You Could Look It Up: Amazing Old Yankee
Stadium Facts
This time of year
baseball fans get especially restless for the season to be in full swing. Not a
substitute but at least a quick reading fix for your reading pleasure some strange,
odd,interesting and amazing Yankee Stadium Facts.
1. Some wanted the brand new Yankee
Stadium in 1923 to be called "Ruth Stadium." Owner Jake Ruppert
wanted Ruppert Stadium. They settled for the nickname "the House That Ruth
Built."
2. It took 500 workers 185 days to
build the original Yankee Stadium.
3. At the start, names of Yankee
players were imprinted in white chalk near the top of their lockers.
4. The practice of selling more
tickets than existing seats lasted until a 1929 stampede in the right field
bleachers left two dead and 62 injured.
5. Negro League teams who played at
the Stadium when the Yanks were on the road were barred from using the Yankee
dressing rooms. Instead, they were obliged to use the visitors’ dressing room.
6. "Lou Gehrig Appreciation
Day" was staged before 61,808 on July 4, 1939. His uniform number four was
the first in baseball history to be retired.
7. In 1941, Yankee president Ed
Barrow offered Civil Defense the use of Yankee Stadium as a bomb shelter in
case of attack. He thought the area under the stands could provide a safe
haven.
8. On August 16, 1948, Babe Ruth
died of throat cancer at age 53. His body lay in state at Yankee Stadium and
was viewed by more than 100,000 fans.
9. The last home run at the original
Yankee Stadium on September 30, 1973 was hit by Duke Sims in his seventh day as
a Yankee. A coin toss that day tabbed him to play. It was not until much later
that Sims realized the significance of his home-run shot.
10. The film "61" was
filmed in Detroit, not at Yankee Stadium.
Billy Crystal explained the Motor City ballpark architecture was better able to
be made to resemble that of the Yankee Stadium of 1961.
11. Sal Durante, the guy who caught
the ball Roger Maris hit for his 61st homer, snagged tickets the day of the
game at a less-than-sold- out Yankee Stadium.
12. Mickey Mantle originally wore
number six, but equipment manager Pete Sheehy switched him to seven after
Mantle was recalled from Kansas City.
13. 20,000 letters that Mickey
Mantle never answered were not bid on in the old Yankee Stadium fire sale in
1974.
14. There was widespread and
indiscriminate disposal of valuable items during demolition of much of the
Stadium in the mid-1970s.
15. Among the items sold in the
refurbishment "fire sale" at Yankee Stadium were player
jockstraps, which had names on them for identification when they came back from
the laundry. The selling of these jockstraps was stopped because of sanitary
reasons.
16. In 1976, a homer by Chris
Chambliss gave the Yankees the American League pennant. Such a mob
crowded the plate that Chambliss was taken back a few minutes after hitting the
homer, and he finally touched home plate.
17. All kinds of crazy things went
on in the bullpens—some of them outlandish and some of them sexy—lots having to
do with food.
18. In 1988, behind a wall
that was closed off for decades, a scorecard, a program and what was supposedly
the bases for the 1936 team were unearthed.
19. The less-than-capable 1990
Yankees had but one starting pitcher who won more than seven games, nine-game
winner Tim Leary—but he also lost 19.
20. On September 11, 2001, within 90
minutes of the horrific attacks on the World Trade Center, Yankee Stadium was
evacuated.
21. Ron Guidry, a good drummer, once
kept a trap set at Yankee Stadium and also played in a post-game concert with
the Beach Boys.
22. Joe Torre was witness to all
three perfect games in Yankee Stadium history: He saw Don Larsen's beauty as a
16-year-old fan, and the gems of David Wells and David Cone from the dugout as
Yankee manager.
23. Bob Sheppard still holds the record
for seeing the most games at Yankee Stadium.
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About
Harvey
Frommer
One of the
most prolific and respected sports journalists and oral historians in the
United States, author of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan,Tony
Dorsett, and Red Holzman, Dr.
Harvey Frommer is an expert on all things
baseball. A professor for more than two decades in the MALS program
at Dartmouth College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their
alumni magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com.
Mint, signed, discounted Frommer books are available from his site.
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