Top 10 Strangest MLB Stadiums Ever

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • Sport

Komentáře • 146

  • @mbd501
    @mbd501 Před rokem +11

    Back in the 70s and 80s, most major league teams had dual baseball/football stadiums. That was the norm at the time.

  • @fabio40
    @fabio40 Před rokem +31

    Think Candlestick Park could fit into this category also.

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm Před rokem +10

      The only really strange thing about the Stick was that they seem to have found the windiest spot on the peninsula to build it.

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 Před rokem +2

      yeah, I always wanted to see a game in Candlestick Park. I pictured myself sitting in the bleachers with my baseball cap, a scorecard, and a cup of Olympia beer behind my right heel!

    • @ATalkingBadger
      @ATalkingBadger Před rokem +1

      Yes, but which stadium would it replace?

    • @surferdude642
      @surferdude642 Před rokem +1

      Candlestick wasn't a bad stadium, but the wind and cold weather was a major issue. It also lost some character when they closed in the right field area. Before that, it was open except for 3 sets of bleachers, you could see right into the parking lot and the bay. San Francisco and the peninsula is generally quite windy in the summer.

    • @surferdude642
      @surferdude642 Před rokem

      ​@@ATalkingBadger Candlestick replaced Seals stadium which was a minor league stadium that the Giants used in 1958 and 1959. It was located much further from the water inside the city.

  • @robertwalker9625
    @robertwalker9625 Před rokem +7

    Wrigley Field in LA was also the park used for MLB Home Run Derby in the late 1950's and early 1960. I really enjoyed that show as a kid, watching the best home run hitters in the game competing against each other.

    • @nicholasherrald2866
      @nicholasherrald2866 Před rokem

      Remember watching that late night on ESPN as filler before they went off the air at night. 😅 loved it!!!

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan Před rokem +18

    Another one that should be mentioned is Braves Field in Boston, whose dimensions changed over the years. Braves' owner James Gaffney wanted a lot of inside-the-park home runs, so when it opened in 1915, it was more than 400 feet down the lines and almost 500 feet to center field. Ty Cobb said that no one would hit a ball out of the park, and a home run wasn't hit over the fence until 1922.

    • @guessundheit6494
      @guessundheit6494 Před rokem +5

      I would ~~~LOVE~~~ to see half the baseball parks do that. Get rid of the juicers and bring back contact hitters and base stealers. When pitchers don't have to throw fire and only need to keep it down on the infield, they can last nine innings instead of six. It's pitching changes that make baseball games so long and boring, not batters wasting time at the plate. A "pitch clock" solves nothing and doesn't address the problem.
      Failing that, start calling the strike zone properly, the size of a window (36" by 17") instead of the size of a shoebox like it is now (24" by 15").

    • @csnide6702
      @csnide6702 Před rokem +1

      @@guessundheit6494 the rule change that galled me was the anti-shift rule... if you can't hit against the shift, you don't belong in the MLB.

    • @guessundheit6494
      @guessundheit6494 Před rokem

      @@csnide6702 "Anti-shift" is about as enforceable as "no zone defence" in basketball. And as laughable.

    • @grahamcracker659
      @grahamcracker659 Před rokem +1

      this is very scare my cat is sad

    • @bubblerap7176
      @bubblerap7176 Před 10 měsíci

      @@csnide6702 ha! that shift was bullshit, like cheating. Glad to see it go.

  • @Tubewings
    @Tubewings Před rokem +11

    Another factoid about the Los Angeles Wrigley Field was that it was the filming location of the 1960 TV show "Home Run Derby", where major league stars of the time competed in a home run hitting contest (including Hank Aaron, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, Harmon Killebrew, and Ernie Banks).

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 Před rokem +3

      YEAH!!! I SAW THAT SHOW!!! between at bats, the announcer would chat with the stars competing! I heard Mickey Mantle talking about Rocky Colovito, "HE HIT 49 HOME RUNS!"

    • @michaelhillman2959
      @michaelhillman2959 Před rokem

      Don’t forget about Al Kaline too.

    • @toastnjam7384
      @toastnjam7384 Před 10 měsíci

      The very first NFL Pro Bowl was held there in 1939.

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 Před rokem +14

    The street behind Fenway's Green Monster is Lansdowne Street. The city refused to allow the Red Sox to block it with a normal design for the field, so they built the wall instead.

    • @dravya1
      @dravya1 Před rokem +1

      the monster was put up so neighbors wouldn't be able to look in without paying, pure greed!

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 Před rokem +2

      @@dravya1 Of course not. If it didn’t go up, balls in the power alley would fly out of the park all game long. People focus on the distance down the line (315, but likely 310), but the real problem is in left-center. They list it as 379, but that’s at the end of the wall. The middle of the wall is less than 350, which is absurdly short. The wall is vital to allow play, not to block visibility.

    • @troubledsole9104
      @troubledsole9104 Před 11 měsíci

      @@dravya1 I think this had to do with their previous ballpark that had no outfield walls.

    • @THEBIGLIE20
      @THEBIGLIE20 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Would you like getting peppered with line drives while you wait in line to get in a bar. Probably not

  • @steve4158
    @steve4158 Před rokem +1

    As a young boy, our family went to Jarry Park to watch the Expos. At the time, Rusty Staub was their big star. It was my first time seeing pro baseball. Great memory!

  • @dorklyasmr6017
    @dorklyasmr6017 Před rokem +4

    "Jarry Park: The capacity was 28,000 and the smallest in major league baseball". Uh, no. That dubious honor goes to Sick's Stadium in Seattle, home to the 1969 Seattle Pilots before they moved to Milwaukee. On opening day the stadium have about 17,000 seats, but they literally were still building some while the game went on. By June they had managed to top out at about 25,000 seats... but the facility was so poorly constructed that if there was anything more than 10,000 fans, the toilets and sinks stopped working from lack of water pressure. Oh, and they also built it on the cheap out of wood; and given the moist conditions in Seattle the stands began rotting almost immediately.
    It's an absolute worthy candidate if you decide to do another video about strange stadiums. There's a Lowe's built on the old location now. You can see a small memorial near the entrance where home plate used to be.

    • @FranBushardt
      @FranBushardt Před rokem

      Jarry Park had A Great Fan Atmosphere for Game play.

  • @ddanelle4729
    @ddanelle4729 Před rokem

    Nice work on the video. I very much enjoyed the history behind the old and current ball parks.

  • @christianwootton100
    @christianwootton100 Před rokem +6

    Baker Bowl, former home of the Phillies should be included here.

  • @dwaynecoy1871
    @dwaynecoy1871 Před rokem +3

    I remember watching the Reds v Expos on TV in the early 70's (72-73?) at Jarry Park.I recall seeing Joe Morgan hit a home run into the swimming pool behind the right field wall. As a young kid I thought it was awesome to see a swimming pool at a baseball stadium. Never knew the name of this odd little stadium until today.

  • @michaelhillman2959
    @michaelhillman2959 Před rokem +2

    Back in 1984, I saw Kirk Gibson hit what I seem to remember was a walk off home run for The Tigers in Exhibition Stadium in Toronto. He hit it “ a country mile” as the old saying goes. It way cleared the right field fence and even cleared the exposed part of the football playing field landing in the end zone. Of course I do not know how long this homer was, but it had to be one of the longest in that now long defunct ballpark.

  • @augthedog55
    @augthedog55 Před rokem

    Great video! One stadium that I was hoping would be included was Colt Stadium. This was the home of the Houston Colt 45s prior to moving into the Astrodome and thus changing their name to the Astros.

  • @semipenguin
    @semipenguin Před rokem +3

    Borchert Field in Milwaukee was never home to a Major League Baseball team. There was an MLB team called the Brewers that played in Milwaukee in 1901, but according to Wikipedia, Borchert Field was not there home. That incarnation of the Brewers left for St Louis after the 1901 season, and become known as the Browns.
    The Brewers team that played there from 1902 - 1952 was a minor league team, they moved in preparation of the Braves moving to Milwaukee in 1953

  • @Glostahdude
    @Glostahdude Před rokem +3

    I live just NE of Boston and have been to many Red Sox games. Yes you are very close to the action. So pay attention. This IS NOT a park for people who stare at their cellphones all game along the 1st and 3rd baselines! Also… they have THE LEAGUES SMALLEST SEATS. If you are over 5’8 or 160 pounds, you’re going to have an EXTREMELY uncomfortable 2.5-3 hours. It’s ridiculous how small they are.

  • @Dave-ti2ue
    @Dave-ti2ue Před rokem +1

    Loved the Polo Grounds. Fun fact from a big old know it all: Hosted the first Louis/Conn fight, one of the legendary heavyweight fights.

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan Před rokem +3

    Joe Morgan said that Crosley Field in Cincinnati had the strangest dimensions of any park he played in; the covered stands were v-shaped, and the park included a 15-degree incline in left field known as "the terrace."

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 Před rokem +2

      yeah, I saw Jackie Brant (one of the best centerfielders in the game) run up the 15-degree incline, trip, fall down and STRETCH with all his might and have the ball land in his glove....and fall out! the official scorer, even though a redleg hit the ball, called it an 'error'.

    • @robbarbieri8676
      @robbarbieri8676 Před rokem

      @@samuelmoulds1016 I remember that there was a home run line in left field at Crosley, where the fence was made of two different materials, metal and wood. I believe if the ball hit the metal, it was a homer. The umps were supposed to be able to tell by the noise made when the ball hit. I would have definitely put Crosley on this list ahead of LA's Wrigley and the one in Milwaukee, which were not really MLB stadiums, at least not for long. I'd probably put it ahead of the original Wrigley as well, since the main point of "oddness" for the poster seems to be they played only day games for so long. Point of fact, the Cubs were going to install lights during the '40s, but then donated the metal to the war effort. After WW II, Phil Wrigley apparently didn't want to spend the money. Oh, and while we're on the subject of lights, Crosley Field was the first to get them back in, I believe 1938.

  • @williammcfadden2869
    @williammcfadden2869 Před rokem +1

    This was an interesting video and I enjoyed it. To the best of my knowledge major league baseball was not played in that stadium in Milwaukee except possibly for the very first few seasons of the American League starting in 1901. By approximately 1905 some of the AL teams had moved to their permanent locations and there was not another franchise shift in MLB until the Boston Braves moved to Milwaukee and became the Milwaukee Braves in 1953. In 1953 the Braves moved into County Stadium where they played for their tenure in Milwaukee until they moved to Atlanta in 1966 and then the Brewers starting in 1970 played at County Stadium until their current stadium was constructed. The Los Angeles Dodgers only played at the LA Coliseum from 1958 until 1961 while Dodger Stadium at Chavez Ravine was being constructed. The LA Coliseum was never intended as their permanent home.

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan Před rokem +7

    Although the photo at 3:47 shows it, you neglected to mention the swimming pool beyond the right field fence at Jarry Park. When the Pirates were visiting and Willie Stargell was at bat, they'd clear the pool, because he was likely to hit a home run there.

    • @kdwaynec
      @kdwaynec Před rokem

      The picture @4:04 is a great shot of the pool.

    • @user-co9gf9mz6d
      @user-co9gf9mz6d Před rokem +1

      It was called Willie's Pool in French because he hit a home run in the pool in 1969. When he retired in 1982 the Expos presented him with a life preserver. If you want to get an idea of his power watch him hit shirtless BP in his prime. Sounds like someone wacking a metal shed with a 2×4.

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello Před 10 měsíci

      I remember hearing way back when that Mack Jones of the Expos also hit one into the pool. I don't know how many others did it..

  • @jordanbonacci5725
    @jordanbonacci5725 Před rokem

    Jarry Park is still used as a park and is absolutely gorgeous. Montreal is hungry for baseball again, we need the Expos back!

  • @cyoung9458
    @cyoung9458 Před rokem +1

    I worked at Exhibition Studium when the Jays were playing there. The grand stand general admission seat in the outfield was $2.00.
    When the Yankee came to play, the whole stadium would be full.

    • @stevejohnson1577
      @stevejohnson1577 Před rokem

      i used to be one of bleacher bums... going to the games in September on cold nights took balls to sit through.

  • @JohnDoe-dh4fi
    @JohnDoe-dh4fi Před rokem

    3:00 Exhibition Stadium was torn down in1999 and the BMO Field got built on the site and opened up in 2007 where the Toronto FC and the Toronto Argonauts play

  • @rickl696
    @rickl696 Před rokem

    What a memory! I so remember Exhibition Stadium and getting tickets to the Blue Jays and the seats were in that right field section. Beyond the right field fence. Would have been great seats for the Argos.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 Před 10 měsíci

    I attended a Dodger game at the Coliseum in 1961 as a ten-year-old. Our seats were lousy, deep in left field. Bill White of the Cardinals hit 3 HRs in a 10-1 win.

  • @davids9520
    @davids9520 Před rokem +2

    You should do a video about Tiger Stadium. It still exists. But as a much more friendly ball field. Very old fashion. But still in use.

    • @NatoBro
      @NatoBro Před rokem

      Tiger Stadium doesn't exist any longer. It was torn down and the field was finally converted into a diamond called the Corner Ballpark. Minor league, high school and some football played there. There is housing surrounding the field as well. Nothing old fashion about it.

  • @richarddenny5340
    @richarddenny5340 Před rokem

    my favorite old time stadiums : the Polo Grounds in NYC and the Baker Bowl in Philly

  • @jayfelsberg1931
    @jayfelsberg1931 Před rokem +4

    But what about the wonderful Baker Bowl??????

  • @matthewgibson8977
    @matthewgibson8977 Před rokem

    Great video

  • @nascarmadman
    @nascarmadman Před rokem +1

    Actual name is Jarry Park Stadium as it was inside Parc Jarry. It originally had only 3000 seats but they hastily added seats to bring it up to the 28K+ it had when the Expos played there.
    Don't forget the ladder that is IN PLAY on the Green Monster.

  • @jsch0201
    @jsch0201 Před rokem +2

    I wonder why the Mile High Stadium in Denver is not introduced.

  • @josephosheavideos3992

    This was an interesting video, but I was puzzled by the inclusion of Chicago's Wrigley Field when the old Yankee Stadium in New York was much more eccentric.

  • @bishopaz
    @bishopaz Před rokem +1

    Should have included Baker Bowl in Philadelphia, League Park in Cleveland, Crosley Field in Cincinnati. Tiger Stadium Detroit. The list is endless.

  • @pstudio4096
    @pstudio4096 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting video!

  • @danielhresko4900
    @danielhresko4900 Před rokem

    If you do a follow up video, please include Crosley Field in Cincinnati and Forbes Field in Pittsburgh.

  • @theworldwariioldtimeradioc8676

    I think it would be awesome to see a park with the dimensions of the Polo Grounds.

  • @JoeSiegler
    @JoeSiegler Před rokem

    I would have included Mile High Stadium in Denver. The Rockies played there the first couple of years before Coors Field was ready. It had that strange tiny left field thing going on like the LA coliseum did too.

  • @MKPiatkowski
    @MKPiatkowski Před rokem +1

    Exhibition Stadium was my stomping grounds as a kid. The first few seasons of the club, you could get those outfield seats (the Grandstand) ridiculously cheap so my family would go a lot. Got a lot of balls there.

    • @goldenretriever6261
      @goldenretriever6261 Před rokem

      The Grandstand seats were $4 at Dominion, and $2 if you had a receipt from grocery shopping at Dominion. We would look through the garbage for receipts to get the half price tickets.

    • @MKPiatkowski
      @MKPiatkowski Před rokem

      @@goldenretriever6261 You needed to spend $20 in groceries and you could get $1 tickets. And since they were undated and we lived close to the stadium, my dad would game the system and bring used tickets on rainouts to get more tickets.

  • @WW-hr1hd
    @WW-hr1hd Před rokem

    I'm surprised Denver's Mile High Stadium and its movable left field stands isn't on this list. Like several stadiums mentioned, it hosted both MLB and NFL teams. But what makes it stand out is that the entire east side of the stadium moved out to accommodate left field for baseball games. The 9 million-pound triple-deck stucture, which seated about 20,000 fans, "floated" on a thin sheet of water while hydrolic jacks pushed it 145 feet out for baseball and in for football. From what I understand it was the largest movable structure in the world.

  • @ES-hr6vg
    @ES-hr6vg Před rokem

    I’m glad I got to go to Exhibition Stadium in Toronto before Skydome opened.

  • @michaeldequatro1012
    @michaeldequatro1012 Před rokem +1

    I would add the old Yankee stadium which had monuments in center field. Outfielders would have to go around these monuments to get a ball.

    • @michaeldequatro1012
      @michaeldequatro1012 Před rokem

      @@helmuthare There is. It was Bobby Murcer who had to go around them. Look it up.

    • @michaeldequatro1012
      @michaeldequatro1012 Před rokem

      @@helmuthare You're not getting the point of the story. The monument was still in the way. It was a bad idea to put them out there.

  • @samwalko
    @samwalko Před rokem

    Wrigley Field (CHI) is also the only (current?) MLB stadium where part of the outfield fence is closer than the distance to the poles. I believe it also has the deepest current distance to both poles.

  • @johnfitzpatrick3094
    @johnfitzpatrick3094 Před rokem +2

    You forgot about Baker Bowl in Philly, and Crosley Field in Cincinnati.

    • @greggower8899
      @greggower8899 Před rokem +1

      I remember Connie Mack stadium in Philly. A right field home run went out into the parking lot. I don’t remember the stadium’s dimensions or what it looked like.

    • @johnfitzpatrick3094
      @johnfitzpatrick3094 Před rokem

      @@greggower8899 I've seen pictures, and it was a much better ballpark than Baker Bowl.

  • @michaelanthony1342
    @michaelanthony1342 Před rokem +3

    The expos went from one dump ( Jarry ) to another dump ( Big O ) ....and then they bailed to Washington ......gee ....I wonder why 😂😂😂😂😂 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 Před rokem +1

      Jarry Park was a cute little place. It needed about 7,000 more seats and the only real issue was bad weather.

    • @goldenretriever6261
      @goldenretriever6261 Před rokem

      Who wants to sit outside in April in Montreal? They needed a good domed stadium.

  • @donaldmackerer9032
    @donaldmackerer9032 Před rokem +2

    Atlanta fulton county stadium was a lot like the oakland coliseum today

    • @orbyfan
      @orbyfan Před rokem

      Both were known for a large amount of foul territory.

  • @FredSox49
    @FredSox49 Před 10 měsíci

    Photos of Wrigley Field in Chicago show up in the Los Angeles coverage.

  • @HardRockMark
    @HardRockMark Před rokem

    Forbes field should probably have made the list. It’s dimension we’re deep enough that the light towers were actually in the field of play.

  • @tonypanzarella9387
    @tonypanzarella9387 Před rokem

    Griffith Stadium, in Washington DC, had an unusual configuration, too, for both incarnations of the Senators. In addition to the seemingly endless left field foul line, there was the indented "notch" in center field, made necessary because the owner of the adjacent land refused to sell.

  • @lordhighexecutioner
    @lordhighexecutioner Před rokem +1

    no mention of the Baker Bowl in Philadelphia?

  • @csnide6702
    @csnide6702 Před rokem +3

    No Tiger Stadium in Detroit....? WTF...?

    • @watson956
      @watson956 Před rokem

      Tiger Stadium wasn't especially weird, apart from the flagpole inside the park in deep left-center. The bleachers were tough seats to watch from on a hot day, though.

    • @csnide6702
      @csnide6702 Před rokem +3

      @@watson956 well... it was 440 to dead center ... had an overhang in RF where seats were over the field & a flagpole on the field.... won't be another like that anytime soon....

  • @marcpower4167
    @marcpower4167 Před rokem

    3:37 Those seats past the wall were typically not sold during the regular season cause they were just too far away from the action, only during the playoffs and late season games when the demand was there. Exhibition stadium's location caused problems because it was so close to Lake Ontario there was often fog and seagulls on the field. And issues with wind and cold. It snowed during the blue jays first ever game, It's days were numbered after a nationally television Grey Cup game was played there in a torrential rain storm which exposed just how ill-equipped it was and a rally was held the next day with thousands of fans outside city hall chanting "we want a dome." Demolished in 1999. The site is now home to BMO field which is home to the CFL's Toronto Argonauts and Major League Soccer's Toronto FC.

    • @marcpower4167
      @marcpower4167 Před rokem

      Also a little piece of trivia: Fenway Park is the only current MLB stadium with a hand operated scoreboard.

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello Před 10 měsíci

      The original building of the Hocky Hall of Fame was across the street from Exhibition Stadium. I've been to Toronto once in my life and that was in 1976. We went to visit the Hockey Hall of Fame, but got to see them doing the renovation work on Exhibition Stadium for the Blue Jays, who would start playing the next year.

  • @curtisdavis8261
    @curtisdavis8261 Před rokem

    How Insightful!

  • @razormc954
    @razormc954 Před rokem +2

    Surprisingly the Polo Grounds was way more suited to football than baseball.

    • @csnide6702
      @csnide6702 Před rokem +2

      or Polo...... 😆

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello Před 10 měsíci

      Also, while there were stadiums called the Polo Grounds going back to 1890, the famous one pictured here was built around 1911 after the previous version burned down.

  • @TheDtruth29
    @TheDtruth29 Před rokem

    Tiger Stadium got to be number#1, it looked creepy

  • @GabGotti3
    @GabGotti3 Před rokem

    Then the Polo ground turned into the projects which is where Rucker Park is.

  • @miguelsandoval1985
    @miguelsandoval1985 Před rokem +2

    What About Old Candlestick Park?

  • @TheAMVDJ
    @TheAMVDJ Před rokem

    I love odd baseball fields. However, I'm not a fan of oddities that can get players injured, like a hill, for example.

  • @THEBIGLIE20
    @THEBIGLIE20 Před 3 měsíci

    You should mention the Astros field with that hill they once had in centerfield.
    Nothing has defied logic greater in sports history than that silly mound

  • @shawnm8772
    @shawnm8772 Před rokem

    What about the field of dreams in Iowa? MLB has played there the past few years

  • @sherlockdad
    @sherlockdad Před rokem +1

    What about Municipal Stadium in Cleveland, Ohio?

  • @samuelmoulds1016
    @samuelmoulds1016 Před rokem +1

    aaah... actually....it wasn't "Jerry" park. but rather Park 'Jar - ree'

  • @rmcljsloan1756
    @rmcljsloan1756 Před rokem

    When the dogers moved from New York to Brooklyn 😂

  • @MrSheckstr
    @MrSheckstr Před rokem +1

    Borchart field was not a MLB field as far as i know….. it held at least one of the previous incarnations of the Milwaukee Brewers (either the Orieals or the Royals) but they were a MINOR league team at the time

    • @marcelotriunfo18
      @marcelotriunfo18 Před rokem +1

      The Brewers replaced a team that left the American Association, considered a major league, in 1891.

    • @kdwaynec
      @kdwaynec Před rokem

      @@marcelotriunfo18 LOL there was nothing "major" going on in 1891. They were still pitching from 55 feet.

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello Před 10 měsíci

      @@kdwaynec It was still the major leagues whether you want to consider it so or not.

  • @nicholasherrald2866
    @nicholasherrald2866 Před rokem

    If we're gonna include the dump that is the collesum in Oakland lets toss in the Metrodome in Minneapolis.
    Beige inflatable roof making fly balls impossible to see. Plexiglass left field wall for "safety." A garbage baggie for a right field wall. Dome inflating fans facing the outfield, behind the batter that were conveniently turned on when the Twins needed a rally... Collapsed in a snow storm. I mean come on hows that not odd!!!
    Plus, It hosted the greatest baseball game ever played in the 1991 Braves vs.Twins game 7.

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 Před rokem +3

    When O'Malley moved the Dodgers to LA, he considered Wrigley, but greed made him take the Coliseum instead. He just couldn't resist the seating capacity. But it was a horrible layout for a baseball field.

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 Před rokem +2

      yeah, you gotta admit, O'MALLEY KNEW BASEBALL!!!

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 Před rokem +1

      @@samuelmoulds1016 There’s no evidence of that. His move out of Brooklyn was driven by money alone.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 Před rokem +1

      @@richdouglas2311 Where in Brooklyn could he have built anything as big as Dodger Stadium?

    • @jamesmorris2578
      @jamesmorris2578 Před rokem +1

      According to a documentary I saw a few years ago on HBO entitled, The History of the Dodgers in Brooklyn, O'Malley actually had a spot in Brooklyn picked out for a new stadium. (He may have even owned the land.) It was at the end of the rail lines coming from Long Island, which he thought would make transportation to the stadium easier without reliance on a car, but Robert Moses, who laid out the highway system in New York, wanted him to build at what eventually became the Shea Stadium/Citi Field site. That wasn't good enough for O'Malley, so he left. Ironically, LA ended up being more car-centric than NY

    • @semipenguin
      @semipenguin Před rokem

      @@davidlafleche1142LOL. The city wanted them to move to Queens where the World’s Fair was. They said What part of Brooklyn don’t you understand? 😂

  • @carlmoore3215
    @carlmoore3215 Před rokem

    5:41 Dodgers moved to New York from Brooklyn? No, they moved to Los Angeles.
    .

  • @DoctorEw220
    @DoctorEw220 Před 10 měsíci

    What about Griffith Stadium?

  • @nateballou3321
    @nateballou3321 Před rokem

    Baseball is the only one of the major sports...baseball, basketball, football, Hockey, & soccer, where the dimensions of the playing surface vary from one place to the next!?

    • @robbarbieri8676
      @robbarbieri8676 Před rokem

      Actually, unless things have changed (and I admit they might have) hockey rink size is not standardized. I know it was this way when I was younger as a team with a lot of speed would want a larger ice surface, while slower, more defensive minded teams wanted smaller rinks.

    • @goldenretriever6261
      @goldenretriever6261 Před rokem

      The old Boston Garden used to have a small rink. All the old rinks were different sizes. I think all the new rinks are the same standard size.

    • @robbarbieri8676
      @robbarbieri8676 Před rokem

      @@goldenretriever6261 Yeah, you're probably, almost certainly, right. I believe (again I might be mistaken) that MSG is now the oldest arena in the NHL, so if they made all the rinks the size of the Rangers, it would make sense. Perhaps MSG had to increase the rink size as well.

  • @theshoe21
    @theshoe21 Před rokem +2

    The fact that the bull pens in the Polo Grounds or the monuments at Old Yankee Stadium were in fair territory is not surprising. Both stadiums were built in the dead ball era of baseball. Since most batted balls did not carry to the wall anyway there was no need for uniform distances down the lines, center field, etc. I bet if baseball were invented today the outfield distances would be standardized just like the the infield.

  • @CaptainCanuck1975
    @CaptainCanuck1975 Před rokem

    I miss those wacky old multi-purpose stadiums, even some of the more "normal" ones like Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego.
    Saw a Blue Jays game at Exhibition Stadium in the early '80s. Very odd-looking place.

  • @sfgiantsfannewaccount1229
    @sfgiantsfannewaccount1229 Před 3 měsíci

    Guys this is not real they stole it from ike g sports

  • @zcorpalpha2462
    @zcorpalpha2462 Před rokem +2

    Polo Grounds was not only beautiful, but it have poor in New York a place to escape
    For a few hours. Giants were loved in New York just as much as the Yankees

  • @bubblerap7176
    @bubblerap7176 Před 10 měsíci

    For me, Polo Grounds win the prize. Those short foul lines, then walls running straight down left and right fields to 450+ feet. Crazy. Imagine a check swing hits one over the right field wall but nothing short of a herculean blast will go out in center. Then those bullpens with the little seating roofs that come into play. If you had a nightmare about baseball, this would be the field to host your dream.

  • @guessundheit6494
    @guessundheit6494 Před rokem +1

    3:00 - EXASPERATION Stadium, as most called it.

    • @fabio40
      @fabio40 Před rokem

      Or The Mistake by the Lake.

    • @marcelotriunfo18
      @marcelotriunfo18 Před rokem

      How about Prohibition Stadium?

    • @orbyfan
      @orbyfan Před rokem

      I don't know what it was like before it was reconfigured for baseball, but I went to five Argonaut games there in 1987, and I had to go about 40 rows up on the covered side to get a good view because the field didn't run parallel to the grandstand. As for the uncovered side, I sat thee for my first game; as a visitor, I accepted the ticket clerk's word that I was getting a good seat. Indeed, it would have been a good seat down the first base line for baseball, but was on the 5-yard line for football. At least I had a good view of a couple of touchdowns.

    • @csnide6702
      @csnide6702 Před rokem

      @@fabio40 that was Cleveland !

    • @fabio40
      @fabio40 Před rokem

      @@csnide6702 It was also Toronto. A very common knickname at the time.

  • @FranBushardt
    @FranBushardt Před rokem +1

    I’m Surprised Sahlen Field In Buffalo was Not Mentioned as it was the Relocation Home of the Toronto Blue Jays During Covid. Its a 19,000 seat Minor League Park for AAA Baseball but was Originally built to be Expanded with Hope of Getting a Major League team which did Not happen other that the Blue Jays Deal. During the Blue Jays Relocation to Buffalo, The Stadium received Many Upgrades to Major League Standards which Made Buffalo having one of the Top Minor League Stadiums in the Country!

  • @danhenderson7010
    @danhenderson7010 Před rokem

    whoops wrong video!

  • @curtisdavis2157
    @curtisdavis2157 Před rokem

    #AhMemoriesOfNostalgia!

  • @SFGiantsBweezy
    @SFGiantsBweezy Před rokem

    How did the Houston AstroDome not make this list?! That’s mind blowing 🤯

  • @DrtyALGreen
    @DrtyALGreen Před 11 měsíci

    Yeah thanks for screwing all of us on PC MLB The Show. I got it on Xbox and was pumped it was finally on Xbox when the console overpriced garbage consoled on me and quit working with no recourse. I got a PC and was going to get The Show only to see it's never coming to PC..smh.

  • @bjmvhsarchives
    @bjmvhsarchives Před rokem

    This is a stolen video.