With a hasty windup followed by a pitch that sailed
above a generous strike zone, President Bush opened the Washington
Nationals' inaugural home game Thursday night and ended the city's
baseball drought of more than three decades.
Bush emerged from the dugout in a red Nationals jacket to mostly
cheers, some boos and lots of camera flashes. Waving to the crowd, he
walked straight to the mound and promptly threw a high pitch toward home
plate. Nationals catcher Brian Schneider reached up and snatched the ball
cleanly, sparking more cheers.
Joe Grzenda, the last pitcher in the Washington Senators' final home
game in 1971, provided the ball he had used in that final game.
The president walked back across the diamond to another round of cheers
from fans packed into 46,000-seat RFK Stadium. He waved and smiled before
disappearing into the dugout.
Bush watched the game from a box behind home plate with baseball
commissioner Bud Selig, first lady Laura Bush, daughter Jenna and others.

Under a blue sky and mild temperatures, Bush executed the ceremonial
first toss with the skill of a guy who knows baseball. He was a part-owner
of the Texas Rangers before running for governor of Texas.
Bush practiced his wind-up in recent days, said White House spokesman
Scott McClellan, before traveling to Rome last week and on Wednesday. He
and Schneider had a private warm-up session at the stadium.
Earlier Thursday, Bush told a newspaper editors meeting in Washington:
"I've got a decision to make today. Do I go with a fastball or a slider?"
Bush's pitch came 95 years to the day that President William Howard
Taft did the same at a game between the Senators and Athletics, the
beginning of a tradition.
The Senators left for Texas in 1972,
but baseball returned to the nation's capital with the home opener
against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
(Agencies)