemplify this quality.