Goodbye to a mecca
Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2008 3:12 am
Even though most of you hate the Yankees and those of us who are Yankee fans, saying goodbye to The House that Ruth Built may even bring a tear to Red Sox fan. Even though it's been over 20 years since I was in the stadium (April 1976) and the Yanks lost that game 6-1 with Otto Velez of the Blue Jays hitting a home run and Chris Chambliss making an error as not only a baseball fan but a Yankee fan I'm going to miss this grand palace. My first trip was a memorable one going to bat day in the early 70's and my mother telling me to hurry up through the line and the dude passing out bats had the same name as I did, so he gave me two bats. I had Thurman Munson's name on mine and my brother had Pete Ward. Munson became my idol and favorite player because of that stupid bat.
I was born in 1964 and it's been a genetic thing in our family to be brought up loving the Yanks. My grandfather who passed 2 years ago at 95 was an usher in Yankee Stadium for 10 years was full of stories that I loved to listen to and my mother who used to skip school to go with her dad to the stadium to watch The Mick the tradition of being a Yankee fan has been passed down from generation to generation in the Lax household.
My mom still has in scrap books the original newspaper clippings from the Mick's entire career and it's an entire history lesson in a few books that one day I'm going to show my kids.
I've lived through the good times and the bad with the Yanks. The 70's were good with Chambliss hitting the HR of Mark Littell to get them in to the 76 series, then the 77, and 78 series vs. the Dodgers. The 80's were tough with George spending tons of money on crap and losing the the hated ones in 81, but the 90's and the new millenium have been good to us. My son who is 12 has shared the ups and downs of being a Yankee fan with me. When he was 5 months old he sat in his little bouncy chair when Charlie Hayes caught the last out of the 96 series. He's the only one out of my 4. One is a Dodger fan and one of my daughters is a Red Sox fan. Go fucking figure, but when you marry into a family that lives in New England you take the good with the bad. It was all good until 2004, but the Yanks will be back. There are too many names that have made this stadium what it is and I don't have the time to mention them all
I, along with many baseball fans shed a tear tonight because the mecca of baseball is leaving us. Now we are only left with a few shrines in Boston and Chicago but the history that has happened in Yankee Stadium will never be paralleled by any sporting arena in the world.
Thanks for the memories,
Sincerely,
a baseball fan.
I was born in 1964 and it's been a genetic thing in our family to be brought up loving the Yanks. My grandfather who passed 2 years ago at 95 was an usher in Yankee Stadium for 10 years was full of stories that I loved to listen to and my mother who used to skip school to go with her dad to the stadium to watch The Mick the tradition of being a Yankee fan has been passed down from generation to generation in the Lax household.
My mom still has in scrap books the original newspaper clippings from the Mick's entire career and it's an entire history lesson in a few books that one day I'm going to show my kids.
I've lived through the good times and the bad with the Yanks. The 70's were good with Chambliss hitting the HR of Mark Littell to get them in to the 76 series, then the 77, and 78 series vs. the Dodgers. The 80's were tough with George spending tons of money on crap and losing the the hated ones in 81, but the 90's and the new millenium have been good to us. My son who is 12 has shared the ups and downs of being a Yankee fan with me. When he was 5 months old he sat in his little bouncy chair when Charlie Hayes caught the last out of the 96 series. He's the only one out of my 4. One is a Dodger fan and one of my daughters is a Red Sox fan. Go fucking figure, but when you marry into a family that lives in New England you take the good with the bad. It was all good until 2004, but the Yanks will be back. There are too many names that have made this stadium what it is and I don't have the time to mention them all
I, along with many baseball fans shed a tear tonight because the mecca of baseball is leaving us. Now we are only left with a few shrines in Boston and Chicago but the history that has happened in Yankee Stadium will never be paralleled by any sporting arena in the world.
Thanks for the memories,
Sincerely,
a baseball fan.