Ballparks # 23 - Busch Stadium, St. Louis
As a kid in New York, I first became a baseball fan in the mid-50’s. At that time, the major league teams were well-established. There were eight teams in the National League and eight teams in the American League...as it had been for a half century. The geography was also pretty simple. The teams were in the northeast and midwest. The arrangement existed since before we had forty-eight states and the thought of expanding west into the frontier was fantasy. The Mississippi River and St. Louis were as far west as the game went. Now, major league baseball has grown to thirty teams with more than a third of them (11) located further west than the western-most team once was.
This summer’s drive-about included more than graves. Between VP # 35 in western Kentucky and VP # 23 in central Illinois, a Cardinal game in St. Louis was too close to miss. Plus, on this day, the visiting team was my local Washington Nationals. You might remember in past ballpark posts, I include a link to the box score of the game. There is no date above to do that. Read on.
St. Louis has been a part of the game’s history from its earliest days. Pro baseball was played in the city before the National League was formed in 1876. For decades in the twentieth century, baseball cities like New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis had two major league teams.
The National League Cardinals is one of the most successful baseball franchises. With eleven championships, only the (damn) Yankees have won more World Series titles. Only the Dodgers and Giants have won more National League pennants.
At one corner of the tight street square that encloses the stadium are action figures of Cardinal stars including Bob Gibson, Ted Simmons, Dizzy Dean and Lou Brock here. In one of the more regretted trades in baseball history, the rival Cubs gave up on young Brock and traded him for non-entities...before he went on to a Hall of Fame career with over 3000 hits and many stolen base records.
In the earliest days of the franchise, the 1880’s team that became the Cardinals often battled the team that became the Chicago Cubs for the top playoff honors in the game. The Cardinal-Cub rivalry has endured to this day. The Lou Brock story has helped keep that tension alive.
In the early twentieth century, Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby won two Triple Crowns and managed the team to its first World Series win in 1926. In the 1930’s, Dizzy Dean and the ‘Gashouse Gang’ Cardinals won a World Series. In 1937, Cardinal Joe ‘Ducky’ Medwick was the last National League player to cop a Triple Crown. In the ‘40’s and ‘50’s, Stan ‘The Man’ Musial led the team to three more World Series wins.
Unlike the Atlanta Braves ballpark complex that has related commerce growing out on all sides, there is no walking the full perimeter of this stadium. Its footprint is shoe-horned next to an interstate highway on one side and railroad tracks on another.
Occupying the rest of the footprint of the former stadium are ballpark-related retail and gathering joints. I ducked in to get out of the heat, grab a beer and chat it up with some of the famously faithful and friendly Cardinal fans. A couple wearing team colors drove down from Iowa for the game. They lamented the team’s current last-place standing in the division, but were all midwest nice about it.
The current ballpark is called Busch Stadium and is named after August Busch, the Anheuser-Busch beer magnate who purchased the team in 1953. The stadium opened in 2006 and the Cards properly christened it by winning the World Series that year, a feat that only the New York Yankees accomplished when the new/old Yankee Stadium opened in 1923.
The place is also referred to as Busch Stadium III. Since 1920, the team rented Sportsman’s Park, owned by their American League rivals, the Browns. In 1954, when the Browns moved to Baltimore to become the Orioles, they sold the stadium to the Cardinals owners who wanted to rename it ‘Budweiser Stadium.’ The commissioner of baseball wasn’t keen on naming a park after a beer so Augie named it after himself, thus we have Busch Stadium I. By the mid-60’s, Busch II came along...another sad, plastic, cookie-cutter, multi-use facility where the Cardinals and their NFL namesake team played starting in 1966.
So, why no link to the ‘Baseball Reference’ web site where you can find the full box score of the contest this day? Let’s continue and learn why that won’t be possible.
Since I was there to noodle around the stadium and look for images, the seat to watch the game is a secondary consideration. At the ticket window, I asked for the cheapest seat in the house. It being a stinky hot day, it was a pleasant surprise to find that the $12 seat in the last row of the upper deck came with a cooling breeze through the chain link behind me.
It was also where I was among the first to see those menacing clouds rolling in from the west. It was then the thought process went something like, “I have a room reserved forty minutes up the road in Illinois. I’m hot and sweaty. I got the shots. Maybe it would be wise to bug out before anyone else.”
Clearly, driving away in the bottom of the first inning was easy. The Nats were already down 1-0. I listened to the game on the radio until the third inning when the sky unloaded and the tarp was rolled out. The storm was bad enough that play never resumed. I didn’t miss much at all. The game didn’t last long enough to become ‘official’...but was as far as my bucket list is concerned.
2 Comments:
Grew up with all 3 stadiums. My mother dated Busch's private waiter so spent time in the owner's box when I was a kid. We had all kinds of Bud memorabilia around the house. Gifts from the boyfriend. Told my mom she should ask for jewelry instead.
Cool memories. The Cards have been a solid part of St. Louis forever...and you had a ringside seat. Thanks for visiting.
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