If you stop it just right at about 2:10 you can get an overlay of the ballpark and the current lay out, pretty cool. Dalton Ave runs from the scoreboard to the light standard on the right field line. You can also I-75 where the cars are parked over the outfield fence.
@@HummBabyBaseballVeterans Stadium, Three Rivers Stadium, Busch 🎉Memorial Stadium, River Front {Replaced Crosley in 1970) Stadium aren't mentioned Connie Mack Stadium in Philadelphia (Veterans Stadium took it's place)..
Thanks for this. My Dad gave me the gift of growing up at Tiger stadium. He passed this February... (About 4 hours before Stafford got his Super Bowl, He wanted to see that.) That Ballpark Was the E ticket. The view, The smell, The grub, The atmosphere. Sucks that it's gone... But I have it. Thanks Dad.
Dad sounds like a good man.... I saw my first game there as well..... How old am I..? --- Denny McLain started that night for Tigers..... Of all these pictures seen here , Detroit looks the saddest.
I got to go to Tiger stadium once when I was about 12. Weekday night game, hardly anyone was there. We sat in the upper deck in dead center field. We never thought about moving down. We thought it was such a cool view.
Forbes Field is inaccurate. Posvar and Lawrence Halls are on the footprint but Barco was built before the Old Grey Lady was demolished. Also. Roberto and Vera Clemente Drive goes through where the outfield once stood. The center field wall still exists and a line of brick shows where the rest of the right field wall stood.
You are absolutely correct! I thought I was losing my mind. It's WAAAAY off. Players stayed at the Schenley hotel across from the field and according to the drawing it would have been in left field. Also you can find a picture of Forbes field and Hillman library coexisting.
So sad that a lot of these stadiums ended up being replaced by ghetto housing or parking lots or a few small buildings, nothing of any significance! 🤷🏻♂️
I love the Baker Bowl and looked it up myself a while back and did exactly what he did here. Shocked to see it turned into a school bus parking garage a gas station, a Dominos, nothing of any real interest. If I ever become super rich I am rebuilding it somewhere :)
Thanks for the memories. Spent many a Saturday afternoon sitting in the right field stands at Forbes Field watching the Pirates for the ungodly price of $ 0.25 . Free after the top of the 7th. Will never forget 1960.
0:08 Brings back memories of going to games with my grandmother - biggest baseball fan I’ve ever known. She kept a scorecard for every Pirate game she listened to on the radio, and that was about every game, for decades. The earliest games were at Forbes Field, though most were at Three Rivers. I took her to a game at PNC Park, Lexus Club behind home plate, for her 100th birthday. Forbes’ home plate is still in the lobby of the Pitt Business School, and the segment of the left field fence cleared by Maz’s 1960 WS winner is still up across the parking lot. Folks gather there every year to listen to Game 7.
Part two Add both the former locations for the Minnesota Twins. The old Metropolitan stadium that is now the Mall of America, and the big inflatable toilet (Metrodome) where they won two world series and is now the US Bank Stadium where the Vikings play and the Twins play across town at the absolutely fantastic target field.
I went to one of the last games at Candlestick. Spent my entire youth going to games in the 70s and 80s, then as an adult in the 90s. Both Giants and 49ers games. Memories♥.
its why people like the "retro" ones I feel, they have the vibe of the old stadium. But the modern engineering to allow for things like a pillarless upper deck. Well also the retro stadiums moved baseball back towards its city, Where as lots of the multi-purpose ones were stuck off outside the city limits with no good accessibility.
no offense, but really? ONe of the most storied baseball teams and it is an afterthought? actually, i would like to see the original stadium, sportsmans park which was used from early 1900s to 1966@@HummBabyBaseball
I worked in the Sennott Square building (the orange one between those lines you drew) on the University of Pittsburgh's campus. I would walk across where Forbes Field stood and past where home plate is on display in Posvar Hall. In the summer I occasionally find baseball fans looking for where Forbes Field used to be. I would tell them, "You're standing in it!" I would point out Roberto Clemente drive -- the "new" road cut through the outfield -- where Roberto used to "work". I would show them where Bill Mazeroski's home run ball crossed the Forbes Field wall -- bricks from the wall still exist and cross the new sidewalks. And then I'd show them the remaining walls and tell them where they could find home plate. It was lots of fun!
If you go to a white Sox game you can visit the location of the home plate of the original Comiskey Park in the parking lot on the north side of 35th Street. They have a concrete batters box and plate.
Google satellite view has an updated image of Tiger Stadium now. It's basically a small grandstand with residencies lining the rest of the field that has the same dimensions in the same place.
What I like about New Comiskey @4:48 Not only did they put a home plate, batters box, and about a 20 foot radius circle, but look at the ramps on the north side of it. That curve? That's Old Comiskey's outline.
A shame these iconic ballparks of the past are no longer standing, but at least I got to see a few games at the old Comiskey Park before she was leveled to the ground and made into a parking lot for the new Comiskey Park. And if cheap assed Jerry Reinsdorf has his way, the Sox'll either move to the suburbs, or out of Chicago entirely. I pray that won't happen, and he'll be gone, and the White Sox will have new ownership.
Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan NY, stands where Hilltop Park, home of the Yankees/Highlanders, 1903-12. Believe it or not, the original homeplate is on the hospital grounds, with a sign to explain the significance.
The original field at Tiger Stadium is still there, and used for PAL games and pro soccer. It is completely surrounded by condos, apartments and retail on the footprint of the old stadium.
Howard University Hospital was built on the site of Griffiths Stadium. The exact location of home plate is marked with a painted marker in a random Hospital hallway.
Down a hallway in Howard University Hospital (site of the old Griffith Stadium), there is a home plate where home plate once stood. Nice homage by the hospital. There's a picture of it on the Wikipedia page for Griffith Stadium: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griffith_Stadium
How about Sportsmans Park/Busch Stadium - 1 in St. Louis??? 10, yes 10 World Series were played there. Babe Ruth hit 3 HR's in a World Series game there, and all the greats from the early 20's through the mid-60's played there. . .Just sayin'. . .
Shea disappearing into a parking lot got me. The first two lines of the song at the end of “A League of Their Own.” This used to be your playground. Used to be your childhood dreams…
Mall of America, once Met Stadium, has a bronze home plate on the floor where it was when the Twins played there. The seat where Harmon Killebrew’s 500th HR hit is attached to a wall where it originally landed.
The old ballparks I've seen games at, that are gone now; Comisky Park, Municipal Stadium, Candlestick Park, Tiger Stadium, The original Yankee Stadium, The Kingdome, Metrodome.
I remember that the 49ers finished a close second to the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC West, so the Seahwaks had home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The divisional round, the Niners won their game, and the Seahawks hosted the New Orleans Saints and narrowly defeated them. Had the 'Aints prevailed, then the NFC Title Game in January 2014 would have been held at Candlestick. That would have been the grandest of "send off" for an old, decaying stadium! My bro-in-law said that no matter what it cost to get two scalped tickets, we were GOING if that game had been played at the "Stick".
Just a suggestion, leave the text on screen so the viewer can read it twice. That is a standard in the broadcast world. Nice video but where was the old stadium in Baltimore?
No reason for Candlestick to be torn down and have Levi's built in Santa Clara. At least, with the closing of Bay Meadows, the 49ers could have built a stadium on that site in San Mateo. Ironically San Francisco was turned down for the 2024 Olympics. The plan was to build a temporary stadium about a mile away from Candlestick on the inland side of US 101 in what is now an industrial wasteland. I figure the Olympic pickers told themselves this: "WTF, they just tore down a stadium that could have been converted to American football/soccer/rugby/track and field events!"
I find it rather interesting that the ballparks of Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds were demolished with terrible housing projects replacing them. Very sad.
As others have pointed out, the Forbes Field footprint is way off. According to the diagram, Forbes Avenue would have run straight through the stadium and the Pitt Student Union would have been in the left field bleachers.
For the benefit of those rushing to reply "but Wrigley Field is still standing," this is in reference to Wrigley Field in Los Angeles, where the Angels played their inaugural season.
Don’t let the music fool you, progress is a good thing. Imagine not having Camden yards, safeco field, comerica park, target field, petco park. Can’t wait till the A’s get a new field. Some day Fenway will close and Boston will be seen for the lousy team and not for the the Fenway experience
The second picture of Forbes Field doesn’t look right. The modern day photo on the right is zoomed out more than the left one and there’s no way you’d fit all of that building infrastructure on the site of a baseball field.
Sad part about ebbits, it's literally like 10 building of apartments. That's it. Everything else around it is almost the same. Smh, they could kept it and had that living space elsewhere
Tiger Stadium Detroit Michigan Wayne County USA Michigan Avenue and Trumbull now smaller ball park retail residential commercial mixed use parking lots
All of those old ballparks had their own character. All had different configurations. All had center fields that were a mile away. Today's ballpark are more like an amusement park. Big flashy scoreboard. Fancy restaurants. The game itself now sucks.
How about Metropolitan Stadium 🏟️ in Bloomington, Minnesota, the former home of the Minnesota Twins and the Minnesota Vikings? That land is now occupied by the Mall of America. ☹️
i think that is disgusting, to demolish famous baseball stadiums,they should have found a way to repair them not to tear them down. to put up high rise apartments and condo buildings.
At 2:00 is Crosley Field in Cincinnati.
If you stop it just right at about 2:10 you can get an overlay of the ballpark and the current lay out, pretty cool. Dalton Ave runs from the scoreboard to the light standard on the right field line. You can also I-75 where the cars are parked over the outfield fence.
Can't figure out why you only labeled every other one.
@@RobertJ-vo4bk unfortunately I'm human and make mistakes.
@@HummBabyBaseballVeterans Stadium, Three Rivers Stadium, Busch 🎉Memorial Stadium, River Front {Replaced Crosley in 1970) Stadium aren't mentioned Connie Mack Stadium in Philadelphia (Veterans Stadium took it's place)..
Excellent baseball nostalgia , especially for those of us who can remember going to these stadiums.
Thanks for this. My Dad gave me the gift of growing up at Tiger stadium. He passed this February... (About 4 hours before Stafford got his Super Bowl, He wanted to see that.) That Ballpark Was the E ticket. The view, The smell, The grub, The atmosphere. Sucks that it's gone... But I have it. Thanks Dad.
Dad sounds like a good man.... I saw my first game there as well..... How old am I..? --- Denny McLain started that night for Tigers..... Of all these pictures seen here , Detroit looks the saddest.
RIP DAD🙏🙏🙏
@@csnide6702this is very inaccurate for what the tiger stadium site looks like it’s very nice now
I got to go to Tiger stadium once when I was about 12. Weekday night game, hardly anyone was there. We sat in the upper deck in dead center field. We never thought about moving down. We thought it was such a cool view.
My Dad and Myself were in attendance for the 1971 All-star at Tiger Stadium.... I sure miss the good old days....
Ah yes The Stick. It’ll always have a special place in the heart of this old giants fan.
Very well done. Kinda sad seeing all the old ballparks gone. The music was a nice touch too.
Thank you. Part 2 is LIVE now - th-cam.com/video/OHevAo_55rQ/w-d-xo.html
Forbes Field is inaccurate. Posvar and Lawrence Halls are on the footprint but Barco was built before the Old Grey Lady was demolished. Also. Roberto and Vera Clemente Drive goes through where the outfield once stood. The center field wall still exists and a line of brick shows where the rest of the right field wall stood.
You are absolutely correct! I thought I was losing my mind. It's WAAAAY off. Players stayed at the Schenley hotel across from the field and according to the drawing it would have been in left field. Also you can find a picture of Forbes field and Hillman library coexisting.
Looking forward to seeing one of these with Shibe Park/Connie Mack Stadium and The Baker Bowl in Philadelphia. Veterans Stadium too.
So sad that a lot of these stadiums ended up being replaced by ghetto housing or parking lots or a few small buildings, nothing of any significance! 🤷🏻♂️
I love the Baker Bowl and looked it up myself a while back and did exactly what he did here. Shocked to see it turned into a school bus parking garage a gas station, a Dominos, nothing of any real interest. If I ever become super rich I am rebuilding it somewhere :)
You forgot Cleveland's League Park. The field is still there and a beautiful museum.
This is such a great video. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
Thanks for the memories. Spent many a Saturday afternoon sitting in the right field stands at Forbes Field watching the Pirates for the ungodly price of $ 0.25 . Free after the top of the 7th. Will never forget 1960.
Very interesting and nostalgic, thank you for posting.
0:08 Brings back memories of going to games with my grandmother - biggest baseball fan I’ve ever known. She kept a scorecard for every Pirate game she listened to on the radio, and that was about every game, for decades. The earliest games were at Forbes Field, though most were at Three Rivers. I took her to a game at PNC Park, Lexus Club behind home plate, for her 100th birthday. Forbes’ home plate is still in the lobby of the Pitt Business School, and the segment of the left field fence cleared by Maz’s 1960 WS winner is still up across the parking lot. Folks gather there every year to listen to Game 7.
Part two Add both the former locations for the Minnesota Twins. The old Metropolitan stadium that is now the Mall of America, and the big inflatable toilet (Metrodome) where they won two world series and is now the US Bank Stadium where the Vikings play and the Twins play across town at the absolutely fantastic target field.
Will do!
Your wish is my command - PART 2 IS LIVE - th-cam.com/video/OHevAo_55rQ/w-d-xo.html
I went to one of the last games at Candlestick. Spent my entire youth going to games in the 70s and 80s, then as an adult in the 90s. Both Giants and 49ers games. Memories♥.
My compliments. This was very well done! Thank you for taking the time to put this together.
I remember games at the stick. Miss the old tough crowd, but not the stadium. I also stood at the home plate location of Polo Grounds.
Why was Candlestick Park torn down. I was there once and I do remember the winds, but it made that park unique.
Miss all the cool old stadiums cause we think we need to build new ones all the time
its why people like the "retro" ones I feel, they have the vibe of the old stadium. But the modern engineering to allow for things like a pillarless upper deck. Well also the retro stadiums moved baseball back towards its city, Where as lots of the multi-purpose ones were stuck off outside the city limits with no good accessibility.
If you do a part 2, please have it include Busch Memorial Stadium.
I finished Part 2 and forgot, but it will be in PART 3, I promise!
If you use an audio clip, it has to be Ozzie's walkoff in game 5 of the 1985 NLCS.
Plus 3 River Stadium, Old Mile High Stadium, Veteran Stadium, and Qualcomm Stadium.
@@TheFaithfulAtheist Go crazy, folks! Go crazy!
no offense, but really? ONe of the most storied baseball teams and it is an afterthought?
actually, i would like to see the original stadium, sportsmans park which was used from early 1900s to 1966@@HummBabyBaseball
It still makes me that those mlb venues were totally dismantled.
Thank you for doing this !
Really helps to see where history happened
I worked in the Sennott Square building (the orange one between those lines you drew) on the University of Pittsburgh's campus. I would walk across where Forbes Field stood and past where home plate is on display in Posvar Hall. In the summer I occasionally find baseball fans looking for where Forbes Field used to be. I would tell them, "You're standing in it!" I would point out Roberto Clemente drive -- the "new" road cut through the outfield -- where Roberto used to "work". I would show them where Bill Mazeroski's home run ball crossed the Forbes Field wall -- bricks from the wall still exist and cross the new sidewalks. And then I'd show them the remaining walls and tell them where they could find home plate.
It was lots of fun!
This channel is amazing keep up the great work gonna share this to some friends
Very well done. Thank you for posting.
Exhibition Stadium where Toronto Blue Jays played 1977-1988 and the Stadium got torn down in 1999
Isn't that now BMO Field?
yes it is and it first opened in 2007
Polo Grounds and Ebbets field were tragedy transformations. But sad to see them all gone.
If you go to a white Sox game you can visit the location of the home plate of the original Comiskey Park in the parking lot on the north side of 35th Street. They have a concrete batters box and plate.
Yankee Stadium II and Citi Field had big shoes to fill when they opened.
Great video! Wonderfully done.
Thank you!
Google satellite view has an updated image of Tiger Stadium now. It's basically a small grandstand with residencies lining the rest of the field that has the same dimensions in the same place.
Haven't been there since they built that, but please tell me the iconic flagpole is still standing in the outfield.
@JosephKarsch-ym6cl yeah the original flagpole is still there.
Awesome vid!! Which park is it at the 2min mark ?
Crosley Field.. i don't know what happened to the text
What I like about New Comiskey @4:48 Not only did they put a home plate, batters box, and about a 20 foot radius circle, but look at the ramps on the north side of it. That curve? That's Old Comiskey's outline.
A shame these iconic ballparks of the past are no longer standing, but at least I got to see a few games at the old Comiskey Park before she was leveled to the ground and made into a parking lot for the new Comiskey Park. And if cheap assed Jerry Reinsdorf has his way, the Sox'll either move to the suburbs, or out of Chicago entirely. I pray that won't happen, and he'll be gone, and the White Sox will have new ownership.
Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan NY, stands where Hilltop Park, home of the Yankees/Highlanders, 1903-12. Believe it or not, the original homeplate is on the hospital grounds, with a sign to explain the significance.
The original field at Tiger Stadium is still there, and used for PAL games and pro soccer. It is completely surrounded by condos, apartments and retail on the footprint of the old stadium.
The unfortunate thing about The Corner Ballpark is that the playing surface is synthetic
Howard University Hospital was built on the site of Griffiths Stadium. The exact location of home plate is marked with a painted marker in a random Hospital hallway.
I know there is a sign on Georgia Ave in front of the hospital. I still remember the smell of Wonder Bread in the neighborhood.
Correct, I had the opportunity to enter the hospital and visit home plate. It's in front of the hospital elevator. For me, that had a lot of meaning.
This was neat. Good job.
thanks for the work
Where’s Connie Mack Stadium (Shibe Park)?
Down a hallway in Howard University Hospital (site of the old Griffith Stadium), there is a home plate where home plate once stood. Nice homage by the hospital. There's a picture of it on the Wikipedia page for Griffith Stadium: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griffith_Stadium
4:24 I was there on April 8, 1974 when Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run, breaking the record then held by Babe Ruth.
How about Sportsmans Park/Busch Stadium - 1 in St. Louis??? 10, yes 10 World Series were played there. Babe Ruth hit 3 HR's in a World Series game there, and all the greats from the early 20's through the mid-60's played there. . .Just sayin'. . .
That is a disgrace to not have included it. I looked through the video without finding it.
If you get to a part 2 I'd love top see Arlington Stadium
I will.. I almost put it in this one
DONE: th-cam.com/video/OHevAo_55rQ/w-d-xo.html
Shea disappearing into a parking lot got me.
The first two lines of the song at the end of “A League of Their Own.”
This used to be your playground.
Used to be your childhood dreams…
I lived in Port Huron,about 50 miles north of Detroit summer 1973.I never went into Tiger Stadium but passed by it several times.
Mall of America, once Met Stadium, has a bronze home plate on the floor where it was when the Twins played there. The seat where Harmon Killebrew’s 500th HR hit is attached to a wall where it originally landed.
The old ballparks I've seen games at, that are gone now; Comisky Park, Municipal Stadium, Candlestick Park, Tiger Stadium, The original Yankee Stadium, The Kingdome, Metrodome.
Interesting video
Nice job here. Enjoyed your video. Sad but enjoyed it.
Thanks!
Very cool
You got tiger stadium wrong. The past 5-10 years or so there is a whole new complex there including a ball field
That was what google satellite view showed a year ago, the image would have been from around 2017.
I believe some cities have where home plate was , always think that is so cool ! Knowing what players stood there !!
I remember that the 49ers finished a close second to the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC West, so the Seahwaks had home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The divisional round, the Niners won their game, and the Seahawks hosted the New Orleans Saints and narrowly defeated them. Had the 'Aints prevailed, then the NFC Title Game in January 2014 would have been held at Candlestick. That would have been the grandest of "send off" for an old, decaying stadium! My bro-in-law said that no matter what it cost to get two scalped tickets, we were GOING if that game had been played at the "Stick".
Fantastic
I remember Seals stadium in San Francisco turned into the big White Front shopping center in the 80's.
Amazing
its sad to see that nothing good came after they demolished this stadiums
Yeah, but those projects in Brooklyn were on another level...
L . Loved tailgating at the stick so many memories at opening day 15 years jn a row 85 to 99 and at pac bell 2000
Where was Shibe Park, and the Baker Bowl? Baltimore Municpal Stadium. Jarry Park, in Montreal.
Just a suggestion, leave the text on screen so the viewer can read it twice. That is a standard in the broadcast world.
Nice video but where was the old stadium in Baltimore?
It just makes me depressed seeing all the stupid ass sky skrappers where iconic pieces of history used to be humans ruin everything.
County Stadium in Milwaukee is now the parking lot for Miller Park.
Very cool presentation, but..."Tijger Stadium"?
The building where Ebbets Field was looks derelict.
County stadium in Milwaukee? Memorial stadium in Baltimore?
Where Shibe Park used to be in Philly is a church.
1:18..."Cijger Stadium"??
No reason for Candlestick to be torn down and have Levi's built in Santa Clara. At least, with the closing of Bay Meadows, the 49ers could have built a stadium on that site in San Mateo. Ironically San Francisco was turned down for the 2024 Olympics. The plan was to build a temporary stadium about a mile away from Candlestick on the inland side of US 101 in what is now an industrial wasteland. I figure the Olympic pickers told themselves this: "WTF, they just tore down a stadium that could have been converted to American football/soccer/rugby/track and field events!"
I find it rather interesting that the ballparks of Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds were demolished with terrible housing projects replacing them. Very sad.
As others have pointed out, the Forbes Field footprint is way off. According to the diagram, Forbes Avenue would have run straight through the stadium and the Pitt Student Union would have been in the left field bleachers.
It looks like Seals Stadium was replaced with old, decrepit industrial buildings.
In the 80's it was the White Front shopping center!
The bones remember. The flesh may forget, but the bones always remember.
What about Wrigley Field, where Maris hit two HR’s in his record breaking season of 1961?
For the benefit of those rushing to reply "but Wrigley Field is still standing," this is in reference to Wrigley Field in Los Angeles, where the Angels played their inaugural season.
Hoy didn’t do angels. They played in south central for a season but still
whats after polo grounds, no name on that one
Crosley Field
Don’t let the music fool you, progress is a good thing. Imagine not having Camden yards, safeco field, comerica park, target field, petco park. Can’t wait till the A’s get a new field. Some day Fenway will close and Boston will be seen for the lousy team and not for the the Fenway experience
What's the second one
Time for Sinatra to sing "There Used To Be a Ballpark...."
I wonder if almost all of them have plaques where they onced stood in a mall forgot which stadium theres a plaque where home plate was
Where is Connie Mack Stadium?
SF's Candlestick Park in the overlay here is taking up MUCH more acreage than it actually did in real life.
Sorry it's not perfect
which stadium is the first one?
this song making me sad cry and sleepy😢
Forbes Field
The second picture of Forbes Field doesn’t look right. The modern day photo on the right is zoomed out more than the left one and there’s no way you’d fit all of that building infrastructure on the site of a baseball field.
Forbes Field - you're off by about 2 blocks!
Should have done Memorial Stadium in Baltimore.
I was born too late for theses stadiums I wanted to see them all but I couldn’t
I was sad when he showed the polo grounds. Polo grounds is my favorite stadium
One of my biggest regrets in life is that I’ll never get to see Shea Stadium
Sad part about ebbits, it's literally like 10 building of apartments. That's it. Everything else around it is almost the same. Smh, they could kept it and had that living space elsewhere
You forgot Wrigley Field in Los Angeles.
That's a Pcl par
It was was MLB stadium for a year.
TOO Bad Yankee Stadium couldn't be Saved & made into a Museum.
😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓😓
Tiger Stadium Detroit Michigan Wayne County USA Michigan Avenue and Trumbull now smaller ball park retail residential commercial mixed use parking lots
All of those old ballparks had their own character. All had different configurations. All had center fields that were a mile away. Today's ballpark are more like an amusement park. Big flashy scoreboard. Fancy restaurants. The game itself now sucks.
Too bad that you didn't include Milwaukee County Stadium and Miller Park.
How about Metropolitan Stadium 🏟️ in Bloomington, Minnesota, the former home of the Minnesota Twins and the Minnesota Vikings? That land is now occupied by the Mall of America. ☹️
Old yankee stadium and shea stadium #RipGranddaddy
The worst ones are the ones that weren't really replaced by anything. Why take out these beautiful stadiums to just leave a dirt lot
Because they are an eyesore as they decay and it just breeds drug use and crime. Plus they have to employ security. Bulldoze and the problem is gone
The music lol
they should be thrown in jail for what they did to Ebbets field... what a disgrace
I'm honestly appalled at how wrong Forbes Field is 🤦♂️
i think that is disgusting, to demolish famous baseball stadiums,they should have found a way to repair them not to tear them down. to put up high rise apartments and condo buildings.