Eddie Mathews was the only guy to play the Braves in Boston, Milwaukee and Atlanta
@EclecticHillbilly7 ай бұрын
Fun fact, he also spent parts of 1951 and 1952 playing for Atlanta's minor league team, before he got called up to the Boston Braves. When he came to Atlanta with the Braves, it was his second stay in Atlanta.
@troylee52737 ай бұрын
That’s my goto trivia question. Only player to play 3 diff cities same franchise
@7927jackparkАй бұрын
Buried in Santa Barbara, not that far from Dodger Stadium.
@Goodkidjr437 ай бұрын
My grandfather, who raised me, was the bullpen coach for Milwaukee. George. C. M. Susce. God bless
@Paranormalisto7 ай бұрын
“Good Kid” Susce.
@dan1oval7 ай бұрын
So cool.
@mndoss17 ай бұрын
I live in the hometown (Sarasota) of your grandfather. Wish I met him, but spoke to Jr when he was living in Lake Placid, Florida.
@kevinmadden16457 ай бұрын
He pitched for the Tigers , didn't he?
@joethaler79217 ай бұрын
I have George Susce, JR 1956 Topps Baseball Card. I had had it for 60 plus years. Are you his son?
@robertbuck18747 ай бұрын
When Wally Moon hit homer over the "Chinese Wall" it became a " Moon Shot"
@goldeneve16 күн бұрын
Walter says it’s was call the Brooklyn bridge
@RRaquello7 ай бұрын
A couple of years after this Roger Craig, Charlie Neal & Felix Mantilla got a different type of glory as members of the record setting Original New York Mets!
@mattanderson63367 ай бұрын
The Marvelous Mets set the bar high for which several teams have tried but none have equaled. Casey Stengel was right when he mused ‘Can anybody here play this game?’ 😂😂😂
@garyfaught37697 ай бұрын
40-120. Amazing!
@eyesonyou997 ай бұрын
Gil Hodges and Don zimmer too
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
@@eyesonyou99And one year later in 1963, the Duke of Flatbush also joined the Mets.
@Classicrocker61197 ай бұрын
This is the best and only colour footage I have seen (so far) of the Dodgers when the Coliseum was their home! Really interesting stuff here!
@ktbeatty7 ай бұрын
Right? So cool to see.
@richardpape55467 ай бұрын
They have color footage of the 59 World Series Chicago vs. L.A.
@ACEDIAMOND6666 ай бұрын
Opening Day 1958....footage exists....
@Olliemets7 ай бұрын
Wow..Color footage of LA Coliseum Baseball. That Eddie Matthews home run similar to a Pesky Pole shot.
@AllanGonnella7 ай бұрын
I was 9 years old. I grew up in Southern California and my dad would take us to the Coliseum to watch the Dodger games. I remember the big screen in left field with Moon hitting the "Moon Shot" over the screen. Sometimes the Dodgers would 70,000 for games and drew around 89,000 against the White Sox in the World Series. I can still remember the lineup: 1-Jim Gilliam, 3B, 2-Charlie Neal, 2B, 3-Wally Moon-LF, 4-Duke Snider, CF, 5-Gil Hodges, 1B, 6-Carl Furillo, RF (or Don Demeter), 7-John Roseboro, C, 8-Maury Wills, SS, 9-Pitcher. (Drysdale, Koufax, Stan Williams, Roger Craig, etc.). I still have a World Series program from 1959. (I can even remember the White Sox lineup: 1-Luis Aparicio, SS, 2-Nellie Fox, 2B, 3-Jim Landis, CF, 4-Ted Kluzewski, 1B, 5-Jim Rivera, RF, 6-Al Smith, LF, 7-Sherm Lollar, C, 8--Bubba Phillips, 3B, 9-Pitcher (Early Wynn, , Billy Pierce, Dick Donovan, etc.
@docadams70997 ай бұрын
The Dodgers and Braves played this playoff because they ended the regular season tied for first place in the NL; there were no divisions in either league then. Second place meant "see you next year." This Dodgers team later won the World Series over the Chicago White Sox. Vin Scully announced Dodgers game from their last years in Brooklyn until fairly recently.
@gvalley077 ай бұрын
Nowadays, that double-play breakup would've emptied benches.
@John-pm1hk7 ай бұрын
yea it would
@smilanesi987 ай бұрын
It was a cheap shot. Did not have to go in like that.
@tmitchellis7 ай бұрын
@@smilanesi98 Back then you were taught to go in any way you could as long you broke it up and got in the SS's head. There was nothing cheap about it, which is why the Braves accepted it.
@natch277 ай бұрын
What middle infielders used to do to combat this move at the time was to throw sidearm to force the runner to get down or he’d get hit in the face. In this situation the game was too important to risk an error by burying the runner in the chops. There’s nothing wrong with a hard slide or even a rolling block (see Hal McRae in 1977 ALCS) but this was brutal. Burdette should’ve beaned him next time up. An interesting side note to this game was Vin Scully got so excited when the winning run scored he said “We’re off to Chicago!” Scully was legendary for his composure and objectivity but he let his hair down when the Dodgers won.
@Robert-is7du7 ай бұрын
It was deliberately sabotaged Logan b cuz of Logan's batting skills against Dodger pitching water tables visual mathematical display windows U can go back in the days of when baseball and football players played dirty Shadow Body victim victimizer software games by willing to deliberately harm another Soul Spirit essence B cuz their willing to hurt U no matter what it takes to take something from U which is ur feelings no different than what demons and parasites do to feed on ur Souls essence of how deeply U love and care about it own cells healthy reproductive systems of generating real living light Oversoul Creation spheres gifting pure internal eternal absolute love as the engine that Eye ManU fest New eternal life forms of Souls Go take a gander at some of the things that Ty Cobb used to do It was not unusual for baseball players who would take a metal file to their cleats and turn them into extremely sharp points to take ur feet out of the game Most people have no idea what these players actually were willing to do to one another Go ask for example Ron Maxwell who was the Director of programming coded visual mathematical display window Star Gate codes AI dead finite light network interface during the filming of the movie " GETTYSBURG" with Jeff Daniels remarkable performance as Chamberlain at Round Top that sealed the victory for the North during the Civil War Because movies are corporate military ( running visual mathematical psycho path way mental field operators) that accumulating more electrons is more vital to THEM as corporate military Pirates than Ur inner Heart and Soul Spirit essence electrical Heart wave form Spiral Spirit axial spin point tones rotation of elemental neuro Gyro eye on circuitry messengers of mathematical firing letter coded order of sequenced Holographic visual Biofield frame rate shutter ISO plasma wave form Spiral circulation speed Tempo of R inner URTHA UNEYE SIGNET NOMI Noble planet encryption MotherArk coded Spiral inner breathing. Their corporate fictional character phantom tyme Matrix echo maps cybernetic mercenaries like movie player CIA handlers where movie investors just like Treaties and Soul Spirit essence contract agreements change their minds energy tabulator like the contract Jeff Daniels had with playing Chamberlain The shooting water table schedule is based on numbers their inner cellular memories are held captive by another cell phone parasite feeding on their cellular transcription future memories so they throw fits of they don't get their way with U and if U stand Ur ground to Honor it word and that boxes them in a corner they can't escape from that TRUTH to live in Honor they fall into a state of RAGE and begin going chaotic cellular Holographic visual disturbances which is a mental disorder and that's what happened while the Director and cast of characters in that movie TRUMPED the corporate AI machine coded state of consciousness directed Black 🖤 Mirror Goo Cube Coded state of cellular dis orientation Their brain cells and circuitry reaction states start breaking circuits all over the place and FREAK OUT The actors told the Corporate Enforcer that if we cannot shoot the scene again tomorrow we're going Home Base and that's called " calling their bluff " The Corporate interplanetary military commander had to relent and Honor the original Contract And U can translate this through Cowboy and Indians directly related to the Crown City of London Corporation Their Crown chakra is inverted and upside down as energetic vampires feeding on the living Light ATP Kreb cycle immunity function Firewall Shield off every living cellular sentient life forms on this planet.. That's why we are here to set the record straight Stand Up Boomerang effect eat the Karmic energy debt directly Aurora Gyrodome Monopole technology Shields activations R UP and running Eternal Sun L UV phasing speed LUV Psonns Mu ah 💋🌈💜🌋
@stevenrunyon1707 ай бұрын
That guy who got a hit off Drysdale was probably greeted with a fastball to the head on his next at bat. Drysdale was a beast. lol
@TheBatugan777 ай бұрын
He was a useless hack.
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
Drysdale’s book “Once a Bum, always a Dodger had some real great stories!”
@williammckay92297 ай бұрын
I was born in August of 1959, six weeks before this game. A lot of these guys were still playing when I was old enough to recognize them.
@johnsain7 ай бұрын
I was born the day before this game!...My dad saved the New York Daily News paper....Still have it.
@peace-yv4qd4 ай бұрын
I remember watching the last few innings of this game on TV. I saw Desi Arnaz banging on the wall next to his seat in the front row. What a treat to see this film. Thanks.
@privatepenguin31377 ай бұрын
WTF!!! Can you imagine this play happening today at 3:35 ??? I know people will say today's game is soft...but that play looks ridiculous even for those times!
@cj10997 ай бұрын
Juuuuust a bit outside....of the baseline.
@242-f5u7 ай бұрын
Those days weren't soft.
@samludu59167 ай бұрын
I saw the Dodgers at the Coliseum in the late fifties and early sixties. It was built for the Olympics in 1932 and served as the Dodgers' temporary (and very awkward ) ball field when the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn in the late fifties. Dodger Stadium opened in 1962. The distance from home plate to the left field fence at the Coliseum was under 300 feet and so they attached a 25-foot screen to the fence to make it more difficult to hit home runs. Wally Moon of the Dodgers became adept at lofting balls over the screen for homers; they were soon nicknamed "Moon Shots." My first glove as a kid was labeled a "Johnny Logan," the name of the Braves infielder who was injured in the above clip.
@pukalani1006 ай бұрын
I was there back when.....My dad caught a foul ball. Never will forget it.
@earlemorgan50685 ай бұрын
We all know this already.
@peace-yv4qd4 ай бұрын
Me too. Grew up in Southern Calif. Attend my first Major League game at the Coliseum in June 1960. Dodgers vs, Cincinnati Reds. Sandy Koufax pitching. He gave up a grand-slam in the first inning. A shot over the high screen in left field. Would have been a fly out in any other stadium. Dodger lost 4 to 3. Charley Neal struck out for the last out.
@jaymorgenthal94792 ай бұрын
they should have been forced to play in LA Wrigley Field or stay in Brooklyn until Dodger Stadium was completed.
@brianarbenz13297 ай бұрын
Hank Aaron and the Dodgers would meet again on a spring night in Atlanta.
@garyfaught37697 ай бұрын
50 years again come Monday night
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
Al DownIng, the pride of Wayne, New Jersey would surrender number 715 to Hammerin’ Hank. I remember watching that game live on NBC with Curt Gowdy’s excited call “He did it!”
@michaelleroy92813 ай бұрын
When the Dodgers first made there first appearance in Atlanta in 1966
@stewartberger77347 ай бұрын
Wild play breaking up the DP...Apparently that was legal This is an amazing piece of footage👋
@hermosita7777 ай бұрын
More than 20 years ago I worked with a woman at the Del Mar Racetrack who had been dating Eddie when they both lived in Mission Valley. She really had no idea what his baseball background was, and she told me that she had noticed Eddie seemed to enjoy baseball enough that he might consider joining a softball league. P.S. Still have the ticket stub to the 1st game played at the Coliseum in '58.
@jeffthrow68923 ай бұрын
Great to see this old footage, the game sure was different back then. I always get a kick out of the sound they used to simulate the ball hitting the bat in these old clips....
@10prkb7 ай бұрын
3:38 Jesus!! Glad that's not part of the game anymore.
@robertboydiiido-bolsa75317 ай бұрын
This game kept the The Braves from being in their third straight series. Nearly a mini-dynasty for Hammering Hank and the Milwaukee boys.
@Russ-gy7tx7 ай бұрын
At 3 months old I lived not far from the Coliseum. Dad took us to a lot of games throughout the years and we saw Legends play.
@haroldgillette71577 ай бұрын
Love this footage from my childhood.
@garyfaught37697 ай бұрын
That field looks like the Rams or SC or both had just played on it.
@Paranormalisto7 ай бұрын
The short left field fence was called “The Chinese Wall” because it yielded so many cheap homers.
@smilanesi987 ай бұрын
5-2 lead and the Braves could not hold it. Teams did not really use a closer the same way they did later on. Great comeback by the Dodgers.
@wmontanez277 ай бұрын
Awesome footage. Thanks.
@mattanderson63367 ай бұрын
Six years later in September 1965 the Braves would play their last game representing Milwaukee at Chavez Ravine before packing up the tepee and moving to Atlanta. With two out in the top of the 9th and a Brave runner on first (I think it was Don Dillard) a ground ball way hit to Dodger shortstop Maury Wills behind second base and he threw the ball to first but hit Dillard square in the forehead knocking him out cold. The Dodger second baseman picked up the ball and tagged the unconscious Dillard out and that was the ignoble end of the Braves 13 year run in Milwaukee. Five years later Bud Selig bought the Seattle Pilots and the Brewers were born. They also had trouble with Los Angeles as the Angels shellacked them 12-0 in their first game.
@generalbullmooseАй бұрын
I was today years old when I learned that the Dodgers & Braves had a best-of-three playoff at the end of the 1959 season because they tied in the standings. I had no idea.
@horaceball54187 ай бұрын
I love this thank you!
@shaunwilliams42317 ай бұрын
That's some double play breakup!!!
@RGZ1127 ай бұрын
The Braves were so good back then, they could have went to three World Series in a row. Too bad the only won one out of two against the Yankees
@stevea68167 ай бұрын
well thats no slight against them, playing a Yankee team in midst of their dynasty and splitting 2 7 game WS matches.
@kevinmadden16457 ай бұрын
They could have gone to four in a row but were caught by the Dodgers late in 1956 and 1959. Incidentally, they were damn lucky to win in 1957. That pitch hit the dirt before it hit Nippy Jones .
@garyfaught37697 ай бұрын
They blew a 3 games to 1 lead in the '58 series.
@graciemaemarie11jones166 ай бұрын
@@garyfaught3769 they were better than the skankees
@Jeff-p5i2w7 ай бұрын
The coliseum,as one writer put it,held 90 thousand people and 2 outfielders! Did you see how bad that field looked? There were 3 football teams playing there the rams ,ucla,and usc.
@Celluloidwatcher7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the footage showing how the '59 Dodgers won the NL pennant, en route to the World Series showdown with the AL Champion Chicago White Sox, who edged the then-Cleveland Indians for the junior circuit title. Now it's off to see the first L.A. Dodgers game in 1958 on YT.
@dr.migilitoloveless23855 ай бұрын
Great color footage.
@Arientis7 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Eddie Matthews was the only Braves player to play in the all 3 locations Boston, Milwaukee, and Atlanta!
@mndoss17 ай бұрын
Charlie Neal is phenomenal, amazing clutch performance in all videos I see. Spokecto Logan when he lived in Milwaukee in 1995.
@stevea68167 ай бұрын
somehow his skills and career declined soon after
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
When Charlie Neal’s MLB career ended, he was a sportscaster on the CBS affiliate here in NYC from the 1970’s through the 1980’s. Great guy!
@richardpape55467 ай бұрын
That field was ridiculous. In the World Series, the White Sox, who lived by good defense, were hit with so many bad bounces due to a shitty infield. Can you imagine what a Milwaukee Chicago World Series would have been? OMG. Hank Aaron and Warren Spahn playing in the old Commisky Park. It would have been one of the best Series ever. They never should have ever let the Dodgers move without a decent ballpark to play in.
@zxccxz1647 ай бұрын
times were different
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
MLB was quick to get established on the west coast and Walter O’Malley wanted to beat everyone out there. He saw the big money to be made in Los Angeles. I guess MLB could put up with subpar field conditions for a few years until Chavez Ravine was ready in 1962.
@stevea68167 ай бұрын
wow---a one game playoff that goes into the 12th inning, beating the champions of last 2 seasons Braves in come from behind fashion. you never hear this publicized very much, unlike the Dodgers Giants playoff series of 1951
@oldiesgeek4547 ай бұрын
@stevea Actually, it was a best 2 out of 3 series. LA had already won game 1 in Milwaukee. 😊
@patrickallan4817 ай бұрын
Craig Nettles of the Yankees did a similar football block on a double play breakup against the Royals in 1977 after Hal McRae had taken out Willie Randolph on a double play breakup earlier in the series.
@georgeford36877 ай бұрын
Utley had nothing on that double play break up, different time for sure.
@flashman88357 ай бұрын
Yes a special 2 of 3 playoff since they ended the regular season tied. I remember Roger Craig was one of the better pitchers of the 1962 Mets with 42 games pitched for a poor team. He then managed the SF Giants to the 1989 pennant when I was stationed out there.
@russellgoff65247 ай бұрын
Would have been sweet to live in LA mid-century
@TheBatugan777 ай бұрын
It was safe back then.
@davidlafleche11427 ай бұрын
That was long before California became a Third World Marxist dictatorship.
@smartluck1007 ай бұрын
It’s a dangerous shit show now
@edwil1117 ай бұрын
except for that smog.
@Capital-Idea7 ай бұрын
Man, those are uniforms!...Dodgers uniforms have been consistently good...however, those double knits they got today look like pajamas, especially since they dont wear stirrups anymore..the pant legs today that go all the way past the tops of the shoes look ridiculous, just like the beltless uniforms that debuted back in '72...the Pirates were able to pull off that look though..thats my 2 cents worth..
@jim720687 ай бұрын
Yeah the only reason the Pirates pulled off their unis is because of the stirrups. They gave the uniform some contrast and color. The pants over the shoes they wear now just look stupid... yeah like pajamas.
@oldiesgeek4547 ай бұрын
@Capital-Idea. I agree 100%. I've never liked polyester unis period. Those old flannel unis were beautiful. Although, I can't imagine playing in them on a hot, humid summer day game. Remember in the 70s and 80s when players used to grab and adjust their crotch area? I assume that was because the polyester unis were too tight back then. Today, they're baggie and you don't see players adjusting themselves anymore. 😊
@mattdon21646 ай бұрын
@@jim72068I recall playing Little League baseball in the late 1960’s into the early 1970’s and we had the flannel uniforms that looked like they were left over from the 1950’s. They weighed a ton and had a zipper front on the top. But they sure were durable and had a shine/sheen to them. Seeing these highlights reminds me of my old LL uniforms.
@smoothjazzandmore7 ай бұрын
The Bumbs won the NL pennant in this game, but eventually won their 2nd World Series over the Chicago White Sox.
@sportingpage14 күн бұрын
This is beautiful.
@Cape-Dweller5 ай бұрын
The “Chinese wall”? Ooooh, can do that today
@DirtygardenCA7 ай бұрын
tremendous footage, outside the peristyle still looks the same today with the existing box office
@daniellinehan637 ай бұрын
Never knew my Sox nrly played Milw. In the '59 WS
@uncletony62107 ай бұрын
Amazing how well the players transitioned from black and white to color. I guess it was easier to see the ball though.
@zcorpalpha24627 ай бұрын
Electric ⚡️ scoreboard in 59 Huh 🤔
@mndoss17 ай бұрын
Lou Burdette lived close to me in Sarasota, before moving closer to his son. Had the privilege ofvspeaking to him in 1990.
@myszek467 ай бұрын
@aristotlewasnotafanofplato3661Lew Burdette played for the Braves at the time
@ChildOfThe1970s7 ай бұрын
Man, I never knew they allowed a base runner to clobber a fielder like that back then!
@brendangallagher11247 ай бұрын
They played like that for about 100 years... kzbin.info/www/bejne/pWa6Y41mmtmAe9U
@carljustinenuestro87713 ай бұрын
1:05 The Braves have the newest Sultan of Swat but it’s not Eddie Mathews. It belongs to his long time teammate, Hank Aaron who went on to becoming the home run king in baseball.
Coliseum Left field was 250 feet to the 40 foot high fence..
@jefftripodi50426 ай бұрын
They need to add the Coliseum to MLB the Show posthaste.
@erock7366 ай бұрын
There’s just a something about the soul of baseball in this footage that is completely absent in modern baseball.
@mattwuxx38887 ай бұрын
Drysdale hit a legit singe to "help his cause". NL Baseball is the best.
@jorgejohnson4517 ай бұрын
3:37 That might have cost the Braves the game, the series, the season. and the World champion. The Dodgers went on to beat the White Sox in the World Series.
@99991ray7 ай бұрын
Dull Crandall...hahahahaa!
@jeffmerklin20227 ай бұрын
All those guys look so much older than guys of same age playing now. Except maybe Drysdale.
@myhometown79817 ай бұрын
Most of those guys were heavy smokers, didn't use sunscreen, and didn't have the healthiest diets. All of that affected their skin and made them look older. This was typical of most of the mid-century American adult population. Life expectancy was considerably shorter back then, as well.
@zxccxz1647 ай бұрын
no botox, PEDS, steroids. around the clock health care.. times change
@jeffc8207 ай бұрын
The Chinese wall??
@rsuriyop7 ай бұрын
Interesting that they actually designed part of the stadium to look like the actual Colosseum. I wonder when this was torn down and got replaced by the current Dodger Stadium.
@benitosanchez25176 ай бұрын
it wasn't, it still stands today and USC football plays there
@davidmitchell68737 ай бұрын
The bases are bulging with bums lol.
@garrethboland7 ай бұрын
The thumbnail looks like their playing in ancient Roman ruins
@toastnjam73847 ай бұрын
First MLB game I ever attended was Dodgers vs Cardinals at the Coliseum in 1961. Bill White hit three homers in a 10-1 Cardinal win. Unless you sat along the infield area the seating was horrible. 03:38 Old time Baseball.
@garybryant9097Күн бұрын
The Coliseum, A truly awful place to play baseball. Where a pop fly to left field was a home run. But, stadiums take time to build.
@scottellsworth27627 ай бұрын
Johnny Logan left on a stretcher. Did Roseboro get bopped in the face at least twice the next season?
@generalbullmooseАй бұрын
"The Cinderella success story of the century"? Ummmm...1914 Braves, anyone?
@deanouellette18687 ай бұрын
3:39 Show that to Jeff McNeil.
@MrLynch-ei4dc6 ай бұрын
Back when dodger fans were more civil and seem human. Now.....cesspit!
@stage51manager7 ай бұрын
Where’s Vin Scully 🎙️📻
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul7 ай бұрын
Was Joe Adcock in that game?
@dorothysewing99977 ай бұрын
And the Yankees have beaten them both in the World Series since then.
@shaunwilliams42317 ай бұрын
That field looks terrible:(
@kw8827 ай бұрын
The racist term "The Chinese Wall"definitely wouldn't work today 😆
@stewartberger77347 ай бұрын
No not in the current environment
@smilanesi987 ай бұрын
Maybe they could have said Great Wall of a China. May have been taken differently.
@tommyriam83207 ай бұрын
0:39 Insane, this guy is in his 20's ..looks like an old man.
@uncletony62107 ай бұрын
Lived to 93.
@KittyPurrfect1007 ай бұрын
The honeymoon has never ended with the Dodgers. But games now feel strange without Vin, Newk, Maury, Lasorda!
@7927jackparkАй бұрын
What team won the most games between 1956 and 1959? Four consecutive seasons. Yanks? Dodgers maybe? How about those Giants? No, just the Braves!!!
@larry930legend7 ай бұрын
Braves mgr should've allowed Burdett to pitch the 9th, sure his kicked himself.
@jaymorgenthal94792 ай бұрын
MLB would never allow a absolutely ridiculous baseball stadium like this today. If Ford Frick and Warren Giles had any balls they should have given O’Malley 2 choices: Play in LA Wrigley or stay in Brooklyn until Dodger Stadium was completed. This Coliseum thing was absolutely ridiculous and stupid.
@straighttree82017 ай бұрын
It's kind of clumsy.
@RafaelSoltren7 ай бұрын
Didn’t like that tackle at second base…. Try that today..can get you killed…..👎👎👎👎
@ChadBest-ug8uo7 ай бұрын
"Milwaukee meets misfortune" How about a full-on assault on a defenseless second baseman. 3:36
@SantaDog817 ай бұрын
That Chinese wall doesn't look so great
@tylerwfy66 ай бұрын
Dodger fans probably rioted after this win
@michaelleroy92816 ай бұрын
No , they had a World Series to play in first
@elprez17 ай бұрын
3:38---Not exactly a clean slide
@efrain9267 ай бұрын
strange I don't see overweight, drunk, belligerent fans acting like absolute fools 🤔
@dan1oval7 ай бұрын
We went to the LA Coliseum many times when the Dodgers played there after they left Brooklyn and in my opinion is was an awful place to play baseball; 251 feet down the LF line with a 42 foot high screen. Watching the Rams and USC was far more enjoyable at the Coliseum than baseball. I did get hooked on Dodger Dogs.
@michaelleroy92817 ай бұрын
It's the only place they found they could play in until Dodger Stadium opened 3 years later
@dan1oval7 ай бұрын
@@michaelleroy9281 The LA dodgers could have played at Wrigley Field in South Central LA, but it only held 22,000 seats. There was talk about expanding seating in Wrigley Field, but it was easier to kick out a community living in Chavez Ravine to build what is now the third oldest field in MLB. Disclaimer I'm a SF Giant fan and hate the Dodgers and what they did to the Chavez Ravine community.
@stevea68167 ай бұрын
@@dan1oval well.....the City or State had to pay them for the land. That's how eminent domain works. Government can take your property for valid public purpose, but has to pay fair market value to the owners.
@bemore11347 ай бұрын
@@dan1oval Expanding the AAA ballpark wouldn't have been anything more than a temporary fix anyway. And it's questionable how many more seats they could shoehorn in there. At least they chose a site that had long-term viability & didn't make fans feel like they were on an Arctic expedition like in Candlestick.
@colourfaze866 ай бұрын
I honestly never knew baseball was played at the coliseum.