The First Pitch: Presidential and Beyond
One of baseball’s most enduring Opening Day traditions is the presidential first pitch, dating back to April 14, 1910, when President William Howard Taft became the first sitting American president to throw the ceremonial ball.
“With Taft throwing the first pitch, baseball, as the national game, received presidential sanction,” Martin Babicz, co-author of the book National Pastime: U.S. History Through Baseball, tells HISTORY.com. “Thus, baseball and the United States became intertwined. You could not separate one from the other.”
Since Taft’s historic toss in Washington, D.C., during a game between the city’s then-team, the Washington Senators, and the Philadelphia Athletics, nearly every sitting president has continued this tradition. Franklin D. Roosevelt, an avid New York baseball fan, made a record eight Opening Day tosses as president—and one as assistant secretary of the Navy, when he subbed for Woodrow Wilson. Exceptions include Jimmy Carter (who did throw out a first pitch during the 1979 World Series), Donald Trump and Joe Biden (who did throw an Opening Day first pitch as vice president in 2009).
In 1973, Richard Nixon became the first president to start the season in a ballpark outside the Washington, D.C., area, Babicz says, when he threw out the first pitch at an Angels game in Anaheim, California, just 10 miles from his birthplace in Yorba Linda. (The Washington Senators had decamped two years earlier to Texas, and Major League Baseball wouldn’t return to D.C. until 2005, when the Nationals took up residence.)
Traditionally, presidents made the toss from the grandstands until 1988, when Ronald Reagan threw the first pitch from the mound.
Celebrities and athletes have also participated in the Opening Day first pitch. Notable figures include actor Robert Redford (Chicago Cubs, 2011), comedian Bill Murray (Chicago Cubs, 2012), rapper Megan Thee Stallion (Houston Astros, 2023) and Hall of Famer Joe DiMaggio (multiple teams between 1963 and 1992).
Wacky Stunts and Gimmicks
Opening Day isn't just about the game; it often features memorable stunts.
The popularity of Opening Day on the baseball calendar means there are never enough tickets to satisfy all the fans, Babicz says. In 1985, the New York Mets tried to serve those overflow fans by hiring comedian and Long Island native son Rodney Dangerfield—known for getting “no respect”—to throw out the first pitch on the second day of the season, part of what the team was optimistically billing “Opening Day II.”
“The second Opening Day had all the fanfare of Opening Day,” Babicz says, “giving fans who could not attend the day before a chance to experience the hoopla.”
In San Diego, fans themselves have turned the season’s second game into a special event called “Tony Gwynn Opening Day,” in honor of a Padres legend who regularly remarked about how that was the game when the true fans came out.
In the 1970s and early ’80s, the Philadelphia Phillies went all out on attention-getting Opening Day stunts. In 1971, they had the first pitch dropped from a helicopter. In 1974, the ball was delivered by a “human cannonball” shot 150 feet from a cannon at second base, landing in a net at home plate. And in 1983, a local weatherman parachuted onto the field with the opening game ball.
One of the team’s most unforgettable stunts involved Richard Johnson, better known as “Kiteman.” In 1972, filling in for a stuntman who bailed at the last minute, the local hardware store owner attempted to ski down a 140-foot ramp at Veterans Stadium with a kite strapped to his back to deliver the game ball to the mayor waiting at home plate. Things didn't go quite as planned: Johnson crashed into the stands. But he still managed to get up and throw the ceremonial first pitch—even if it was into the bullpen, some 400 feet from its intended destination.
“I was just relieved that he was alive,” Phillies chairman Bill Giles says in his autobiography, Pouring Six Beers at a Time. “Generally speaking, a dead body is not a good omen for the start of a baseball season.”