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Topic:
~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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JediANGELA
Registered:
Sep '02
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Date Posted:
4/1 7:18pm
Subject:
~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
- Date Edited:
4/1 7:28pm (1 edits total)
Edited By:
JediANGELA
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Tonight, marked the beginning of the end for "The House That Ruth Built". To commemorate that, MLB is having the All Star Game there one last time, before it becomes nothing but an echo in the dust.
The YES Network (Yankee Entertainment and Sports Network) has been airing programs and tidbits throughout Spring Training about the history and legacy of the Stadium and will continue to do so until the very end.
In this thread I will give a history about the legacy of Yankee Stadium. Feel free to post your thoughts, feelings, and any personal history that you have with the Ballpark in the Bronx.
From Wikipedia:
Upon its opening, Yankee Stadium soon came to be known as "The House that Ruth Built", a play on the nursery rhyme "The House that Jack Built", and in reference to the Yankees' star player, Babe Ruth. Ruth's power as a drawing card had enabled the Yankees to build their own stadium in the Bronx after their rivals across the Harlem River, the New York Giants, were threatening to evict them. In the first game at Yankee Stadium, April 18, 1923, Ruth hit the first home run at the Stadium, a three-run shot to help defeat his former team, the Boston Red Sox, 4-1. Boston Red Sox first baseman George Burns got the first hit ever in Yankee Stadium. The Yankees also won their first World Series during the Stadium's inaugural season, a rare coincidence that would not occur again until the St. Louis Cardinals did it in 2006.
It was the Babe's homerun to right field that gave it its nickname, "The House That Ruth Built". It was also Babe's liking to right field that eventually led to a 1937 renovation to occur that created what is known today at the 'short porch in right field'.
Just a small opening day history for all.
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Memories are gained, memories are lost But those that we retain are with us for an eternity. Once things are gone, theyre gone forever. Never let the memories fade. The final year-Yankee Stadium 1923-2008
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Onoto
Title: Risk Host
Registered:
Oct '04
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Date Posted:
4/1 7:47pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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So no "Yankees suck" comments, huh?
That damned park will be sorely missed: the history, the dimensions, everything. One-third of the Classic Ballfield Triumvirate will be gone at the end of this season, and that makes this baseball fan very sad.
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http://boards.theforce.net/Message.aspx?topic=29007905&brd=10264&replies=0 - I am currently hosting the C&G version of the classic wargame Risk. Stop by and see what's going on!
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DarthTunick
Title: Host: The JCC Weekly Poll
Registered:
Nov '00
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Date Posted:
4/2 1:16am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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The Yankees are making a damned foolish decision in replacing the stadium, I think. You simply cannot replace the cache of the current Yankee Stadium with the new one to open next season, it's simply impossible.
2008: The 50th season of L.A. Dodger baseball!
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September 11th, 2001  -Never forget Viva La Ciudad de Los Angeles! RIP, Cody "Snowball" Reeves, 1978-2008. Let me explain something to you about the Dude...... 2008 NLCS: Dodgers vs. Phillies
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darth_gersh
Registered:
Feb '05
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Date Posted:
4/2 8:32am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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I think its the right decision to replace the stadium if it indeed needs to be replaced. I have never been there so I can't say from experience. I have been to wrigley and the history is great, but as far as being a great place to watch and experience a game it sucks.
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Bring on the Wookiee! "All things truly wicked start from innocence". Ernest Hemingway Save the Great White Sharks! Crash's site soon to be up http://sharkconservationsociety.org Columbia sportswear sucks!
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Eeth-my-Koth
Registered:
May '01
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Date Posted:
4/2 8:37am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
- Date Edited:
4/2 8:37am (1 edits total)
Edited By:
Eeth-my-Koth
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Same goes for Fenway.
Great place to check out and stuff.
But man my back and neck was sore after only a few innings.
Great start last night to the final season.
2008 YANKEE GAME HEROES
1. Melky Cabrera
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DarthWormie
Title: Former CR, Massachusetts Imperial Syndicate
Registered:
Jul '04
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Date Posted:
4/2 9:17am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Eeth-my-Koth posted: Same goes for Fenway.
Great place to check out and stuff.
But man my back and neck was sore after only a few innings.
For as many positive upgrades and improvements the new ownership has made to Fenway, it's still a dump and really does need to be replaced. I'm tired of listening to media (local and national) romanticize and fawn about how great a place it is to watch a game. These are people who NEVER have to sit in a $50 grandstand seat with either an obstructed seat or one that faces the left field wall instead of home plate.
I now conclude this rant and return you to the Yankee Stadium thread already in progress.
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"What's so wrong about wanting power converters?" "...and so shines a good deed in a weary world."—W. Wonka Scavenging the Collectibles Galaxy: http://www.thejawa.com
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Eeth-my-Koth
Registered:
May '01
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Date Posted:
4/2 9:35am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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DarthWormie posted:
Eeth-my-Koth posted: Same goes for Fenway.
Great place to check out and stuff.
But man my back and neck was sore after only a few innings.
For as many positive upgrades and improvements the new ownership has made to Fenway, it's still a dump and really does need to be replaced. I'm tired of listening to media (local and national) romanticize and fawn about how great a place it is to watch a game. These are people who NEVER have to sit in a $50 grandstand seat with either an obstructed seat or one that faces the left field wall instead of home plate.
I now conclude this rant and return you to the Yankee Stadium thread already in progress.
How about both?
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DarthIntegral
Title: Manager SWC & Arena
Registered:
Jul '05
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Date Posted:
4/2 10:37am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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I really, really hope I am able to make a trip to NY this summer and take in a game at Yankee Stadium. I feel my life as a baseball fan will never be complete if I can't make it to Yankee, Fenway, and Wrigley. And the clock is about to run out on Yankee.
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halibut gave me 15 respect points I think he's just trying to bribe his way towards victory in Forum Feud Sey's big brother "Faith will bring a way to the impossible"
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DarthWormie
Title: Former CR, Massachusetts Imperial Syndicate
Registered:
Jul '04
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Date Posted:
4/2 11:39am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Eeth-my-Koth posted: [quote=DarthWormie][quote=Eeth-my-Koth]Same goes for Fenway.
How about both?
Oh they have plenty of those too!
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"What's so wrong about wanting power converters?" "...and so shines a good deed in a weary world."—W. Wonka Scavenging the Collectibles Galaxy: http://www.thejawa.com
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DarthTunick
Title: Host: The JCC Weekly Poll
Registered:
Nov '00
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Date Posted:
4/2 11:40am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Once this season is over, you know which stadium will be the 3rd oldest after Fenway & Wrigley? Dodger Stadium!
2008: The 50th season of L.A. Dodger baseball!
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September 11th, 2001  -Never forget Viva La Ciudad de Los Angeles! RIP, Cody "Snowball" Reeves, 1978-2008. Let me explain something to you about the Dude...... 2008 NLCS: Dodgers vs. Phillies
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DarthWormie
Title: Former CR, Massachusetts Imperial Syndicate
Registered:
Jul '04
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Date Posted:
4/2 1:47pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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DarthTunick posted: Once this season is over, you know which stadium will be the 3rd oldest after Fenway & Wrigley? Dodger Stadium!
Dodger stadium is quite nice. A friend of mine took me to a game there while I was in town for C4 last year. We sat in one of the upper decks behind home plate and the view was amazing.
The concession area up there is a bit dark and grimy but other than that, I liked the place.
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"What's so wrong about wanting power converters?" "...and so shines a good deed in a weary world."—W. Wonka Scavenging the Collectibles Galaxy: http://www.thejawa.com
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KnightWriter
Title: Administrator Emeritus
Registered:
Nov '01
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Date Posted:
4/2 2:44pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Fenway and Wrigley should absolutely be left alone. No ifs, ands or buts about it.
I think Steinbrenner is making a huge mistake by messing with Yankee Stadium, and I wouldn't be surprised if they went a few decades without a Series win, if not more.
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Onoto
Title: Risk Host
Registered:
Oct '04
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Date Posted:
4/2 3:04pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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The Curse of the House the Bambino Built? I could live with that.
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http://boards.theforce.net/Message.aspx?topic=29007905&brd=10264&replies=0 - I am currently hosting the C&G version of the classic wargame Risk. Stop by and see what's going on!
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JediANGELA
Registered:
Sep '02
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Date Posted:
4/2 4:39pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Heres a little more history about the Stadium and its lasting legacy on other stadiums.
"Yankee Stadium was the first three-tiered sports facility in the United States and one of the first baseball parks to be given the lasting title of stadium. Baseball teams typically played in a park or a field. The word stadium deliberately evoked ancient Greece, where a stadium was unit of measure--the length of a footrace; the buildings that housed footraces were called stadiums. Yankee Stadium was one of the first to be deliberately designed as a multi-purpose facility. The field was initially surrounded by a (misshapen) quarter-mile running track, which effectively also served as a warning track for outfielders, a feature now standard on all major league fields. The left and right field bleacher sections were laid out at right angles to each other, and to the third base stands, to be properly positioned for both track-and-field events and football. The large electronic scoreboard in right-center field, featuring both teams' lineups and scores of other baseball games, was the first of its kind."
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Memories are gained, memories are lost But those that we retain are with us for an eternity. Once things are gone, theyre gone forever. Never let the memories fade. The final year-Yankee Stadium 1923-2008
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yankee8255
Registered:
May '05
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Date Posted:
4/3 6:34am
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
- Date Edited:
4/3 6:34am (1 edits total)
Edited By:
yankee8255
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I think I read that it was in fact the first to be called "stadium".
Anyway, thought I'd share some of my fondest memories:
- My first game there was the 76 or 77 Old Timer's Day. My next door neighbor had an extra ticket. Ron Guidry pitched. I think they lost. (I saw 3-4 games when the Yankees were at Shea during the renovations -- I grew up in Flushing).
- The a big gap, my Dad was never in the mood to drive up to the Bronx. A good friend was a big Yankee fan, and we started going to games together during summers in college (late 80s), 2-3 per summer). I had a wild streak of 10-15 game sin a row that went to where Mattingly hit a home run, and I actually had a knack for calling them. The streak included a game at the Old Comisky in Chicago. The streak actually ended there, at Andy Hawkins No-Hit loss, in 1990 (I have the score card at my parents house).
- I was a masochist and kept going in the early 90s, when they weren't even contending anymore. The Mel Hall years. Ugh.
- My first playoff game ever was also Don Mattingly's. 1995 ALDS Game 1 vs. the Mariners. Great game, lots of back and forth, and Donnie Baseball game up big more than once.
- After Buck Showalter was fired, I vowed I would never go to a Yankee game again. So a big giant gap for me in 1996. I forgave quickly, though, when Torre had them playing better than ever.
- 1997 and 1998 were lean years, too, since I was still in DC worked over the summer.
-1999 was awesome, though, some friends and I got a 15 game package, that included the right to one game per playoff round. That meant Game 4 of the WS, Clemens vs. Smoltz. Awesome game.
- The prices on tickets skyrocketed after that, so no more ticket package, but i still went to 5-10 games through 2002, including ALCS games in 2000 and 2001 The clincher vs. the Mariners both years). The 2001 game was probably even better than the 1999 WS game, coming in the aftermath of 9/11. The bald eagle flew in after the national anthem, and the Irish tenor guy sang God Bless America in the 7th inning stretch. I still get goosebumps. When Justice hit the clinching HR off the upper deck facade, I serious got scared the upper deck was going to colapse, it was rocking so dramatically.
Sadly, I haven't been to a game since 2002, as I moved to Europe in 2003, and haven#t been home during baseball season since, and it doesn#t look like I'll be back this year, either.
Angela, a great choice for the title of the thread, a baseball cathedral is precisely what it is. I look forward to the new stadium, but I'll always miss the place that holds so many great memories for me.
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A perfect world: a house in the Hamptons with two solaria and a horse named Prickely Pete, Dr. van Nostrand as my primary care physician, the O-OT legally available on DVD in a quality worthy of its greatness and Luke the undisputed hero of Star Wars
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JediANGELA
Registered:
Sep '02
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Date Posted:
4/3 7:40pm
Subject:
RE: ~Yankee Stadium ~1923-2008: A Farewell to the Cathedral
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Instead of giving a history today, I decided to share a personal story.
I must have 3 or 4 at the time, and my grandparents had the whole family over for a bbq. It just happened to be a Yankees/Red Sox game that day. I was outside playing with my older cousins when we heard yelling from inside. We ran back to see an argument on the field. The camera kept panning around to show the fans screaming along with the players (I forgot even what it was over it was almost 20 years ago or so). That was the first time I remember seeing Yankee Stadium either on TV or real life. I'm sure I must have seen it before, but thats my first real memory of it.
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Memories are gained, memories are lost But those that we retain are with us for an eternity. Once things are gone, theyre gone forever. Never let the memories fade. The final year-Yankee Stadium 1923-2008
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