Best of the Hall and the town
Best place for a
quiet walk with
your spouse after
all that baseball: Anywhere along
Otsego Lake. Cooperstown is quite
pretty, with the lake
and the hills around it
providing a soothing
backdrop.
Best fine dining:
Alex & Ika. This Main
Street gem offers
inventive continental
fare. Try the spicy
habanero shrimp
cheesecake and the
house cocktails. My
wife and I enjoyed
every item we ordered.
Best place to grab
a snack: Danny's
Main Street Market
features robust
sandwiches, delectable
baked goods and
some excellent beers.
Locals flock there at
lunch, which is always a
good sign.
Best display
related to a
ballplayer: Ted
Williams thought about
hitting so precisely that
he figured out what
average he could
attain for pitches in
every part of the strike
zone. The Hall
demonstrates his
findings with a
rectangle of color coded
balls. It's hard to
describe, but it
captures instantly
Williams' manic
devotion to his craft.
Best interactive
exhibit: The virtual
tour of Boston's South
End Grounds, which
burned down in 1894.
It's amazing to feel
you're entering a
grandstand that hasn't
hosted a game in more
than a century.
Best baseball
cards: The Old Judge
set. The Hall's
collection includes
more than 135,000
cards, many of them
famous. But check out
these sepia-toned
cards from the 1880s
to gain perspective on
the deep roots of the
hobby.
Best collected
display of
memorabilia: The
wall featuring balls
from every no-hitter
since 1940. On the
one hand, it's stunning
to see how regularly
Nolan Ryan pulled off
this feat. On the other,
the display is a
testament to the
fleeting nature of
pitching greatness,
because many who
threw no-hitters could
not pull off
distinguished careers.
Best Hall of Fame
plaques: There's a
reason the first class is
set aside at the front of
the gallery. If you were
building a baseball
Rushmore, Babe Ruth,
Ty Cobb, Walter
Johnson, Christy
Mathewson and
Honus Wagner
wouldn't make a bad
start.
Best place to feel
the magic of the
Hall of Fame: The
plaque gallery. It's not
an inventive answer,
but that's where the
history of baseball's
greatest performers
comes together. It's
also a quiet spot suited
for contemplation.
[CHILDS WALKER]
Copyright © 2009, The Baltimore Sun
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