Thursday, September 28 Past greats bid farewell to 'old friend' Associated Press |
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MILWAUKEE -- Warren Spahn and Del Crandall helped the Brewers close down Milwaukee County Stadium, a ballpark the pair helped open in 1953.
"It was here that boys became men," Uecker said. "And men became champions, and champions became legends."
Spahn, the winningest left-hander in baseball history with 363 victories, on Thursday threw the ceremonial first pitch to Crandall, his batterymate on opening day with the Milwaukee Braves 48 years ago.
"It's like the curtain's falling," said Spahn, 79, who tossed a two-bouncer from about 30 feet away Thursday. "The party's over."
Spahn and Crandall, who managed the Brewers from 1972-75 after his playing days were done, were among more than 40 former Brewers, Braves and Green Bay Packers taking part in the festivities. The Brewers move next year to Miller Park, under construction beyond County Stadium's outfield fence.
Hank Aaron was the first one introduced in a postgame celebration following Cincinnati's 8-1 victory. He was decked out in his old Milwaukee Braves uniform.
Willie Davis, a defensive end with the great Green Bay teams of the 1960s, was next and rumbled around with a football tucked under his arm.
Hall of Famer Robin Yount rode in on his Harley-Davidson motorcycle and circled the field just like he did after the 1982 World Series.
When all were introduced, they formed a human chain from second base to center field and a flag with the County Stadium logo was passed down from Bernie Brewer's chalet, through the stands and all the way to the mound.
Yount handed the flag to Brewers shortstop Mark Loretta.
"Each of us has touched this flag, symbolic of how County Stadium has touched us," Yount said. "Don't ever forget where it all started."
Loretta said nobody would.
"County Stadium has served us well and we will never forget her," he said. "But, oh, will it be sweet across the street."
"So long, old friend," he said.
The record regular-season crowd of 57,354 toted cameras and camcorders, shared memories, shed tears and downed bratwursts and brews on a cloudless day that only grew cold in the ninth, when they stood and shouted and snapped photos as if it were Game 7 of the World Series.
They had little to cheer about before that, save for Olympic hero Ben Sheets.
Sheets, the Brewers' top minor league pitching prospect, shut out Cuba in the gold medal game at Sydney, Australia. He emerged from the dugout with his medal dangling from his neck and waved to the crowd as it chanted, "U-S-A! U-S-A!"
The crowd also went crazy over the final sausage race, which the bratwurst won, incidentally, by a casing over the Italian sausage.
Some came to say goodbye to the old place; others to say good riddance.
"I think I speak for all the guys who played here in the last five years when I say I'm glad to see it go," outfielder Jeromy Burnitz said.
The stadium, the nation's first publicly financed ballpark, was built in the early 1950s for $4.8 million -- about what Burnitz made this season alone. And it was constructed at a time when no major league team had moved since 1901.
One look at the place lured the Braves from Boston and sparked pro sports' great westward migration.
The Braves, who won the '57 World Series, were the first NL team to draw 2 million fans and never had a losing season in Milwaukee. But they bolted for the Deep South after the 1965 season.
Four years later, Bud Selig led a group that bought the Seattle Pilots out of bankruptcy court and returned America's pastime to Brew City.
The Brewers won the '82 AL pennant but lost the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals 4-3. In 1998, they became the first team to switch leagues since 1892, returning Milwaukee to its NL roots.
But hard times befell them. Eight straight losing seasons and the 1994 players' strike thinned the crowds.
The Packers pulled up stakes in 1994 after playing a portion of their home schedule at County Stadium for 41 seasons.
Demolition begins next week at the old ballpark.
The new $394 million stadium, with its retractable roof, was to open this year, but the project was delayed after a crane collapse killed three ironworkers on July 14, 1999.
Along a chain link fence between the old ballpark and the new one, somebody placed three bouquets of flowers Thursday. |
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