The Stadium that couldn't be saved

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 233

  • @markbrown4039
    @markbrown4039 Год назад +61

    Tiger Stadium was my stadium, growing up in the Detroit area. I was at the final game in 1999. The place was low on the amenities you see today, but it had a lot of charm and history. The right field overhang you pointed out created a "porch" in the right field stands, and when Al Kaline joined the team in the mid-50s, a section of seats in the right field corner was taken out, so Kaline could use his amazing defensive prowess to catch fly balls. Losing Tiger Stadium and watching it being torn down really hurt.

    • @aspalovin
      @aspalovin Год назад +4

      The worst part about it being torn down was the decade it took... The slowest band-aid pull ever.

    • @lionsfan7500
      @lionsfan7500 Год назад +2

      Tiger Stadium will always have a special place in my heart. My uncle took me to my first game there in 1981 after the strike vs Kansas Royals and the Tigers won on a walk off in the 10th and Kevin Saucier got the win and that was one of the best nights of my childhood it was magical. My uncle was a teenager in 1957 and went to the NFL championship game and sat in the upper deck bleachers for 50 cents lol how crazy. He still has the ticket stubb and framed it.

    • @marcvslicinivscrassvs7536
      @marcvslicinivscrassvs7536 Год назад +1

      Jack Morris was a beast

  • @aspalovin
    @aspalovin Год назад +18

    I choke up every time I see this gorgeous park.. My Dad took me to games all the time and I got to be there for The Win in '84... Bless You, Boys! Gibby made the building ring like a tuning fork. We live across the creek in Windsor and between Tiger Stadium, The Joe and Windsor arena.. The sight, sounds... and oh.. The smells can't be duplicated

    • @darrendoyle568
      @darrendoyle568 8 месяцев назад

      Did you get to crash the field when they won

    • @brianb1440
      @brianb1440 5 месяцев назад

      I had the great fortune to go to a game there in 1987. Tigers were playing the Orioles. Good game, tho the Tigers blew a lead in the 8th and lost. But what I still remember most is the surreal feeling that time stopped as I exited the dark concourse that smelled of stale beer and walked out into the field level boxes. The stadium surrounded me and was so enormous. The field was so close. Everything stopped, and I felt my chest would explode from the beating of my heart. It was a feeling I never had at a ballpark before or since, and I've been to many. What a marvelous experience.

  • @stevenosmond2168
    @stevenosmond2168 Год назад +9

    This was my favorite place to go. The outside you show is cosmetic and was showing its age. I went to my last game in 1999. Sat in the right field Upper deck to experience the overhang.

  • @Dave-ti2ue
    @Dave-ti2ue Год назад +12

    The '71 All Star Game played there was such a classic.

    • @michaelward9880
      @michaelward9880 5 месяцев назад

      Absolutely! Do you remember Reggie Jackson's Homer? What a blast!

  • @youlittlesaget
    @youlittlesaget Год назад +9

    Definitely my favorite sports stadium of all time. I still can’t believe that it’s gone.

  • @cmdrflake
    @cmdrflake Год назад +26

    The upper deck was terrific with a nearly unique vantage point of a game. My Dad and I were in the second row behind home plate. Terrific seats.

    • @kenelkins1787
      @kenelkins1787 Год назад +1

      My family moved to Detroit in 1968. I used to pay $1 for an upper deck bleacher in center field. Fly balls to the warning track in right field would disappear beneath the overhang and you wouldn't know if you should cheer or moan until you heard the reaction of the crowd in the rest of the stadium. It was a really good hitter's park (except for the 440 feet to straight away center field) that I could never understand why they built Comerica as big as an airport.

  • @b.ramit88
    @b.ramit88 Год назад +10

    I am very blessed to be able to see tiger stadium before they demolished it

  • @thecentralscrutinizer304
    @thecentralscrutinizer304 Год назад +10

    Tigers fan here, great video. My first game NY@DET June 1993.

  • @mizer9510
    @mizer9510 Год назад +15

    Kinda sad that Tiger Stadium is no longer around. It was an iconic stadium with a lot of great memories and nostalgia behind it. I wish they could've saved it.

    • @Jamestown-y9j
      @Jamestown-y9j 4 месяца назад

      I feel the same about Comiskey, damn was my summer home away from home.

  • @2xroadtrippers
    @2xroadtrippers Год назад +23

    The home run porch at Globe Life Park was a tribute to Tiger Stadium.

    • @SirManfly
      @SirManfly Год назад +1

      Didn’t they even botch the new at the time stadium 🏟️ by making the walls in the outfield too far back making it tough to hit homers? 🤔

    • @moderationinexcess
      @moderationinexcess Год назад +5

      @@SirManflyballpark in arlington was a hitter’s park walls weren’t very deep any direction from home plate. While on the subject….
      it’s RF porch was for Tiger Stadium
      Jagged outfield fence for Griffith Stadium
      Outer facade arches were for Ebbets field
      Taller LF fence with manual scoreboards was for Fenway
      CF batter’s eye grass was for Wrigley
      Frieze at the top of the upper grandstand was for Yankee Stadium
      I feel like I might be forgetting a few features in honor of the old baseball cathedrals…. DFW sports fans may remind me of others. That stadium was truly magnificent we just couldn’t add a roof to it.

    • @OldRustySteele
      @OldRustySteele Год назад +1

      @@moderationinexcess. Great recap, Mr Moderation! I’ll add one more. First neon “action” scoreboard was the Anheuser-Busch “A and Eagle” in
      Busch Stadium #1 (originally Sportsman’s Park). When Bill Veeck bought the White Sox, the Cards scoreboard was his inspiration for his even-more raucous neon action scoreboard with the pin wheels and fireworks.

    • @moderationinexcess
      @moderationinexcess Год назад +1

      @@OldRustySteele many lost gems and while the Ballpark in Arlington wasn’t around long enough to be considered an all time great I felt it was a fantastic stadium that combined awesome elements of past cathedrals of the game

  • @sportsmaster1364
    @sportsmaster1364 Год назад +25

    One of the more heart-wrenching things I've seen in terms of happenings to a stadium is when the last parts of Tiger Stadium demolition were featured in the music video for "Beautiful" by Eminem. That stadium looked like it had so much charm, and could tell so many majestic stories if its walls could talk.

    • @blacksunshine1089
      @blacksunshine1089 Год назад +5

      The place had a culture of its own, and was steeped in history, not only due to the numerous sporting events that occurred there from boxing, to pro football, and baseball, but the generations of fans who went there, and even the employees. The structure itself had a lot of character, from the air vents on the exterior walls of the building, to the dark, dingy concourses leading to the breathtaking view of the bright green field, the aroma of hot dogs and stale beer, the dark shadowed between the upper and lower decks to weathered concrete, and the vast network of on the underside of the upper deck.

    • @blacksunshine1089
      @blacksunshine1089 Год назад +7

      For me, attending games there was a similar to the feeling I would get when visiting my grandparents old house, the one they had lived in since the 1950s with the old furniture, family photos, and numerous memories.

  • @xtrabiggg13
    @xtrabiggg13 Год назад +35

    The field is now completely surrounded by mixed-use development, with the Detroit Police Athletic league using the field, along with youth and semi- por soccer teams. Corktown area surrounding it is booming.

    • @erikmoyer1788
      @erikmoyer1788 Год назад +6

      The area is much nicer now!

    • @AlligatorArms
      @AlligatorArms Год назад +1

      Right, I just visited the area last week-I’d go to games at Tiger Stadium with my Dad and he’d always park over on Labrosse St. for free, and we’d walk about half a mile up Trumbull Ave. to the ballpark & I’d literally have my fingers crossed the whole time that our car would still be there fully intact after the game. Now, you pretty much have to be a millionaire to live there…pretty crazy, but it sure is a nice area. Although Michigan Ave. probably hasn’t been repaved since the Tigers won a World Series.

    • @mrg8581
      @mrg8581 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@erikmoyer1788 Detroit still garbage.

    • @mrg8581
      @mrg8581 7 месяцев назад

      ​​@@AlligatorArms Liberal Elite Millennials and Gen Z. Democrat youth.🤬

  • @gregorykrug8034
    @gregorykrug8034 Год назад +67

    If Tiger Stadium was in England, it would have been renovated. In America, we tear old things down so we can have newer, shinier things.

    • @kevinfitzgerald1010
      @kevinfitzgerald1010 Год назад +10

      Famous teams like Man. Utd and Liverpool are constrained by the tight urban neighborhoods in which they are located. So instead they add new stands and seating, totally destroying most of any original character. Liverpool added an enormous new Main Stand in 2016 and will be rebuilding and double decking one of the end stands in the next two years. Also, Arsenal did leave its century plus home of Highbury (cap. 38000) for Emirates Stadium (cap. 60000). So moves can happen; it's just difficult in old, built up cities.

    • @gregorykrug8034
      @gregorykrug8034 Год назад +10

      @@kevinfitzgerald1010 Good points, but in America, we often deem stadiums obsolete after twenty years. In baseball, the Rangers and Braves cried for new stadiums, only to move out after twenty years. The Diamondbacks and Brewers have recently wanted new stadiums, too. I find it all odd.

    • @kevinfitzgerald1010
      @kevinfitzgerald1010 Год назад +7

      @gregorykrug8034 I'm American; on this thread because I'm from Detroit and knew Tiger Stadium very well. I spent a good deal of time in my career in England so I'm up on some of their stadium issues. Wouldn't you say the Atlanta and Texas situations are largely due to them being built before the luxury suite boom? Turner Field was hacked together from the 1996 Olympic stadium (liked it though) and the Texas ballpark was rather plain. The new Texas ballpark looks to have hit that spot; don't know much about the new Atlanta park except it's in the burbs. No avoiding traffic in Atlanta anyway. Also don't know much about the AZ park, but the Milwaukee situation grinds my gears. Newish high tech park, and the Selig family are allegedly loyal to the minor market that is Milwaukee. The extortion play is reprehensible.

    • @gregorykrug8034
      @gregorykrug8034 Год назад +4

      @@kevinfitzgerald1010 The Rangers wanted a dome to beat the heat, but why not think of that before?
      The "last of the bad stadiums" imo is the new Comiskey Park. I have not been there (I have driven past it), but at least they have spent $$$ in improvements.
      Speaking of the White Sox, if the Bears do move out of Soldier Field eventually, I swear that the Soldier Field location would be a PERFECT location for a new Comiskey Park. They can keep the columns, but everything else could be redone for a beautiful ballpark.

    • @johnkelly6925
      @johnkelly6925 Год назад +4

      The British completely demolished old Wembley before building the new stadium on that site

  • @marklittle8805
    @marklittle8805 Год назад +8

    The Stadium was charming but old. It deserved a better fate. I saw a few games there as a student across the river in Windsor. Opening Day of Tigers Baseball was always a good day .

    • @GeraldBacon-si5mx
      @GeraldBacon-si5mx Год назад

      I lived in Windsor from 1987-1998 and moved to the downtown area just so i could go to games using tunnel bus.

  • @AugustMedia
    @AugustMedia Год назад +2

    Lot's of great times in my youth at that stadium. 1984 World Series, KISS playing there in 1996, just so much.

  • @MrKerry4371
    @MrKerry4371 Год назад +4

    Thanks for the video- watched many many games at Tiger stadium in the 70's and early 80's !!! Awesome stadium- I miss it!!!

  • @wolver73
    @wolver73 Год назад +7

    My first impression of Briggs Stadium (later Tiger Stadium) when I was about 8 years old was that I had never seen so much green. A strange thought for someone growing up in the country.

  • @harryknutts8428
    @harryknutts8428 3 месяца назад +2

    i was born in 1976 and i still remember the excitement of going downtown and parking the car and getting out with my dad and his best freind who i called uncle eddy and my little brother, we always bought a bad of peanuts still in the shell off a street vendor on the way to the stadium which was a couple blocks away ,, walking through the crowd the excitement building , getting closer u can hear music of anouncements on the loud speakers echo,, we always sat in lower deck left field , it was the 80s it was awesome, later in the 90s i remember going as a young man no longer with my father but with freinds and i still tried to feel the feelings i felt with my dad but times changed and nobody really went down there , i remember going to games in like 1997 0r 1998 and there was like 7000 people there in a stadium built for 50000 , it was kinda cool in that u could just about sit anywhere u wanted but sad at the same time,, i wish i did more stuff with my dad in my life , just didnt work that way tho

  • @matthewclark1674
    @matthewclark1674 Год назад +4

    Loved those summer nights at Tiger Stadium.

  • @jsivco3sivco785
    @jsivco3sivco785 Год назад +10

    2:00 - The dome never came, "that's how we got Ford Field." No! Lack of a dome is how we got the Pontiac Silverdome!! Ford Field was decades later.

  • @Lfg117
    @Lfg117 Год назад +11

    Old MLB Tiger Stadium: Among the best site lines in the history of MLB.

  • @pgc2455
    @pgc2455 Год назад +12

    What I most remember about the old Tiger Stadium were the green wooden seats that folded down. They gave the stadium a great hitting background. The old stadium was a home run paradise. Tiger announcer Ernie Harwell called Tiger Stadium a Green Cathedral. In the 1970's the stadium was sold to the city of Detroit for a nominal amount and the city took over maintenance. The wooden seats were taken out and replaced by blue plastic seats. The 1970-80 renovations by the City took the heart out of the old stadium.

    • @wmw3629
      @wmw3629 Год назад +2

      I love my old green wooden seats from Briggs Stadium

    • @wanderer34
      @wanderer34 Год назад +3

      I believe the reason why the wooden seats were taken out was to avoid a fire hazard. I remember in London when there was a Tube station that had a wooden escalator which was actually historic but the escalator caught in fire due to the oil and grease collecting inside the well and heating up causing an automatic fire and as a result, the entire escalator had to be taken out. If anything, removing the wooden seats was to avoid a fire hazard.

    • @Knightmessenger
      @Knightmessenger Год назад

      ​@wanderer34 and they were taken out around the time the use of lead in paint was finally banned.

  • @vox1962
    @vox1962 Год назад +2

    One of the best ballparks in which to watch a game, even the outfield seats had a great view, sad that she’s gone

  • @blacksunshine1089
    @blacksunshine1089 Год назад +17

    Detroit had a landmark, an attraction for baseball enthusiasts, and they threw it away. What also gets me is that they rejected every proposal for redevelopment.
    It was such a part of the Tigers’ and city’s identity, and should have been saved.
    I always loved its presence on the corner. The sight would both give me chills, and pull at my heartstrings.

    • @kentstallard6512
      @kentstallard6512 Год назад

      Landmark?? Hardly. Too far from downtown and the riverfront.
      And a cookie cutter old design. The only thing special about Tiger Stadium is what happened there, not the building itself.

    • @wanderer34
      @wanderer34 Год назад

      It’s the only move that I rejected from the CAY era.

    • @blacksunshine1089
      @blacksunshine1089 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@kentstallard6512 clearly, you were either never there, or have no appreciation for the sport and its history. Who cares if it wasn’t right in the middle of downtown or on the river!? It’s a ballpark, not a condominium!!
      Located in the historic Corktown neighborhood was an icon and an attraction for baseball enthusiasts.

    • @kentstallard6512
      @kentstallard6512 10 месяцев назад

      @@blacksunshine1089 I was born and raised in the 313. Went to many games at Tiger Stadium.
      It was not a great stadium. Great things happened there. Just like the old Yankee Stadium.

    • @blacksunshine1089
      @blacksunshine1089 10 месяцев назад

      @@kentstallard6512 it wasn’t an amusement park/entertainment center with a baseball diamond in the middle.
      It was built in a time when people were there to watch the game, and didn’t need water slides, nightclubs, Ferris wheels, and 5-star restaurants to keep them entertained.
      If it was still there today, we’d have our own Fenway Park, or Wrigley Field.

  • @erikmoyer1788
    @erikmoyer1788 Год назад +22

    Loved watching games here in the upper deck box seats. You were on top of the action. There was no way to renovate the stadium and give a view to the city. A move needed to be made. While many hate on Comerica it's a good place to watch a ballgame in an area that has helped the city. Not many cities can have all 4 major sports within a 1/2-mile radius with arts / music and food!

    • @sirchi8731
      @sirchi8731 Год назад +1

      Facts

    • @seanhoward8025
      @seanhoward8025 Год назад

      You forgot that it was in the 💩est neighborhoods in one of the 💩est cities in America. You had a real shot at getting jacked when you went to a Tigers game.

    • @truthsayers8725
      @truthsayers8725 Год назад

      ive been to about a dozen games at the CoPa. have hated almost every aspect of the game and the field. ive LOVED being in the company of family and friends but that field and all of the flat dinner plate (seating) stadiums suck in my opinion. i liked being on top of the action at The Corner...

  • @7mileDem
    @7mileDem Год назад +7

    When Comerica Park reaches it's expiration date, the Tigers will move back to Corktown somewhere near the corner of Michigan & Trumbull 35-40 years down the road. The Corner Ballpark (Old Tiger Stadium) is alive and well, they host PAL Youth League Baseball and Football, weddings, movie nights, parties. The area is bustling with bars,restaurants, alot of foot traffic that area was a dead zone in years past.

    • @alexanderzachary4650
      @alexanderzachary4650 2 месяца назад +1

      For some reason this vid was posted in 2023 and incredibly out of date! The Corner Ballpark is probably the best development project the city has and best part is that its for the kids! That whole area is so amazing now!

  • @kevinarthur8488
    @kevinarthur8488 Год назад +10

    I sat in the right field overhang that was literally over the field just to the right of the right field foul pole. I was there in 1999 when I was 13 years old and as the sun was setting behind the stadium in the background I got to see griffey and Arod hit, and idk why but at that moment I knew what I was seeing was so beautiful that I’d remember it forever. That stadium was a bummer for me cause just as I fell in love with it they’d be leaving it within a few months for comerica. It’s like falling in love and finding out the girl has 6 months to live… Maybe not as dramatic, but I’d give anything to see one more game there. It’s also criminal that it was torn down, and the creators of mlb the show should be prosecuted for not putting this stadium in the game but having 2 versions of comiskey and Forbes smh….

  • @aspalovin
    @aspalovin Год назад +7

    I wish that everyone that never saw a game there could have. I've been to several MLB stadiums and the word 'intimate' is key here. It was the perfect place to get up close to your hero's and just 'feel' the game. Comerica is an Oasis in the city but whether in OR out of the park it just lacks that soul. As a Canadian I had my 1st legal U.S. beer there!

  • @davids9520
    @davids9520 Год назад +16

    The baseball field still exists. The flag pole can still handle the flag. Baseball has and can be played at the location. The "Corner Ballpark" has bleacher seats along the infield base lines. Much like a 19th century ball park. You could play a major league baseball game now.. Just not with a true baseball crowd on hand. Come to Detroit and see it. The upper and lower decks of seats were used as the Detroit Lions played at the stadium during the 1950's and 1960's. Attendance of between 55,000 & 56,000 occurred for games at the stadium.

    • @GeraldBacon-si5mx
      @GeraldBacon-si5mx Год назад

      I went to 718 games at Tiger Stadium from 1982-99.I love what they did to site it's awesome.Wish i could visit but can't get there anymore.

  • @Z64sports
    @Z64sports Год назад +8

    All stadiums should have a 2nd deck like that. Maybe not that big but same general concept of the seats being really close

    • @Knightmessenger
      @Knightmessenger Год назад +1

      PNC Park in Pittsburgh is the closest to a double deck stadium like a jewelbox ballpark.
      About as close to the action as any ballpark built after the 1920s. Comerica Park should have been built like that.

  • @talldude5841
    @talldude5841 Год назад +7

    I am so lucky to see both the Tigers and the Lions play here back in the late 60's. Loved this stadium and still have it in my mind. One thing you failed to mention was it was located in one of the worse parts of Detroit. Many fans refused to go to night games there because of the danger getting out of there at night.

    • @wanderer34
      @wanderer34 Год назад +2

      Yankee Stadium was located in the worst parts of the Bronx and while the old Yankee Stadium no longer exists, the new Yankee Stadium sits right across where the old one was at.

    • @paulday5722
      @paulday5722 Год назад +1

      @@wanderer34 When you are one of the greatest sports franchises of all time, with Hall-of-
      Fame caliber players you can get away with that. If you are a smaller market team that is rarely above average stadium location and parking make a big difference.

  • @vincentjay77
    @vincentjay77 Год назад +2

    I can only imagine the memories my dad made at Tiger Stadium that he never told me about. I went there as a kid but was too young to remember. He got season tickets to Comerica when it opened. Lots of memories. You already know I shed some tears watching the final games of Miguel Cabrera on tv. Baseball will do that to you once you put it all in perspective. That stretch along Michigan Ave is nicer and nicer each time I go home. Train station looks incredible. Also, as much as I can't stand domes, would've been nice. I've definitely sat through a few Tigers games in the snow lol

  • @jonnybotz7
    @jonnybotz7 Год назад +3

    It would've been awesome if this stadium was able to see a few more years to be able to host an NHL Winter Classic.

  • @jonstefanik9400
    @jonstefanik9400 Год назад +7

    I always thought that Tiger Stadium and old Comiskey Park were cousin stadiums. They even had identical light stantions.

    • @RICHBLACKCOCK
      @RICHBLACKCOCK Год назад

      @jonstefanik9400 The BASEBALL PALACE OF THE WORLD! 35TH & Shields. Right off the DAN RYAN EXPWY. I-94. I used to go to many a gm. at Comiskey. Tiger Stadium & Comiskey had similar designs. Only FENWAY & WRIGLEY remain. The crazy part is that DODGER STADIUM is 3rd oldest after Wrigley. Go figure!

  • @jimmylewis2007
    @jimmylewis2007 Год назад +1

    THIS WAS AWESOME! I grew up in that ballpark and miss her to this very day. Loved the photos and your excellent commentary.

  • @HonoluluBlue81
    @HonoluluBlue81 24 дня назад +1

    So many memories of Tiger Stadium. Every time I drive past where it sat it feels like a piece of me is missing.

  • @ZacharyWhite25
    @ZacharyWhite25 Год назад +11

    Both Tiger Stadium and Comiskey Park were real ballparks. Not shopping malls, they were true ballparks. Both of them did not deserve the wrecking ball.

  • @JB-bs1se
    @JB-bs1se Год назад +6

    I loved Tiger Stadium. I wish they would have saved it for MLB. I absolutely hated Comerica Park when it first opened.

    • @MrKerry4371
      @MrKerry4371 Год назад +1

      Never did like Comerica Park- I've only been to maybe 4 games at comerica.

    • @billybandyk0720
      @billybandyk0720 Год назад +1

      ​@@MrKerry4371That's 4 more games than I'll ever attend. Due 2 "non-baseball" reasons (specifically how Comerica Bank conducts business), I have a personal boycott of Comerica Park bc of how the namesake bank treated me as a customer.

    • @MrKerry4371
      @MrKerry4371 Год назад +1

      @@billybandyk0720 your not missing anything at Comerica Park- it seems like only after 22 years, it's already outdated from what I have read. Sorry for your side note of dealing with the bank issues.

    • @billybandyk0720
      @billybandyk0720 Год назад

      @@MrKerry4371 Completely agreed. Bc of my personal issues w/"Blow-Me-Erica" (rhymes w/Comerica) Bank; NO 1 CAN PAY ME 2 STEP FOOT INSIDE THAT P.O.S. BALLPARK!!!!! Furthermore; it goes beyond personal RE: Comerica Bank/Park. When the L8, GR8 Mr. I (Mike Ilitch, Sr.) sought financial assistance in getting the ballpark built, ALL of the Michigan-based banks (including Comerica) FLAT-OUT REJECTED. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE 4 Mr. I; he obtained the financial assistance from Japan-based Sumitomo Bank. Down the line; Mr. I sold the naming rights 2 the ballpark 2 Comerica Bank. Here's my problem w/that; Comerica Bank wouldn't provide a loan 2 build the ballpark but can afford 2 put their name on it. @ that time; Comerica Bank's slogan was "We LISTEN; We UNDERSTAND; We MAKE IT WORK"!!!!! Ok; here's my translation of that slogan as it pertains 2 the loan 4 the ballpark as follows:
      We LISTEN 2 ALL OF THE FBS that Mr. I would NEVER SELL THE NAMING RIGHTS 2 THE BALLPARK!!!!!
      We UNDERSTAND THAT ALL OF THE MICHIGAN-BASED BANKS (including Comerica) FLAT-OUT REJECTED MR. I'S LOAN REQUEST 4 FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN BUILDING THE BALLPARK (only 2 obtain the loan from Japan-based Sumitomo Bank thereafter).
      Yet; Comerica Bank insists that WE MAKE IT WORK!!!!!
      Well; if Comerica Bank couldn't loan Mr. I the money 2 build the ballpark; they have NO RIGHT WHATSOEVER 2 PUT THEIR NAME ON IT!!!!! Furthermore; Comerica Bank was the 1st bank in Michigan 2 charge maintenance fees on their savings & checking accounts. The manner in how these fees were assessed made it impossible 4 me 2 maintain an account w/them. Moreover; Comerica Bank bought out Manufacturers Bank (that's where the blue trapezoid comes from; I was originally w/Manufacuturers Bank RE: my savings account). Another translation of the matter; it's like u build a model airplane & u sell it 2 me but I tell others that I made it myself. Same philosophy applies RE: Comerica Park. Comerica Bank wouldn't loan out the money 2 build the ballpark but decided 2 put their name on it anyway. From my stance; that's simply unethical. Again; I have my reasons as a4mentioned RE: Comerica Park & it's all bc Comerica Bank has NO INTEGRITY RE: their business practices/ethics. If I were 2 ever step foot in2 Comerica Park; I'd b supporting their unethical business. No, thanks! I don't support that FBS!!!!!

  • @xaviersaavedra7442
    @xaviersaavedra7442 Год назад +8

    I’m not even a tigers fan. And I didn’t even want this destroyed. I mean look at it. It is aesthetically pleasing

  • @baronvonglowered
    @baronvonglowered Год назад +6

    Jays fan here, loved this stadium--always felt you were on top of the play, snack bar on the second deck above us had a small fire which was quickly extinguished lol--good times

    • @DJMetzler337
      @DJMetzler337 5 месяцев назад +2

      I remember seeing Joe Carter and Robbie Alomar put up 14 runs on us one night in 1993 at Tiger Stadium. Jays fans always travelled well in the 90s. Always wanted to see a game at Skydome growing up.

  • @CreightonRabs
    @CreightonRabs Год назад +6

    I thought there was a rumor that Wayne State University was going to build a baseball stadium on the site of Tiger Stadium, but I could have misremembered that. In any event, the left field scoreboard from Tiger Stadium was restored and is now part of the "Green Monster" replica wall at Wayne State's new baseball stadium, Harwell Field, which is at Trumbull and Warren, about 2.3 miles north of the old Tiger Stadium site at Trumbull and Michigan.

  • @PeterPumkineter
    @PeterPumkineter 4 месяца назад +1

    I absolutely loved Tiger Stadium. I grew in Grand Rapids very easy to get to in driving. I really miss that. I got goose bumps everytime i walked in an 1905 built stadium. If id known that was gonna happen i would have built another baseball team in competition to the Tigers!

  • @ronpeacock9939
    @ronpeacock9939 Год назад +9

    Like many from that ERA, they were beautiful stadiums… and Aged Poorly? Stop smoking weed… the damn thing lasted for nearly 100 years.. .compared to stadiums in Texas and Atlanta, it lived a longer life than 3 stadiums in each location (plus.. still more years to come to get to Tiger Stadium).. I’d say it aged pretty dam well…

  • @royhruska2731
    @royhruska2731 5 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up in Cleveland. Tiger Stadium was the best stadium ever.
    Stopped a couple of years ago to see what was left. I saw the ghosts of Kaline, Gibson, Northrop, Lolich, Freehan etc. It was a good feeling. Really miss it. Most of all the voice of Harwell, Carey
    Go get ‘em Tigers

  • @DJMetzler337
    @DJMetzler337 5 месяцев назад +2

    I saw my first ever baseball game here in 1989 against the California Angels. I still get emotional each time I see Tiger Stadium because there is no baseball stadium like it. The way the catcher’s mitt echoed behind home plate. You could hear the loud pop. It felt like you were on the field. Loads of shade in many areas. I will never forget the chills I got when I got to walk the bases after the game in 1997 even though I was 14 and it was supposed to be kids 13 and younger. Those were the days!
    Only thing I hated were the terrible smelling urinal troughs.

  • @howie9751
    @howie9751 Год назад +5

    Luxury seats rule stadiums and arenas.

  • @spencera3075
    @spencera3075 Год назад +2

    Fenway Park & Tiger Stadium opened the same year, using the same building techniques. If you even suggested tearing down Fenway, they’d lynch you in Boston. In Detroit, they just let cool old buildings rot.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад

      The same day in fact.

  • @robertrockwell7581
    @robertrockwell7581 2 месяца назад +1

    I was on the Ground Crew from 1982 until 2010. Loved Tiger Stadium and hated it when it was torn down. lots of good times there. two years after we moved to Comerica Park Mike Ilitch the owner said he should have renovated Tiger Stadium.

  • @dontedrake2316
    @dontedrake2316 Год назад +2

    Used to be home of the Detroit lions in Michigan and Michigan State play the football game you should look that up great video keep up the great content 👍

  • @jamesdelap4085
    @jamesdelap4085 Год назад +5

    Reggie Jackson almost hit it out of this park in the 1971 ALL STAR game. . .Against the late Doc Ellis who said he was on LSD.

  • @lonniestephens6254
    @lonniestephens6254 Год назад +4

    It does make me sick that they dismantled the Historic Tiger Stadium!

  • @kevinfitzgerald1010
    @kevinfitzgerald1010 Год назад +5

    Upper deck bleachers were 50 cents in the 70's. It was always called the upper deck; not sure what you're on about there. Also, you can't compare it to Fenway. The Red Sox wanted for years to build a new, spacious park. But there's no way that would happen in Boston due to space, costs and litigation so they focused instead on maxing what could be done to Fenway. Detroit has endless open real estate to build from the ground up. Finally, the poles at Tiger Stadium ruined many a view. As much as I loved it, it was time to go, and in the end the city really couldn't afford anything but razing it entirely.

  • @StantonsJourneys
    @StantonsJourneys Год назад +2

    So sad that this was where I saw my first MLB game. It was such an amazing ballpark

  • @jamesmccarthy4777
    @jamesmccarthy4777 Год назад +1

    So glad to have been able to go to games at Tiger Stadium before it closed. Comerica Park is so dated and I will not cry when that's finally closed.

  • @jamesisenberg5909
    @jamesisenberg5909 Год назад +4

    In the 1980's I went to a game against the (then) California Angels. Prior to the game, Reggie Jackson was shagging balls in right field, and fans were tossing money on him (coins) from the right field overhang. That was in reaction to how much he was getting paid by the Angels : ) I was also there when he hit a home run over the roof.

  • @lionsfan7500
    @lionsfan7500 Год назад +4

    You didn't do research because they built a new grandstand and it's the The Corner Ballpark now. It's the home of the Detroit Police Athletic League and they have some big high school baseball games there. Therrs a grandstand built behind home plate with concessions and in the outfield there are nice looking townhouses.

  • @danmarsh5949
    @danmarsh5949 Год назад +2

    For most of the 1990s the lower-deck bleachers in center field had a blue curtain or tarp hanging from the upper deck, forming a hitter's eye. I don't recall if that curtain was there for the final game in 1999; I had to work and so ended up listening to the post-game ceremonies on the radio. I'm still salty about that.

  • @robertkeefer1552
    @robertkeefer1552 Год назад +4

    Lions and Tigers and demolished stadiums. Oh my! Sad to see that historic house demolished. I will always remember the home run by Reggie Jackson off the roof transformer at the 1971 All Star game.

  • @saints093
    @saints093 Год назад +2

    They could have renovated the rest of Tiger Stadium and maybe used it for high school baseball, I think that would have been an AWESOME thing to do with the remainder of Tiger Stadium

  • @StuntmanBeatz313
    @StuntmanBeatz313 Год назад +1

    born in 93, so my Tiger Stadium memories are extremely vague but I been there before.. The before, in between & after of that Michigan & Trumbull intersection are mind blowing.. the cobblestone roads are still there tho

  • @aaronnolff9029
    @aaronnolff9029 Год назад +3

    wish I want to tiger Stadium but here is the good thing me my mom and brother was visiting Michigan from California and my aunt and uncle was like let's go into tiger Stadium so we tried in the 7th inning but couldn't get inside so we went back to the pickup truck and from there we was listening to Al Kaline and Ernie Harwell on the radio we was right by tiger Stadium listening to the game on the radio that was a cool thing right there and looking at Tiger Stadium this was in 1992 and being from Oakland California was cool because all my family members are tigers fans even my two little nephews but they are from California like me but me I am a big Oakland A's fan but if the A's do move to Las Vegas I might be a Tigers fan but back in the day my uncle who is in California to told me that my aunts and uncles used to go to Tiger Stadium even my older cousins to and my uncle used to Chase my older cousins around the stadium I did go by Comerica Park when I was last in Michigan in 2000 that was cool to see

    • @wmw3629
      @wmw3629 Год назад +2

      Keep the A’s in Oakland!!

  • @stevekendra8983
    @stevekendra8983 12 дней назад

    I only saw one game at tiger stadium as a kid. We were in the lower deck in the middle row just past 3rd base. The Tigers won against the Royals. Looking back i didn't appreciate the fact I was in one of the most iconic venues watching some of the greatest Tigers like Alan Trammell, Lou Whitiker, Cecil Fielder, etc. Later when I was with one of my best friends from college, we visited the site during demolition. There were just a few sections of the grandstand left.

  • @howie9751
    @howie9751 Год назад +2

    Never got to see Tiger Stadium. Old Comiskey, Ebbets Field, the Polo Grounds and the original Yankee Stadium. Couldn't find any other reason to get to Detroit but I was trying to plan it when Comerica was built.

  • @RobMcDougall
    @RobMcDougall Год назад +17

    Opened the same day as Fenway, could have been saved but for greed.
    EDIT: Also, they tore up the grass and now the "surviving field" is artificial turf, absolutely criminal.

    • @kentstallard6512
      @kentstallard6512 Год назад

      Tiger Stadium had none of the quirky charm of Fenway.
      Good riddance.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад

      why do you hate baseball@@kentstallard6512

  • @KvnHcks
    @KvnHcks Год назад +1

    RIP Tigers Stadium and the Palace

  • @frankproscia1656
    @frankproscia1656 Год назад +7

    This was a great stadium. Very unique in its way. It could have been saved and still be used as an MLB stadium. Damn shame.

  • @getx1265
    @getx1265 Год назад

    Anyone else remember an old Marlboro ad (early/mid 60s) featuring Paul Hornung standing in a trench coat by one of those upright supports in the stands, relaxing while smoking a Marlboro as a narrator reminisced about a previous outstanding game he had played at Tiger Stadium? Loved those great old ads featuring sports heroes

  • @StewieGriffin111
    @StewieGriffin111 Год назад +1

    There is actually a small multi purpose “stadium” on the lot now

  • @rayrussell6258
    @rayrussell6258 Год назад +1

    Moot point about the corporate suites location. Tiger Stadium was torn down because the city of Detroit was basically bankrupt at the time. They had no money to maintain the facility. The city couldn't keep its street lights on or tear down residential blight, much less maintain a steel 100-year-old structure. I attended many games in Tiger Stadium later in life, long after I became a Tiger fan in the 1968 season. I've been to one game at the new field. It's just not the same, I won't go again. The city wanted to get football back downtown, and that was the nail in the coffin that drove baseball to be relocated to a joint complex with Ford Field. They got corporate money to help that joint project.

  • @reesejabs1895
    @reesejabs1895 Год назад +7

    It's a real shame that Tiger Stadium's replacement, Comerica Park, is such a bland ballpark.

    • @jonstefanik9400
      @jonstefanik9400 Год назад +1

      Although with Comerica Park you do get a view of Downtown Detroit.

    • @ThyPandora
      @ThyPandora Год назад +1

      @@jonstefanik9400 Also, you're below street level watching games too... which allows for that skyline view from the stadium.
      Maybe not with the upper deck seating plus suites, but with the lower bowl, you're below the street level watching games.

    • @kevinfitzgerald1010
      @kevinfitzgerald1010 Год назад +2

      The insistence on having generous dimensions was the biggest mistake. Camden Yards had been open for several years by then; it's as if the designers took no lessons from it.

    • @wanderer34
      @wanderer34 Год назад +1

      Tiger Stadium was actually the oldest ballpark in MLB, even slightly older than Fenway Park. What would’ve been had Tiger Stadium been preserved…

  • @jamiejones3253
    @jamiejones3253 3 месяца назад +1

    My first game ever was at Tiger Stadium it was great. Wish it could have been saved.

  • @PaleBlueDot2
    @PaleBlueDot2 Год назад +8

    It looks like a multi purpose stadium tbh

  • @martincaidin4166
    @martincaidin4166 Год назад +1

    There was no batter's eye screen in that stadium. Weird.

  • @freethinkerrr2897
    @freethinkerrr2897 Год назад +1

    Tearing down Tiger Stadium was criminal. Those city council people should be ashamed. It should have been kept as a Baseball shrine.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад

      Considering they didn't have enough money to fund the fire department at the time, I don't think saving a 90 year old ballpark was real high on the docket. It sucks but there was nothing anyone could have done, short of a Bill Gates type rolling in and buying up the entire thing.

  • @domwings4329
    @domwings4329 19 дней назад

    I remember going to a game there I was about 11 and I think it was the last season there. It was a free ticket and that meant I was sitting behind one of the pillars which obstructed my view considerably

  • @martincoronado9232
    @martincoronado9232 Год назад +1

    No I’m not really a baseball fan. I have to admit that tiger stadium has a field for an English Premier league soccer stadium. One of the features of that is a usually most English Premier stadium especially the older ones are surrounded by city or community so they don’t just feel like a stadium, but rather personal grounds.

  • @Nhamp2000
    @Nhamp2000 3 месяца назад

    Still haven't warmed uo to Comerica. It has all the charm and nuance of a food court.

  • @herchelleonwood7463
    @herchelleonwood7463 Год назад +1

    and the Juice ran for 273 yards here in a 1976 game,,and Buffalo still only scored 14 points.

  • @herchelleonwood7463
    @herchelleonwood7463 Год назад +1

    Tiger stadium was uncomfortable, but a GREAT place to see a game for 40,000 people,,another 10,000 or so seats had restricted views mostly behind posts,,the upper deck almost felt like you were on top of the field, because you were !.Tiger Stadium should have been saved just like Fenway and Wrigley Field were,,, SOMEONE REALLY DROPPED THE BALL ON THIS ONE !!

  • @Gary_C
    @Gary_C Год назад +1

    Why don't modern stadiums build the upper decks over the lower decks like that? I'm sure we have the materials and engineering now to do it without the support beams.

    • @RobertShubitowski
      @RobertShubitowski 4 месяца назад

      People in the lower deck can't track balls hit into the air if they are sitting under an overhang. What they see is a ball hit, but they have no idea where it is going until it lands or is caught.

  • @brendas.1374
    @brendas.1374 Месяц назад +2

    Tiger Stadium > Comerica Park

  • @a.d.ggaming1877
    @a.d.ggaming1877 Год назад +2

    If it had survived a few more yrs it'll probably b still here . The big boom n Detroit happened a few yrs later

  • @GlennJackson-d8e
    @GlennJackson-d8e 4 месяца назад +2

    It is sad that luxury boxes are more important than the hardcore fans.

  • @karlcarolan6875
    @karlcarolan6875 4 месяца назад

    I remember Bo Schembecler said you can't shackle the team to the rusting hulk that tiger stadium had become . The amount of salt used to keep people safe during the football season ruined it internally . My Harper Woods little league team played on the field after the stadium was torn down. My St. Louis Cardinals tied the Tigers in a very closely contested game.

  • @Springbok314
    @Springbok314 Месяц назад

    Heck they demolished 40 year old Joe Louis arena and the even newer place where the Pistons used to play way out in the suburbs.

  • @brandonkropp7769
    @brandonkropp7769 19 дней назад

    All three of Detroit's new stadiums are depressing. But its very nice to have a downtown resurgence. City needs a winner. Go Lions!

  • @SRTV580
    @SRTV580 Год назад

    There's a stadium there now, it's much smaller but it's called "The Corner Ballpark" and is used for youth sports.

  • @Mr.MikeBarksdale
    @Mr.MikeBarksdale Год назад

    I've been to 41 different MLB stadiums. I caught the end of the 1990s when all the stadiums were being changed. Tiger Stadium was BY FAR my favorite stadium. My dad and I both caught a ball there in 1999. Not as trendy and yuppie as Wrigley or Fenway, and so charming. I will NEVER go to a game at Comerica Park or whatever park they play in now. Think about this: the first week for games at Tiger Stadium was the week of the Titanic sinking.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад

      Fenway also opened on the same day.

  • @OldRustySteele
    @OldRustySteele Год назад

    Wish I had a chance to go to Tiger Stadium, but never did. Been to quite a few of both the old and current stadia, but never been to either one in Motown.

  • @100chuckjones
    @100chuckjones 11 месяцев назад

    doing a great job on these videos.

  • @adventurerhoades
    @adventurerhoades 21 день назад

    Shame they didn't save it. Fenway, & Wrigley sell out often just because of nostalgic park. We could of been in that group

  • @chuckinhouston9952
    @chuckinhouston9952 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @cjones3710
    @cjones3710 Год назад +2

    I hate baseball moved from Memorial Stadium, Yankee Stadium, and Tiger stadium. Old parks are better more affordable. Less crap in them. Silly things. Led board, blinky WWF lighting and adverts glowing

  • @devonbrooks246
    @devonbrooks246 Год назад +2

    I don't know why Tigers can't preserve some of the field and make a museum or memorial for historical purposes? This is where Ty Cobb played, and the home of the 1968 and 1984 World Series Champions. Keep the field and use it for amateur leagues and dress it up with historic Tigers memorabilia.

    • @Knightmessenger
      @Knightmessenger Год назад

      That's kinda what happened with the new development there. The Corner Ballpark as it's called.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад

      That's like, almost precisely what happened. Are you new?

  • @Knightmessenger
    @Knightmessenger Год назад

    I feel very fortunate to have seen many games there including the final in 1999.
    It was a shame more of it wasnt saved since a new grandstand ultimately ended up being built behind home plate anyway. But the city was very corrupt at the time.
    Comerica Park is in a great location and is nice to walk around but the sightlines are terrible, maybe the worst of any baseball only stadium built after Camden Yards. Hard to think of a more dramtic contrast between seat views of two ballparks in the same city or team.

  • @tonecot8932
    @tonecot8932 Год назад +1

    They should have converted it into a minor league stadium or for a local colleges baseball team.

  • @romeoalpha68
    @romeoalpha68 4 месяца назад

    Navin Field , Briggs Stadium , Tiger Stadium , I wish they could have saved the Stadium . Like Fenway and Wrigley Field .
    Unfortunately it wasn't in the cards .

  • @SuperSportsFan17
    @SuperSportsFan17 Год назад

    That was the original plan was supposed to keep that section up for high school games and add a few more lights. the city was dumb to demolish the whole thing...

  • @frankisfunny2007
    @frankisfunny2007 11 месяцев назад

    Technically, while Tiger Stadium around it is long gone, the field is still there. As well is being used for high school use.

  • @cpfishfan14
    @cpfishfan14 Год назад +1

    could have being an mls stadium