Debriefing
Kevin Hallinan: Baseball Security's Mr. (April thru) October
The same year a routine ground ball to first skated through Bill Buckner's legs, thus demolishing the psyche of Red Sox fans (including us here at Debriefing), Major League Baseball hired Kevin Hallinan as its senior vice president of security and facility management.
By Scott Berinato
October 01, 2003 — CSO — The same year a routine ground ball to first skated through Bill Buckner's legs, thus demolishing the psyche of Red Sox fans (including us here at Debriefing), Major League Baseball hired Kevin Hallinan as its senior vice president of security and facility management. It was a position conjured by then-commissioner Peter Ueberroth, who believed alcohol and the security problems it creates were a factor in dwindling attendance.
Since then, Hallinan has seen and learned more about sports security than the Red Sox have learned about pitching winning championships. In the past year alone, Hallinan had to deal with two incidents of fans charging the White Sox's field, once attacking a coach and once an umpire, another incident in which a cherry bomb detonated in the bleachers in Oakland, and yet another in Oakland in which a spectator beaned an outfielder in the head with a cell phone.
In May, Hallinan volunteered to become chairman of the board for the TEAM (Techniques for Effective Alcohol Management) Coalition, a nonprofit consortium of sports leagues, vendors, brewers, broadcasters, facility managers and traffic safety experts founded in 1987. You can thank TEAM for rules we now take for granted, like no beer after the seventh inning.
This month, Hallinan takes on the World Series, a major event both in terms of American sports and security.
The fan who attacked the first-base coach got no jail time. Just community service, rehabilitation and probation.
I testified in that case. The judge let him walk. It was disappointing. Other cases have yielded stiffer penalties and sent a better message.
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