Forty years ago today, Ferris Bueller, Cameron Fry and Slowen Peterson took their seats in the left field in the Vrigle field while playing hooks from school for a day.
How do we know the scene of The Cubes Game in the 1986 film “Ferris Bueller de of of”, on June 5, 1985? Well, that puzzle was solved by something spectacular Spying work from Larry Granilo of baseball prospectus in 2011.
Highlight on television – who recalls Principal Ed Runi at Pizza Place – cub reliever Lee Smith is included in pitching for the brave. Ferris grabbed a dishonest ball with Washington’s bat, and the Granillo’s discovery of the game logs revealed that Washington only hit a foul ball from Lee Smith, which took place on 5 June 1985 in the 11th innings of the game.
In four decades, no one said which seats were actually sitting in a friendly count. Therefore, CLLCT went to Wrigley Field this week to complete it.
With the help of Ed Hartig, Historian Ed Hartig, Chief Commercial Officer Colin Folkner and director of ticket services, Brian Garza, Clact could get the seats of Bueller – or at least one could get close to anyone.
The scene was filmed with actors in a separate cub game played in September 1985, and Harting did research to determine the seat space.
Interest: Photo 1 shows them directly in a section with the old bullpen home plate, with no visible corridor in front of them, which will put them in the first section of the box below the left-field line.
My guess is that there was no row 1 in that section due to the curvature of the wall.
Interest: In photo 3, you look at the top of two rows a ramp behind you and they face the ground as on their right. At that time there was no such ramp at the top of the first section of the box.
My speculation is that they moved to Section 104 – which would have a ramp, but, of course, a visible corridor in front of them will break. They will be in the end.
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Hartig filmed Ferris’ foul-ball catch and Cameron “swing batter batter” in two different classes.
For logic, suppose we care more about where Ferris caught the foul ball.
Therefore, we met Garza and Falkner to see the scene in the Wrigley field.
With the new seats and fresh concrete present in 1985, Garza watched the video and still saw the pictures and saw the third-base line down to the home plate, which remains unchanged.
Bryan Garza, the cub director of ticket services, helped Darren Rowle detect the seat from “Ferris Bueller Day Off”.
With the research of hearting, Garza came to the conclusion that the equivalent of Ferris seat is most likely with a slone in Cameron in Section 3, Row 13, Seat 15, Seat 16 and Slone in Seat 14.
The irony is that Bueller seat is in the same section as the most notorious seat in Ballpark: 2004 NLCS is located in Steve Bartman’s seat, Section 3, Row 12, Seat 1 from Game 6 of NLCS Debacle.
Therefore, as of today, there is a new premium seat in the left area that may cost a few additional rupees.
Fans of the cub and Wrigleygoers, this is on.
And if you want something else, I am respecting the 40th anniversary of the scene by putting my ferris vest-which has been photographed for the Wrigley scenes between the other for the auction.
Darren is one of the founder of the Rowel CLLCT and one of the leading reporters of the country who are in the collectable market. He first worked for ESPN, CNBC and action network.