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Sausage Race - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sausage Race

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The sausages near the finish line of the Sausage Race.
The sausages near the finish line of the Sausage Race.

The Sausage Race is held after the bottom of the sixth inning at every home game of the Milwaukee Brewers. The Sausage Race is a promotion for the Klement's Sausage Company, located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Klement's sausages are served at Miller Park, the home of the Milwaukee Brewers. A new chorizo racing sausage was unveiled on Thursday, July 27, 2006.[1]

Contents

[edit] Racing sausages

Brett Wurst, the bratwurst, at the grand opening of the West Milwaukee Pick 'n Save
Brett Wurst, the bratwurst, at the grand opening of the West Milwaukee Pick 'n Save

There are five racing sausages (mascots). Their official names are given by the race's sponsor:

  • #1, Bratt Wurst is a bratwurst and wears green Austro-Bavarian lederhosen.
  • #2, Stosh is a Polish sausage and wears dark sunglasses and a blue and red rugby shirt.
  • #3, Guido is an Italian sausage and wears a chef's outfit.
  • #4, Frankie Furter is a hot dog and wears a baseball uniform.
  • #5, Cinco is a chorizo and wears a sombrero. (Added for one race in 2006, became permanent addition in 2007, see below.)

2007 Final Standings Hot Dog: 23 Polish: 20 Chorizo: 18 Italian: 16 Bratwurst: 10

However, most fans refer to the sausages as Brat, Polish, Italian, Hot Dog and Chorizo.

Employees of the Milwaukee Brewers or Miller Park usually run the race. Having donned the oversized foam sausage costumes that measure seven feet, three inches high (2.21 meters) from the top of the head to the knees of the runners, the contestants start their race between the dugout and the baseline around third base. They sprint down the warning track, around home plate and continue toward first base.

The sausages have also appeared at many charity events, including an annual charity run/walk in their honor with proceeds going to the Milwaukee Brewers Charities, and are also available for personal appearances on non-game days. They also have a twice-a-year home-and-home relay race against their Pittsburgh Pirates counterparts, the Racing Pierogies.

The sausages recently starred in two SportsCenter spots for ESPN. The first, set at ESPN's cafeteria, was shown at Miller Park on May 19, 2006. The second features them in a parody of the Running of the Bulls with other ESPN employees.

[edit] History

The sausages prepare to race.
The sausages prepare to race.

[edit] Origins

The race originated as a virtual scoreboard race in the early 1990s. The Associated Press quotes Laurel Prieb, former Brewers vice president, as saying the actual sausage mascots were introduced "as a lark" around 1995, and only on Sundays to appease kids in the crowd.

The earliest record of the sausage race in live-action took place on Sunday, May 29, 1994 when the Brewers retired the number 19 of their future Hall of Famer, Robin Yount. The race had begun as a routine sausage race on the old off-black and off-white replay board at County Stadium. As the theme from Chariots of Fire played and the animated sausages made their way around Milwaukee en route to County Stadium, the sausages appeared in live form for the first time from the left field fence and raced to what would become a legendary Milwaukee Brewers tradition.

By 2000, the final year for the Brewers at County Stadium, the costumed racers became a full-time attraction. The last ever Sausage Race at County Stadium took place on September 28, 2000 and was won by the Brat.

There were only three sausages when the race was introduced: the bratwurst, the Polish and the Italian. The hot dog was not introduced until the mid-1990s.[2]

[edit] Randall Simon incident

On July 9, 2003 Randall Simon, then the first baseman of the Pittsburgh Pirates, hit the head of a runner's costume with a baseball bat. The tap didn't hit the human head of Mandy Block who was wearing the Italian Sausage costume, but it did knock her over, and she took the Hot Dog down with her. The Polish Sausage helped the Italian Sausage up and all sausages finished the Race. Simon was arrested and paid a fine, and was suspended by Major League Baseball for three games. He later apologized. Block asked only that the offending bat be autographed and given to her. Simon obliged. Since that incident, T-shirts and other propaganda popped up with the now infamous words, "Don't whack our wiener!"

Simon was traded to the Chicago Cubs later that season (for reasons unrelated to the incident). He returned to Milwaukee with the Cubs for a series against the Brewers. During the first game, Simon's teammates playfully held him back as the sausages raced past their dugout. In a later game that season, Simon purchased Italian sausages for a randomly chosen section of the crowd. He remains unforgiven by the majority of Milwaukee Brewers fans.

[edit] The Chorizo joins the race

The Chorizo was added for the 2006 season to commemorate Latino contributions to the game of baseball, as well as to acknowledge the Brewers' growing Latino fanbase.[3] It ran its first race (and only one of the 2006 season) on Saturday, July 29 to celebrate Cerveceros Day (cervecero translates to beer-maker or maker of beer in Spanish; the Brewers also wore Cerveceros jerseys on this day). However, the Chorizo did not become an everyday participant in the Sausage Race until the 2007 season because of an MLB rule stating that a team may not introduce a new mascot in the middle of a season.

[edit] Notable contestants

Aside from the now-famous Mandy Block, ball players Mark Grace, Pat Meares, Geoff Jenkins, and Hideo Nomo have raced as sausages. A handful of sports journalists have also raced as well as former Green Bay Packers wide receiver Javon Walker, who participated in the race in 2004. Participation is not open to the general public.

[edit] Other racers

Besides the Pittsburgh Pierogies, the Washington Nationals have their own version of the Sausage race, with runners dressed in oversized costumes representing the four Presidents on Mount RushmoreGeorge Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt — which began when new ownership took over the team from Major League Baseball in 2006. Prior to that, the race was computer generated.

The Tampa Bay Devil Rays have their own version as well, sponsored by PepsiCo, the owners of the naming rights to Tropicana Field. Their race is between large bottles of Pepsi, Aquafina and Sierra Mist. Before 2007, these were computer-generated as well.

The Baltimore Orioles have a similar race, featuring hot dogs on the video board with different condiments: Ketchup, Mustard, and Relish. This is sponsored by Esskay, and has been around since the opening of Camden Yards.

The Kansas City Royals also have a hot dog race, with runners dressed as hot dogs and differentiated by Heinz condiments: Ketchup, Mustard, and Relish. Live costumed racers made their first appearance during the 2007 season, with the race being limited to the video board prior to this as well.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Chorizo joins Racing Sausages
  2. ^ Brewers/Klements Racing Sausages - A Historical Perspective
  3. ^ Chorizo represents growing Latino population in Wisconsin

[edit] External links


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