At Wrigley Field in Chicago, it's time for a new vision



CHICAGO -- If you were a 23-year-old given responsibility for renovating Wrigley Field, what would you do with the scoreboard?
That was the situation in 1937, when the job of overseeing the renovation of the ballpark at the end of the season was largely in the hands of a young Bill Veeck, the future baseball impresario who was then a Cubs employee.
In what should be considered his legacy, rather than sending a midget up to bat for the St. Louis Browns in 1951, Veeck added ivy to the outfield walls and had a pioneering scoreboard put above the center-field bleachers.
Well, it's time for another change: Keep the ivy but remove the scoreboard. Bring on the Diamond Vision.
It is time for a scoreboard where you don't have to add up the runs to figure out the score, where the score of every major-league game can be displayed, and where you don't need to buy a scorecard to know who's pitching in an out-of-town game.
Even Fenway has one
The nation's oldest ballpark, Boston's Fenway Park, has a video-replay board. That makes Wrigley Field, which opened in 1914, two years after Fenway, the only major-league stadium that doesn't have a screen to watch a replay.
Yes, the old scoreboard is charming, but there comes a time to acknowledge that modern technology adds to the experience of attending a ballgame in a historic ballpark. We expect a certain level of information in our society, and I'm tired of the vastly inefficient scoreboard that does nothing to enhance the action on the field.
In my view, the scoreboard is a giant green target of digital opportunity. A chance for a 21st century visionary to add a must-see, high-definition element to what Veeck promoted as "Beautiful Wrigley Field."
So what would a 23-year old do today if his job were to create a new scoreboard?
"He would put in the Diamond Vision," minor-league baseball executive Mike Veeck said of what his father would do if given the opportunity today. "He was very much a man of his time. He would do it for the fan appeal."
"It would look awesome at Wrigley if it were done right," said Mark Foster, general manager for Mitsubishi's Diamond Vision unit.
What else you can do
There's another neat trick you could do with today's high-def scoreboards, said Foster, whose company put the giant screens in the United Center and U.S. Cellular Field.
You also might appease the Wrigley diehards who oppose change by programming the scoreboard to leave off a game or two from around the league. Kidding.
What would a 23-year-old do today if his job were to create a new scoreboard?
Basic information would be a glance away. The screen would display relevant statistics for the player at bat, an easy-to-read (no math!) summary of the game action and always provide the name of the pitcher, in case you missed a pitching change.
This is what fans at every other park in the country have come to expect, even at venerable old Fenway.
But, of course, Wrigley is not like every other park, a message the Cubs push in a new campaign to highlight the field's historic charms. (The Cubs are owned by the Tribune Co., the publisher of the Chicago Tribune.)
One radio spot touts why the Cubs haven't changed the 70-year-old scoreboard. The reasons: It ain't broke. It still keeps perfect score. We don't need bling.
My favorite: We never bought into that whole digital fad.
Yet with a little vision, a new screen would have the same footprint as the classic it replaces. It wouldn't be the nation's biggest but would fit right in, perhaps even encased in a model of the old scoreboard with the analog clock still on top.
Time to reconsider history
This fan is asking the Cubs to reconsider the park's history.
When Bill Veeck put in that old scoreboard before the 1938 season, it was based on a new concept. According to the Cubs Encyclopedia, instead of using lights that could be turned on or off, Veeck chose a design that used magnetic 'eyelids' that could be pulled up or down to change the score. It was considered innovative at the time.
The scoreboard was, and remains, hand operated, and even McDonough says it's not perfect.
So what would a 23-year-old do today if his job were to create a new scoreboard?
If it were someone with the vision of Bill Veeck, who also introduced the exploding scoreboard at Comiskey Park, you could be certain it would be a memorable attraction.
Eric Benderoff writes about technology for the Chicago Tribune. Contact him at ebenderofftribune.com.
& copy; 2006 Chicago Tribune