“Where’s Tommy?” John asked next – and Henry pointed to Tom Hagan at first base.
“Where’s Zim?” John asked next – and Henry pointed to Ryan Zimmerman at third base.
Henry Ford offered this memory earlier this week while seated in B3 and with an arm around B4. Nowadays, he might say his favorite spot at The Dish is the batter’s box – heading into Friday’s home NCAA Tournament matchup with the University of Pennsylvania, Ford has 17 home runs, the most ever by a UVA freshman – but for most of his life, it was here in his family’s seats.
The Fords have had the same view of Cavalier baseball for two decades. It’s been shared by all members of the family – including Henry’s uncle Kevin, an alumnus of the program – but some of the most cherished times in the seats came when John Ford drove down from Washington to join them.
A “people person” with a baseball background, John, a former police officer, was the ideal fan to share the space with. He could chat up anyone around him, while providing unique perspective on the game at hand.
Above all else, he was “big on UVA baseball,” said Ryan Ford, John’s son and Henry’s father.
He loved the Wahoos since Kevin played for them in the 1990s and that passion only deepened as he got closer to the program.
“He would swing by on like a Tuesday and pick up Henry,” said Ryan, who moved to Charlottesville with his wife, Christy, in 2001. “I mean, Henry was 6 months old, and my dad would take him up to the field and walk in and have a chat with coach Mac (UVA assistant coach Kevin McMullan) and take him to the game and sit in the front row and take in the games with him. He was Henry’s baseball buddy.
“And Henry was engaged.”
John helped Henry learn the names of UVA’s players, leading them to cheer on their favorite team together as the Cavaliers began their rise to a national power under head coach Brian O’Connor, now in his 21st season on Grounds.
As Henry grew older and developed into a promising player in his own right, he soaked in more information about his grandfather – how John was once invited to a tryout for the Cleveland Indians, how John had a sweet left-handed swing and how John always wore jersey No. 9.
“From everything I’ve heard,” Henry said, “he was super talented.”
The last time John watched the Hoos was in Omaha, Nebraska, at the 2009 College World Series, fulfilling a bucket list trip with his sons. He had terminal cancer then, but that did little to derail what Ryan called an “amazing trip.”
It’s been 15 years since John’s death, but his presence is still sensed at Disharoon Park. When members of the Ford family – Henry has two younger sisters, Tulip and Ruby – sit in B3 and B4 now, they’re there in proud support of the UVA player who wears No. 9.
Henry Ford is a sweet-swinging representation of his grandfather.
“He’s like Henry’s baseball guardian angel,” Ryan said. “I feel it. When we’re at The Dish, you can feel it. I mean, my dad’s the one who introduced Henry to all of this.”
Henry is forever grateful. At noon Friday, he debuts in the NCAA Tournament, starring in his hometown – and on the team of his childhood.
“I know me playing here and having success means the most to my grandpa more than anybody,” he said. “So, I definitely play for him and know that he’s watching.”