Yankee Stadium (1923): Difference between revisions
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==Proposed new Yankee Stadium== |
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In the summer of [[2005]], the Yankees announced a plan to build a [[New Yankee Stadium]] across the street from the current stadium, on the site of [[Macombs Dam Park]]. If the plan goes through, groundbreaking for the new stadium would take place in the summer of [[2006]], and the facility would be ready for the [[2009]] baseball season. This plan could be delayed or canceled if the Internal Revenue Service does not approve the financing plan. The project could also be delayed or cancelled due to community based groups similar to the ones which prevented the [[West Side Stadium]] and current protesting the [[Brooklyn Nets Arena]] |
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<P>If the new stadium is built on schedule, [[2008]] would be the final season at Yankee Stadium, which would be demolished and replaced with replacement park facilities. A [[2005]] [[New York Post]] article mentioned that Major League Baseball may award Yankee Stadium with the [[2008 MLB All Star Game]] as a sendoff to the historic venue. |
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In the summer of 2005, the [[New York Yankees]], along with New York city and state officials, unveiled plans to tear down the historic Yankee Stadium and build a $1.3 billion stadium on 22 acres of public parkland north of their East 161st Street home. The project, which would require about $450 million in public subsidies, has been given a [[Bronx cheer]] by community groups, urban planners, and parks, health, and public transportation advocates. In the fall, [[Bronx Community Board 4]] voted against the project (the board’s decisions are nonbinding), which would be the most expensive stadium ever built in the United States. |
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The transfer of Macombs Dam and John Mullaly parks was passed by the New York State Legislature without a public hearing in the days after the stadium’s design was unveiled. Opponents say this violates state and federal laws designed to protect parkland. City officials, including Bronx [[Borough President]] [[Adolfo Carrion]], say the parkland will be replaced with better parks. Community groups say the new parklike features would be small and scattered, compared with the 22 acres of central, continuous open space that is now available. Some parklike features would be built on the [[Harlem River]] waterfront, which is one mile away from the current parkland and requires walking under an interstate highway and over railroad tracks to access. Ten acres of the replacement parklike features would be built on artificial surface atop new parking garages; these parklike features would be closed to accommodate fans’ cars on game days, which make up half of the summer. Other parklike features would be built on the 9-acre site of Yankee Stadium, which would be completely torn down. The city has agreed to pay $103 million for the new parklike features and $27 million to demolish Yankee Stadium, and has also agreed not to charge the Yankees rent and taxes. The [[New York City Department of Parks and Recreation]] would retain ownership of the new stadium’s land. |
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The [[New York Legislature|New York State Legislature]] agreed to $70 million in subsidies for a $320 million parking garage project. It is not clear who would fund the remaining $250 million and who would reap the parking revenue. This would give the Yankees approximately 3,000 more parking spaces; their new stadium would have about 7,000 fewer seats. For several decades, transportation and community groups have urged the state’s [[Metropolitan Transportation Authority (New York)|Metropolitan Transportation Authority]] to build a station for the [[Metro-North]] commuter railroad’s [[Hudson Line (Metro-North)|Hudson Line]], which runs adjacent to Yankee Stadium. Public transportation had been excluded from this project. On the eve of the New York City Council's vote on the project, Mayor [[Michael Bloomberg]] and Governor [[George Pataki]] said they supported building a [[Metro-North]] station. (Pataki controls a majority of votes on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, a quasi-public agency.) The City Council approved the project with two dissenting votes. It has not been made clear how the perennially underfunded MTA would fund a Metro-North station. Some transportation advocates say funds may be diverted from any number of other transportation projects. Many others say the Metro-North station, which was part of the city's Yankee Stadium renovation plan in 1974-75, may never actually get built. |
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In addition to the environmental hazard from adding exhaust fumes to the neighborhood, health advocates are concerned about the effect of removing 377 mature trees from this Bronx neighborhood, which has one of the highest childhood asthma rates in the city. The city says all of trees will be replaced. Many new parklike features will be built on artificial surface, however. It is unclear how long it will take for trees to grow in pavement. |
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The stadium itself would be paid for with $866 million in tax-free bonds from the city, state, and federal governments; the Yankees would repay those bonds. [[Major League Baseball]]’s 2002 collective bargaining agreement allows teams to deduct up to 40 percent of new-stadium costs from their revenue-sharing responsibilities. For the Yankees, who consistently boast the league's highest payroll and revenue, this means more than $300 million of their stadium’s costs may be borne by the 16 lowest-revenue teams in baseball. |
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City officials, including [[Bloomberg]], say the neighborhood will benefit from the new stadium and parklike features. Yankees President Randy Levine, who previously worked in the mayoral administration of [[Bloomberg]] predecessor [[Rudolph Giuliani]], says a new stadium will create thousands of jobs for the community. The city’s Economic Development Corporation, whose members are appointed by the mayor, says the stadium would increase the city’s tax base by $96 million over a 30-year period. |
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Stadium advocates say there is no alternative to this new stadium, and say that a new stadium ensures the Yankees will remain in New York City for the next several decades. Twenty years earlier, principal owner [[George Steinbrenner]] considered moving the Yankees to the [[Meadowlands Sports Complex]] in East Rutherford, New Jersey. In recent years, however, [[New Jersey]] officials have said they are not willing to spend taxpayer dollars on a baseball stadium. Since then, construction has begun on the Xanadu entertainment complex in the [[Meadowlands]] and more public land has been handed to the [[New York Giants]] and [[Jets]] to build a shared football stadium. With no land and no public money, the [[Yankees]] long ago ceased considering the [[Meadowlands]] for a stadium. Eight years earlier, the [[Giuliani]] administration attempted to build a stadium for the [[Yankees]] on the West Side railyards in [[Manhattan]]. The proposal never got off the ground. Two years ago, the Bloomberg administration failed to build a football stadium for the [[New York Jets]] on that site. |
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Community groups want the [[Yankees]] to use several available parcels of land south of East 161st Street to build their stadium, or to renovate Yankee Stadium. A plan being discussed in 1998 estimated the cost of stadium renovation at $200 million. Renovating the existing parkland would cost about $25 million. |
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The [[Yankees]] still must climb two procedural hurdles. One is approval from the [[Internal Revenue Service]]. The Yankees will repay the city's tax-free bonds with payments in lieu of taxes, even though the Yankees do not pay taxes on Yankee Stadium and would not on their new stadium. The tax code revisions of 1986 stipulate that tax-free bonds be used for public projects only. The Yankees are a private, for-profit business. The project also requires approval from the [[National Parks Service]], which has not received the state's application to abandon the public parkland. The National Parks Service must approve the alienation of parkland because the parks received federal funds under the Land and Water Conservation Act in 1979. Officials have said this approval could take up to a year. The Yankees had planned on breaking ground by May 1, 2006, with Opening Day 2009 to open their new stadium. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 00:04, 3 June 2006
Template:Infobox Baseball Stadium
Yankee Stadium is the home stadium of the New York Yankees, a major league baseball team. Located at East 161st Street and River Avenue in The Bronx, New York City, it originally opened on April 18, 1923 and reopened on April 15, 1976 after an extensive three year renovation. The first night game was played on May 28, 1946.
Yankee Stadium is often referred to as "The House that Ruth Built", but it is usually referred to as "The Stadium". It was the first baseball park to be labeled a "Stadium" rather than a "Field," a "Park," or a "Grounds," and it conformed to the usage of the term in ancient Greece, where a stadium was a foot-race arena. Yankee Stadium's field was initially surrounded by a (misshapen) quarter-mile running track, which effectively also served as an early "warning track" for fielders, a feature now standard in all major league ballparks.
Yankee Stadium favors left-handed batters because of a shorter right-field fence, which was once called "Ruthville" and is now known as "the short porch", although the field has become much more symmetric over the years. In contrast, the park has been less favorable for right-handed batters. Under the original configuration, the outfield distances were 395 feet from home plate to left field, 460 ft to left center, and 490 ft to straightaway center. [1]
Left-center soon came to be called "Death Valley," in reference to the high number of balls hit to that area that would have cleared the wall easily in other parks but resulted in simple fly ball outs in Yankee Stadium. Although the fence has been moved in several times over the years to make it more hitter friendly, the park remains one of the most difficult for right-handed hitters, as evidenced by the fact that in 2005, Alex Rodriguez became the first right-handed Yankee hitter to hit 40 home runs in a season since 1937, when Joe DiMaggio belted 46. Rodriguez set a new team record for right-handed batters with 48. According to baseball historian Bill James, Joe DiMaggio lost more home runs due to his home park disadvantage that any player in history. Two lefthanders have done better: Roger Maris with 61 in 1961, and Babe Ruth on four occasions with a peak of 60 in 1927. Switch-hitting Mickey Mantle hit 54 in 1961.
A story that has become somewhat of an urban legend purports that the stadium's design was tailored to fit the left-handed power exhibited by Babe Ruth. However, a look at aerial photographs of the area shows that the stadium is built on a triangular plot of land originally owned by one of the Yankee owners, and that the stadium, like many other parks of that era and many newer "retro" parks, was fit into that plot. Additionally, an elevated train line still runs beyond the right field bleachers, and was present when the stadium was first built. Making the right field area larger would have necessitated eliminating seating and possibly building a high "Green Monster"-like wall.
A good depiction of the atmosphere of the pre-renovation stadium can be seen in the latter scenes of the 1959 Mervyn LeRoy film The FBI Story, which starred James Stewart. In these scenes, FBI agents tracked a suspected Soviet espionage courier. These scenes show the arrival of an elevated train at the station near the right field bleachers, football action and crowd scenes and reaction during a New York Giants game, groups of people waiting at a concession stand, and scenes outside the main stadium concourse.
The seats behind center field are painted black and not occupied during baseball games; known as a "batter's eye," this allows batters to track the ball as it is pitched, as the "black bleachers" section is directly in front of them. If fans were allowed to sit in this section, it would create an unfair pitcher's advantage, as it would make it virtually impossible for batters to track the ball if a substantial number of fans were wearing white shirts.
Perhaps the best known of all baseball stadiums, Yankee Stadium is the scene of such memorable events as Babe Ruth's then-record 60th home run in 1927; tearful farewell addresses by Lou Gehrig in 1939 and Babe Ruth in 1948; Don Larsen's perfect World Series game in 1956; Roger Maris's then-record 61st home run in 1961; Reggie Jackson's three home runs in a World Series game in 1977; and on-field celebrations of World Series championships. In addition, the 1939 and 1977 Major League Baseball All-Star Games were held there, as well as the second 1960 All-Star Game.
The best way to describe Yankee Stadium is as follows: "It's called the World Series, but it's usually played here." Since its opening in 1923, the World Series have been played at Yankee Stadium an astounding 37 times out of 82, with the Yankees winning 26 of the 37 Series.
The World Series at Yankee Stadium
Perhaps the best description of Yankee Stadium is as follows: "It's called the World Series, but it's usually played here." Since its opening in 1923, the World Series have been played at Yankee Stadium an astounding 37 times out of 82 World Series through 2005, with the Yankees winning 26 out of 37.
These are the World Series that were clinched at Yankee Stadium:
- New York Yankees, in 1927, 1938, 1947, 1950, 1951, 1953, 1977, 1996 and 1999.
- St. Louis Cardinals, in 1926 and 1942.
- Brooklyn Dodgers in 1955, their only World Championship before moving to Los Angeles.
- Milwaukee Braves, in 1957, through 2005 the only World Series won by a Milwaukee team.
- Cincinnati Reds, in 1976.
- Los Angeles Dodgers, in 1981.
- Florida Marlins, in 2003.
- The Yankees clinched World Series wins on the road at: The Polo Grounds in 1923, 1936 and 1937; Sportsman's Park in St. Louis in 1928 and 1943; Wrigley Field in Chicago in 1932; Crosley Field in Cincinnati in 1939 and 1961; Ebbets Field in Brooklyn in 1941, 1949, 1952 and 1956; Milwaukee County Stadium in 1958; Candlestick Park in San Francisco in 1962; Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles in 1978; Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego in 1998; and Shea Stadium in New York in 2000.
- The Yankees lost the World Series on the road in 1960, 1963, 1964 and 2001.
The Yankees also lost the 1921 and 1922 World Series to the N.Y. Giants, but at the time the Yankees played their homes games at the Polo Grounds -- the Giants' park.
Professional football at Yankee Stadium
The New York Giants football team played at Yankee Stadium from 1956 to 1973. They left the Polo Grounds, where they had played since their founding in 1925, and won the NFL Championship in their first season in the Stadium, defeating the Chicago Bears 47-7 on December 30, 1956. It is accepted by football historians that the chant, "Dee-FENSE!" was first used at Yankee Stadium that year to describe the Giant defense, led by linebacker Sam Huff. Other Giant Hall-of-Famers to play for them in Yankee Stadium include quarterbacks Charley Conerly and Y.A. Tittle, running back Frank Gifford, tackle Roosevelt Brown, defensive end Andy Robustelli and safety Emlen Tunnell.
During these years, the Giants were coached by Jim Lee Howell (1954-60) and Allie Sherman (1961-68). Howell's staff included offensive coordinator Vince Lombardi, who had played for Fordham University at Yankee Stadium, and defensive coordinator Tom Landry, who had been a Giant defensive back. The two men would become head coaches, and Lombardi's Green Bay Packers would face Landry's Dallas Cowboys in two NFL Championship Games in the late 1960s.
In addition to the 1956 game, which they won, the Giants hosted two other NFL Championship Games at Yankee Stadium, at a time when host sites were rotated between the league's Eastern and Western Division Champions. The Giants played the Baltimore Colts on December 28, 1958, and, in the first overtime game ever played in the NFL, lost, 23-17, in a game described by many observers as "the greatest game ever played." On December 30, 1962, the Giants lost to Lombardi's Packers, 16-7. Despite reaching the Championship Game six times in eight years between 1956 and 1963 (including the 1959 game in Baltimore, the 1961 game in Green Bay and the 1963 game in Chicago), the Giants only won the first of these, in 1956.
It was also at Yankee Stadium that one of the NFL's "greatest hits" took place. On November 20, 1960, the Giants hosted the Philadelphia Eagles, and just after catching a pass, Gifford was hit by Eagle linebacker Chuck Bednarik, knocking him out and causing him to fumble. The fumble was recovered by the Eagles, who went on to win the game and later the NFL Championship. This was the one season between 1958 and 1963 that the Giants did not win the Eastern Division. Gifford was so badly hurt that he missed the rest of the season and all of the 1961 season. The photograph of Bednarik, pumping his fist in celebration of the recovered fumble, standing over an unconscious Gifford, is one of football's best-known pictures.
By 1964, age and injuries began to catch up with the Giants, and they were largely uncompetitive for the remainder of their tenure in Yankee Stadium. Knowing the Stadium would close in the middle (for football) of the 1973 season, and that the stadium they had arranged to build in New Jersey (to be named Giants Stadium) would not open until 1976,the team secured temporary home fields for the remainder of 1973 and all of 1974 and 1975.
The Stadium was also home to several football teams known as the "New York Yankees," but none of these lasted for more than a few seasons.
College football at Yankee Stadium
The 1930 and 1931 Army-Navy Games were played at Yankee Stadium. Army won both of them, by scores of 6-0 and 17-7.
Army played Notre Dame there 20 times from 1925 to 1946. In the 1928 game, Army led 6-0 at halftime, before Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne invoked the memory of his school's greatest football hero to that point, George Gipp, who had died in 1920. In a story he is now believed to have made up, Rockne told of meeting Gipp on his deathbed, and hearing the great player say, "Sometime, when the team is up against it, and the breaks are beating the boys, tell 'em to go out there with everything they've got, and win just one for the Gipper." Notre Dame came back to win the game, 12-6.
Army and Notre Dame also played at Yankee Stadium in 1946, when Army was ranked number 1 in the nation and had won the last two National Championships, and Notre Dame was ranked number 2. One of several college football games to be known as "The Game of the Century" in the days leading up to it, the game ended in a 0-0 tie, and when both teams remained undefeated at the end of the season, Notre Dame was awarded the National Championship. The two schools would play each other at Yankee Stadium only once more, in 1969, by which point Army was no longer a major football power, and Notre Dame won, 45-0. In games played against each other at Yankee Stadium, Notre Dame won 14, Army won 4, and there were 3 ties.
Notre Dame played 24 games at Yankee Stadium, going 15-6-3. Army played 38, splitting them, 17-17-4. New York University played more games there than any other school, 96, using it as a secondary home field from 1923 to 1948, with a record of 52-40-4. Nearby Fordham University played 19 games there, going 13-5-1.
Eight college football games were played at Yankee Stadium on Thanksgiving Day, the first seven by NYU: Beating Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon University) in 1931 and 1932, beating Fordham in 1936, losing to Oregon State in 1928, losing to Carnegie Tech in 1929, and losing to Fordham in 1934 and 1935. A game between Notre Dame and Syracuse University, scheduled for November 23, 1963, was postponed to Thanksgiving, November 28, due to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Syracuse won, 27-15.
The Gotham Bowl was scheduled to premiere at Yankee Stadium in 1960, but was cancelled when no opponent could be found for Oregon State University. The 1961 game was moved to the Polo Grounds, and when just 6,166 people came to Yankee Stadium for the 1962 game, won by the University of Nebraska over the University of Miami, 36-24, the Gotham Bowl was never played again.
Starting in 1971, the Stadium hosted the Whitney M. Young Urban League Classic, a game between "historically black colleges," often featuring Grambling State University of Louisiana, coached by Eddie Robinson. The Classic helped to spread the fame of Grambling and other similar schools. The Classic was held at Shea Stadium during the 1974-75 renovation of Yankee Stadium, and was last played there in the 1987 season, the last time a football game was played there. Grambling lost to Central State University of Ohio, 37-21.
[2] It has been held at Giants Stadium in New Jersey's Meadowlands Sports Complex ever since.
Other events
Many boxing matches have been held at the Stadium, notably Joe Louis's first-round knockout of Max Schmeling on June 22, 1938. Heavyweight champions Jack Dempsey (after losing the title), Rocky Marciano, Floyd Patterson, Ingemar Johansson and Muhammad Ali all had at least one fight there.
Billy Graham held large gatherings at the Stadium. The New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League used Yankee Stadium for home games in 1971 and then again in 1976.
On October 4, 1965, Pope Paul VI celebrated a Mass at Yankee Stadium during a visit to the United States in front of a crowd in excess of 80,000. This was the first Papal Mass ever delivered in North America. Fourteen years later, on October 2, 1979, Pope John Paul II also celebrated Mass there. The Stadium was also the site of a memorial service on September 23, 2001 in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks.
However, the Stadium has been used almost exclusively for baseball since 2001, as most other concerts and events seek the more modern facilities of Madison Square Garden or Giants Stadium.
The Facade and the Big Bat
One of its distinguishing features is the white facade that hangs over the outfield bleacher billboards and scoreboard. A similar frieze once hung from the roof over the upper deck before the renovation.
Also notable is the exhaust stack that stands outside the main entrance gate, constructed in the shape of a baseball bat. It is sponsored by Louisville Slugger, and is designed to look like a Babe Ruth model. "The Big Bat" is often used as a meeting place for people who will be sitting at games together but arriving separately.
While some elements of the Stadium are decidedly modern, its asymmetry, monuments in left-center field and exterior arches give fans a reminder of the Stadium during its most golden period. Even the blue YANKEE STADIUM letters over the main gate are longtime features; they're the same letters that first appeared there in white in the early 1960s.
Rules at the stadium
After the September 11, 2001 attacks, the authorities of Yankees Stadium enforced stricter (and more controversial) rules. As of 2006, the following rules are enforced at Yankees Stadium:
- No video cameras
- No backpacks
- No briefcases
- No large bags
- No coolers
- No glass or plastic bottles or cans (As of April 21, 2006 plastic bottles containing water are permitted. )
The reason given for these strict rules is security, but they have proven unpopular due both to inconvenience caused and to skepticism as to the real motivation behind them (some fans believe the restriction on cans and bottles, for example, is really intended to encourage people to buy beverages from the concession stands, with the "security" rationale simply used for justification). Despite their unpopularity, attempts to get rid of these rules have not been successful.
Monument Park
The following personalities are honored with monuments or plaques in Monument Park, located behind the left-center field fence at Yankee Stadium, between the bullpens. Monuments, rather than plaques, are generally awarded only to the greatest of the great, and then only after their deaths. Many of these figures also had their uniform numbers retired. Such ceremonies often take place either at home openers or on Old Timers' Day. Figures are listed in the order in which their plaques were dedicated:
- Miller Huggins, manager 1918-29, monument dedicated May 30, 1932. This monument was originally placed on the field of play, in front of the center-field flagpole. Huggins never wore a number on his uniform, and so no number is retired for him.
- Jacob Ruppert, owner 1915-39, plaque dedicated April 19, 1940. This plaque was placed on the outfield wall, to the right of the flagpole.
- Lou Gehrig, first baseman 1923-39, number 4 retired July 4, 1939, monument dedicated July 6, 1941. This monument was placed to the left of the Huggins monument. Gehrig was the first Major League Baseball player to have his uniform number retired.
- Babe Ruth, right fielder 1920-34, number 3 retired June 13, 1948, monument dedicated April 19, 1949. This monument was placed to the right of the Huggins monument. The three monuments together were about 450 feet from home plate, but a ball would occasionally get back there. In the 1992 book The Gospel According to Casey, by Ira Berkow and Jim Kaplan, it is reported that Yankee manager Casey Stengel was watching his center fielder fumbling with the ball in the vicinity of the monuments, while the batter-runner circled the bases. Stengel yelled out, "Ruth, Gehrig, Huggins, somebody get that ball back to the infield!"
- Ed Barrow, general manager 1921-46, plaque dedicated April 15, 1954. The plaque was placed on the wall, to the left of the flagpole.
- Joe DiMaggio, center fielder 1936-51, number 5 retired April 18, 1952, plaque dedicated June 8, 1969, replaced by a monument April 25, 1999.
- Mickey Mantle, center fielder 1951-68, number 7 retired and plaque dedicated June 8, 1969, replaced by a monument August 25, 1996. Mantle was awarded his plaque on Mickey Mantle Day, handed to him by DiMaggio. Mantle then handed DiMaggio his plaque, saying, "His oughta be just a little bit higher than mine." Instead, they were placed side-by-side on the wall. These were the last plaques to be placed in play. Following the 1974-75 renovation of Yankee Stadium, the monuments and plaques were moved to the new Monument Park.
- Joe McCarthy, manager 1931-46, plaque dedicated April 29, 1976. Although the Yankees adopted uniform numbers in 1929, McCarthy never wore a number as Yankee manager, and so no number has been retired for him.
- Casey Stengel, manager 1949-60, number 37 retired August 8, 1970, plaque dedicated July 30, 1976.
- Thurman Munson, catcher 1969-79, number 15 retired August 2, 1979, plaque dedicated September 20, 1980.
- Elston Howard, outfielder and catcher 1955-67, coach 1969-80, number 32 retired and plaque dedicated July 21, 1984.
- Roger Maris, outfielder 1960-66, number 9 retired and plaque dedicated July 21, 1984, in the same ceremony as Howard's.
- Phil Rizzuto, shortstop 1941-56 and broadcaster 1957-96, number 10 retired and plaque dedicated August 4, 1985.
- Billy Martin, second baseman 1950-57, manager 1975-78, 1979, 1983, 1985 and 1988, number 1 retired and plaque dedicated August 10, 1986.
- Lefty Gomez, pitcher 1930-42, plaque dedicated August 1, 1987. His number 11 has not been retired.
- Whitey Ford, pitcher 1950-67, number 16 retired April 6, 1974, plaque dedicated August 1, 1987, in the same ceremony as Gomez's.
- Bill Dickey, catcher 1928-46, manager 1946, coach 1949-60, number 8 retired April 18, 1972, plaque dedicated August 21, 1988.
- Yogi Berra, catcher and outfielder 1946-63, manager 1964 and 1984-85, coach 1975-83, number 8 retired April 18, 1972, plaque dedicated August 21, 1988 -- in each case, in the same ceremony as Dickey's.
- Allie Reynolds, pitcher 1947-54, plaque dedicated August 27, 1989. His number 22 has not been retired.
- Don Mattingly, first baseman 1982-95, coach since 2004, number 23 retired and plaque dedicated August 31, 1997.
- Mel Allen, broadcaster 1939-64 and 1976-89, plaque dedicated July 25, 1998.
- Bob Sheppard, public address announcer since 1951, plaque dedicated May 7, 2000.
- Reggie Jackson, right fielder 1977-81, number 44 retired August 14, 1993, plaque dedicated July 6, 2002.
- Ron Guidry, pitcher 1975-88, coach 2006, number 49 retired and plaque dedicated August 23, 2003.
- Red Ruffing, pitcher 1930-46, plaque dedicated July 10, 2004. His number 15 had already been retired for Munson.
Huggins, Gehrig, Ruth, Barrow, DiMaggio, Mantle, McCarthy, Stengel, Rizzuto, Gomez, Ford, Dickey, Berra, Jackson and Ruffing are also members of the Baseball Hall of Fame. Allen received the Hall's Ford Frick Award, the broadcasters' equivalent of Hall of Fame election.
In addition, the Knights of Columbus donated plaques to the Yankees in honor of the masses delivered at Yankee Stadium by Pope Paul VI on October 4, 1965 and Pope John Paul II on October 2, 1979.
This led to a joke: "Who are the two former Cardinals who have plaques at Yankee Stadium?" It should be noted, however, that Huggins and Maris played for the St. Louis Cardinals, so there is a real answer to the joke's question. Joe Torre also played for (and managed) the Cardinals, and will likely receive a plaque shortly after his retirement, which would end the joke, unless Pope Benedict XVI or a successor visits the United States and delivers a Mass at Yankee Stadium or the planned successor ballpark, making it, "Who are the three former Cardinals..."
The Yankees dedicated a plaque to the victims and rescue workers of the 9/11 attacks on September 11, 2002, the first anniversary of the attacks. Although usually referred to as a "monument," it is simply a plaque resting in a corner of Monument Park, rather than a plaque mounted on a granite slab as the "monuments" are.
Although Paul O'Neill (outfielder 1993-2001) has not been honored with the retirement of his number 21 or with the dedication of a Monument Park plaque, the number has not been reissued following his retirement. Tino Martinez was reissued #24 for his 2005 return to the team. While it was issued to Ruben Sierra in 2003 and 2004, the number has not been reissued in 2006.
Although Major League Baseball retired number 42 leaguewide for Jackie Robinson in 1997, the Yankees remain the only team not to list 42 along with their team's retired numbers. Yankees pitcher Mariano Rivera is the only current player to wear the number as the number was grandfathered for all players wearing the number at the time, but all the other teams retired #42 while they had players wearing the number.
The monuments are located more than 450 feet from home plate. It is an achievement for a home run in the "new" Stadium to go into the monuments on the fly. Among those who have done so are Thurman Munson (in Game 3 of the 1978 American League Championship Series) and Alex Rodriguez (in August 2005).
Since the mid-1980s, the rear fence lining the walkway from the grandstand to the monuments -- the barrier that was the outfield fence from 1976 to 1984 -- has borne the Yankees' retired numbers. Under those numbers are small stands with short biographies of the players that were honored.
Access
Yankee Stadium can be reached via the New York City Subway using the B, D, or 4 trains. Since the 1970s renovation, there has been a plan to put a Metro-North station on the Hudson Line tracks that run behind the Stadium's parking deck, but this has not yet been done, citing concerns over the Yankees committing to playing in the Bronx. A tentative deal has been reached to construct a station in time for the opening of the New Yankee Stadium, if it is built as currently planned.
One hypothesis is that the "Bronx cheer" was so named because of its popularity among Yankees fans.
Chronology of outfield dimensions
Compiled from various photos, baseball annuals, and Green Cathedrals by Phil Lowry.
1923-1936
- Left Field Line - 285 ft.
- Straightaway LF, corner of main stand - 395 ft.
- Straightaway LF, corner of bleachers - 460 ft.
- Center Field - 490 ft.
- Right Center - 429 ft.
- Straightaway RF, bleacher gate - 350 ft.
- Right Field Line - 295 ft.
1937-1973
- Left Field Line - 301 ft.
- Straightaway LF, corner of main stand - 402 ft. - left of bullpen
- Straightaway LF, corner of bleachers - 415 ft. - right of bullpen
- Deep Left Center - 457 ft.
- Center Field - 461 ft.
- Right Center - 407 ft.
- Straightaway RF, corner of bleachers - 367 ft. - left of bullpen
- Straightaway RF, near corner of main stand - 344 ft. - right of bullpen
- Right Field Line - 296 ft.
- Backstop - 82 ft.
1974-1975
- Renovation of Yankee Stadium
1976-1984
- Left Field Line - 312 ft.
- Straightaway LF - 387 ft.
- Deep Left Center - 430 ft.
- Center Field - 417 ft.
- Right Center - 385 ft.
- Straightaway RF - 353 ft.
- Right Field Line - 310 ft.
1985-1987
- Altered to make Monument Park accessible to fans
- Left Field Line - 312 ft.
- Straightaway LF - 379 ft.
- Deep Left Center - 411 ft.
- Center Field - 410 ft.
- Right Center - 385 ft.
- Straightaway RF - 353 ft.
- Right Field Line - 310 ft.
1988-present
- Altered to make Monument Park more accessible
- Left Field Line - 318 ft.
- Straightaway LF - 379 ft.
- Deep Left Center - 399 ft.
- Center Field - 408 ft.
- Right Center - 385 ft.
- Straightaway RF - 353 ft.
- Right Field Line - 314 ft.
Ballpark Ratings
Ballpark Digest: 4/5
Proposed new Yankee Stadium
- Main article: New Yankee Stadium
In the summer of 2005, the Yankees announced a plan to build a New Yankee Stadium across the street from the current stadium, on the site of Macombs Dam Park. If the plan goes through, groundbreaking for the new stadium would take place in the summer of 2006, and the facility would be ready for the 2009 baseball season. This plan could be delayed or canceled if the Internal Revenue Service does not approve the financing plan. The project could also be delayed or cancelled due to community based groups similar to the ones which prevented the West Side Stadium and current protesting the Brooklyn Nets Arena
If the new stadium is built on schedule, 2008 would be the final season at Yankee Stadium, which would be demolished and replaced with replacement park facilities. A 2005 New York Post article mentioned that Major League Baseball may award Yankee Stadium with the 2008 MLB All Star Game as a sendoff to the historic venue.
External links
- Ballpark Digest Visit
- Brief History of Yankee Stadium
- History of Yankee Stadium - About.com
- Yankee Stadium history
- Yankee Stadium info
- Visiting Yankee Stadium
- The best Yankee forums on the net
- Virtual Tour of Yankee Stadium
- Save Our Parks
- Template:Geolinks-US-buildingscale
Preceded by Polo Grounds 1913–1922 |
Home of the New York Yankees 1923–1973 |
Succeeded by Shea Stadium 1974–1975 |
Preceded by Shea Stadium 1974–1975 |
Home of the New York Yankees 1976–present |
Succeeded by Current |