By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Breitenbucher wants to see Manteca residents’ images once again gracing BLD outfield bleachers
FACES IN THE CROWD
faces BLD
This 2008 file phots shows outfield “bleachers” at the BLD complex populated with Manteca residents as two teams meet up after completing a game.

Big League Dreams is making upwards of $2 million in upgrades at the city-owned sports complex the firm leases.

Its part of a new 25-year lease — with two 5-year options to extend it — the Manteca City Council approved Tuesday.

An Unrivaled Sports representative said the work will include new turf, new safety netting, renovations to the two restaurants, and overall beautification.

The work is expected to take place in the next six to nine months.

The beautification includes refreshing the outfield bleacher photo billboard work of various real people to represent fans.

Councilman Dave Breitenbucher asked that the firm consider using Manteca residents to give the sports complex more of a local touch.

Manteca people were used in the art work when the sports complex opened 17 years ago.

When the photos had faded and were refreshed, the company leasing the complex used photos of people that had been taken for a complex in another state as a replacement.

The Unrivaled Sports representative thought Breitenbucher’s idea had merit, but it wasn’t clear if it would occur.

The City of Manteca owned sports complex on Milo Candini Drive off of Daniels Street has six replica MLB fields such as Fenway Park. 

Each field has pseudo bleachers along the outfields. 

Photographic wraps of the images of various Manteca residents taken back in 2007 and merged together to create a crowd.

Those in the bleachers paid $30 apiece — the money went to support recreation programs for low-income youth — to have their images plastered in the outfield.

The photos were shot using a solo stadium seat in the City Council chambers against a solid green backdrop. A number of people brought their own props — baseball gloves, bags of peanuts and such. Some opted just to sit and smile. Others pumped their fist, pointed, clapped, or looked as if they were cheering.

The BLD complex isn’t the only place in Manteca you can find images of fans filling bleachers.

 

Likeness of Manteca

residents also in the

baseball mural bleachers

The other is the 138-foot by 7-foot-8 mural commissioned by the Manteca Mural Society at Library Park. It has 92 spectators. Each face on the mural was painted by muralist Dave Gordon with each person depicted being about two feet from the waist to the top of their head.

It cost $25 unless, of course, you wanted preferred seating. Then it was $50. 

The faces were those of either the person making the donation or that of a friend of a loved one. The money helped defray the cost of the mural commemorating Manteca’s first baseball field.

The likeness of one person appeared in the mural at no charge.

 That person is William Perry — the Post Office worker who took a sabbatical from working in 1935 to build Manteca’s version of the Field of Dreams on a vacant downtown lot where Library Park is today.

Perry financed and built the bleachers and field as a way to provide a place of entertainment, recreation, and pride for the community that was reeling in the depths of the Great Depression.

It is not, by the way, the Bill Perry who served as mayor in the late 1990s. 

Growing up there was confusion between the two as they went to school at the same time prompting the man who helped rally the community around baseball to have people call him “the other” Bill Perry.

The mural depicts the final inning of a girls’ game. Lined up alongside the third base fence line are the boys who are waiting to take the field next. 

On the other opposite fence line are more spectators as well as a passing engine of a Tidewater Southern Railway train.

A runner is positioned to score from third while a right-handed batter is awaiting a pitch. There is a dog that cases down balls and retrieves them depicted in the mural. Gordon said that was a touch that reflected the fact there were no outfield fences.

The baseball mural is one of five murals at Library Park along a path dubbed “the history walk.”

 

To contact Dennis Wyatt, e-mail dwyatt@mantecabulletin.com