Tag Archive | "Ozzie"

I miss Jack

“I miss Jack Buck”.

Still to this day, those words are the one’s I feel define my writing.  An article I wrote for the now closed Baseball Digest site took that theme.  It was in Spring Training and I realized the game just did not sound the same.  That article, more than any other, has shown my heart and soul towards this game on every level.

 Read my thoughts on Jack from last year here on i70 as well as my original work for Baseball Digest on Going 9 Baseball’s site.  The original work, both the I Miss Jack Buck article and an interview with Christine Buck can be read by clicking the respective links.

This year marks the tenth anniversary of the day heaven gained a legendary announcer and we all lost a golden voice.  Last night, during my weekly Seamheads podcast, Gateway To Baseball Heaven, Daniel Shoptaw reminded me of the anniversary.  I reminded everyone just what that anniversary was.

For many people around the world, they lost a lot of things when Jack Buck passed away.  Most remember the war hero, the poet, the author and of course the announcer.  Fans around the nation and the world lost a storyteller that had very few parallels within his peers.

For myself and many others, there was something more.  We lost a friend.

I remember that day 10 years ago, when the news was announced that Jack had left us.  I remember, for the first time in my life, I wept over a baseball figure.

I grew up with this game.  I watched “my team” lose the 1985 and 1987 World Series.  I suffered through horrible stretches of players and games.  I watched as a new generation of legends took over the game.  I watched as players that were involved in the tales that Jack himself would spin were no longer around, having departed this world and the game and I was seemingly unphased.

I teared up when Ozzie retired.  It shook me to my roots when the Cardinals took the field days after the events of September 11, 2001.  I was emotional when I said goodbye to a man known by many as The Mayor Of The Bleachers, the first real friend that I had developed because of this game.  Never before, however, had I openly lost control of my emotions over someone that I had never personally spent any time with.

That was Jack.  Through the years of radio listening, television watching and bonding with my father over this game that grown men play, Jack was always there.  For countless months every summer, nights when I was supposed to be asleep, and days that were too hot to fathom, Jack Buck was my companion.

He was real.  You never got the impression that Jack was not genuine.  He wore his heart on his sleeve.  He was professional and forthcoming yet a fan at the same time.  He was the expert in the room and the guy sitting next to you at the bar at the same time.

Time heals all wounds.  We find new friends and we move on when there is loss.  The Cardinals will employ many different announcers in my lifetime alone.  The game will evolve and change and somewhere along the lines a new legend will assume the role behind the microphone.  I’m not sure it will ever change anything for me.

I still miss Jack Buck.

Bill Ivie is the editor here at I-70 Baseball
He is the host of I-70 Radio, hosted every week on BlogTalkRadio.
Follow him on Twitter here.

Posted in Cardinals, Classic, FeaturedComments (1)

Ozzie’s Shadow

In sports, music, and entertainment, legends come along every so often that need only a first name. The Babe, Pele, Madonna (or Lady Gaga’s mom as many of my friends commented during the Super Bowl), Usher, Prince, P Diddy/Daddy/Dandy or whatever the latest name is. If we are talking about basketball and I say “MJ”, you immediately know who I am referring to. If we are talking music, and I say “MJ” you know immediately who I mean.

In sports, those one-name figures cast a shadow so large that it takes a long time before it feels right to watch anyone else play “their” position on “their” team. I was flipping through the channels just the other day, and stopped on the Chicago Bulls game for just a few minutes. Derrick Rose is one of the NBA’s best players, no question about it. For me, it still just does not feel right watching a Bulls superstar not named Michael, even though he has not worn a Bulls jersey since 1996.

In Cardinal Nation, there is a larger-than-life player that also walked away from the game in 1996. He also needs only one name to be remembered; of course I am talking about Ozzie. Ozzie (Smith) was Rookie of the Year in 1978, won an astounding 13-straight Gold Gloves from 1980-1992, played in 15 All-Star Games, was runner-up MVP in 1987 despite not hitting one home run, and was eventually voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. In what I consider the most telling stat, Ozzie led the team in WAR (wins above replacement) each season from 1983-1995 (check out Derek Goold’s piece for a great read on this). No other Cardinal has led the team in WAR that many consecutive seasons.

*Quick sidenote: Just as a means of showing the effect of inflation and free-agency on the game, Ozzie made $31.5M during his 15 seasons with the Cardinals.

More than incredible stats, he was the face of the Whiteyball era, and provided 15 years of excellent shortstop play that has not been matched since. He was the back-flip to start the game. He was the guy that kept you glued to the TV not knowing just what he might do next. It still does not feel quite right to me watching anyone else play shortstop for the Cardinals. It takes time to fill the shoes of the legend…actually that is not correct…it takes time to be OK with them not being filled. Ozzie’s shadow still looms large.

This article will look briefly at Ozzie’s career, the shortstops since Ozzie, and what we can reasonably expect from the shortstop position this season with Rafael Furcal as the starter.

During Ozzie’s 15 years with the Cardinals, he had 1944 hits, 644 RBIs, 433 SBs, and a .272 BA. He was the perfect offensive spark during the Whiteyball era of manufacuring runs. Let’s take 1995 and 1996 (age 40 and 41 seasons) out of the equation for a minute and look at average production between 1982-1994.

During those years Ozzie averaged the following line per season:

Ozzie Smith 1982-1994

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

521      72     25    4      2        49      32    64   .273

While these are good offensive numbers, he would not be a Hall-of-Famer simply based on this offensive production alone.

Average WAR 1982-94: 4.42      Total WAR 1982-94: 57.5

WAR by Season

1982: 4.0   1983: 3.0   1984: 4.4   1985: 5.7   1986: 5.3   1987: 7.1   1988: 5.5   1989: 6.3   1990: 2.8   1991: 4.7   1992: 4.3

1993: 2.5   1994: 1.9

WAR factors in defensive play (runs saved above replacement level), and Ozzie’s D was a huge factor in his outstanding WAR levels during his Cardinal years. Only once since he retired has a Cardinal shortstop (Edgar Renteria 2003) had a season WAR higher than Ozzie’s average WAR as a Cardinal. No Cardinal shortstop has topped his season total of 7.1 in 1987. That is impressive.

Here are the season averages for shortstops post-Ozzie. If they were the primary starter all year, only their stats will be measured. If multiple players started a significant number of games, their numbers will be combined for the year(s) being measured. All stat lines are an average per season of the year(s) measured.

Royce Clayton 1997

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

576     75      39    5      9         61     30   33   .266

WAR: 2.6

Royce Clayton, Luis Ordaz, David Howard 1998

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

546      83      25    2      6        49     21    64   .214

WAR: -1.5

Edgar Renteria 1999-2004

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

560      83      35    2     12      75      25   51   .290

Average WAR 1999-2004: 3.0      Total WAR 1999-2004: 18

WAR by Season

1999: 1.4   2000: 2.2   2001: 1.2   2002: 4.2   2003: 6.5   2004: 2.5

David Eckstein 2005-2006

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

565      79      22    4     5         42     9      43    .293

Average WAR 2005-2006: 3.2      Total WAR 2005-2006: 6.4

WAR by Season

2005: 4.2   2006: 2.2

David Eckstein, Brendan Ryan 2007

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

614      88      32     0     7        43      17   39   .302

WAR: 3.2

Cesar Izturis, Brendan Ryan 2008

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

611       80     19     3      1        34      31   45    .264

WAR: 1.8

Brendan Ryan, Julio Lugo, Tyler Greene 2009

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

646       88     33     11    7       57     23   45    .277

WAR: 3.9

Brendan Ryan, Tyler Greene 2010

AB        R       2B    3B   HR    RBI    SB   BB   Avg

543     64     24     3      3         46     22   46    .223

WAR: 1.4

Ryan Theriot, Nick Punto, Daniel Descalso, Rafael Furcal 2011

2011 saw each of these four guys start at shortstop at some point. Everyone but Descalso saw significant playing time at another infield position so short of going through 162 box scores, there is no easy way to split out production from shortstop position for 162 games. For the sake of this article, we will look at the WAR totals for each of the four players that manned the position at some point

Theriot 2011 WAR: 0.00    NIck Punto 2011 WAR: 1.5   Descalso 2011 WAR: 1.2   Furcal 2011 WAR: 1.4

The numbers above show the Cardinals have not received anywhere near the production at shortstop they had during the Ozzie years. Save a couple of Renteria’s seasons and one of Eckstein’s, the Cardinals shortstops have produced at average to below-average levels.

Cardinal fans hope that changes in 2012. Reversing that trend falls on the shoulders of Rafael Furcal. He will have the opportunity to be the everyday shortstop this season, and gives the Cardinals a prototypical leader hitter they have not had in a number of years.

While Furcal will certainly not be Ozzie this year (age 34 season), he does provide hope for good, consistent play that is long overdue at shortstop. If he can stay healthy and approach career norms, he could give the Cardinals better production at the position than they have since 2003. Going back to Furcal’s rookie season of 2000, he has posted the following WAR totals in seasons where he has been healthy:

2000: 3.6   2002: 2.1   2003: 4.9   2004: 2.6   2005: 5.9   2006: 3.0   2007:  1.3   2009: 2.4   2010:  3.8  

A return to 2010 production would exceed the average of the Renteria, Eckstein, and Clayton years. A return to 2005 production, while very unlikely at age 34, would be the best season for a Cardinal shortstop since 2003 and 1989 before that.

Ozzie’s shadow still looms large over the Cardinal shortstop position. He was a once-in-a-generation shortstop. We may never see another like him wear the birds on the bat. But there is hope at shortstop for the 2012 season. There is also a kid by the name of Ryan Jackson that will be at Memphis this year. He is pretty darn good, and will have his chance to be the shortstop of the future. Ozzie’s shoes can never be filled. Furcal and Jackson, however, could be a significant upgrade over what the Cardinals have seen for the last 15 seasons.

Posted in Cardinals, Classic, FeaturedComments (2)

The Game Does Not Sound The Same

It was 1985 when I moved to Missouri. A magical season that captured my attention. Two teams from my new home state would reach the pinnacle of the game I loved.

Until that year, I was a baseball fan. I had liked various teams in my youth and followed others closely, even at my young age. I had baseball cards and favorite players. I played ball in my back yard imaging what it must be like to be on that field. I envisioned larger than life men playing that game along side of me. That year changed the way I saw the game. That year I became a consistent observer of the Royals and adopted them as my “step-team”. That year, I became a Cardinal fan.

I have been asked many times why I became a fan of this team? Why I write about this game? Why I do so many radio appearances and host my own show? All of those answers are remarkably answered with the same two words.

Jack Buck.

It was Jack that taught me how to see this game the right way. His voice over the airwaves, the smooth transition from play to interview and back again. The genuine excitement in his voice over the game he loved. I loved the game beyond belief but when I heard the voice of Jack Buck and the way he described the simple action before him, it became magical. It took on a trait that I never knew was possible. A ground ball to deep short was seemingly fielded in left field and would manage to appear in the first baseman’s glove before the runner could reach safely. Home runs were majestic moon shots that would all but disappear in the night sky. Line drives must have had fire coming off of them. The players themselves floated around the field.

While the game seemed full of magic as I got lost in his voice, the images in my mind were so real I could imagine sitting in the stands. The magical description translated into my mind into a film reel of exact science. I could picture right where Ozzie stood on the field when he unleashed a throw that most shortstops would never attempt and still get his man. I could picture the seat a home run landed in and how much beer was left in the cup being held by the guy who caught it.

Jack Buck began his career in St. Louis in 1954 along side Harry Carray after graduating from Ohio State. Prior to college, Buck was a decorated war veteran of World War II. His fifteen years with Harry Carray would become the launching pad of two hall of fame caliber careers and endless memories for a generation of baseball fans who relied on the radio to bring them their beloved game of baseball.

In the 1960′s Buck had left for a year to broadcast football but would return and continue his work for the mighty KMOX out of St. Louis. He would also miss a year in the 1970′s as he tried to launch his own show on CBS. Ultimately, it was his pairing with former Cardinals outfielder Mike Shannon in the 70′s that would lead to the team that many remember vividly.

While Jack called World Series (8), Super Bowls (17), and various other sports broadcasts, it was his calls of Kirk Gibson’s home run in the 1988 World Series and Ozzie Smith’s 1985 NLCS home run that are most remembered. Perhaps it was the magestic voice that told us after 34 years in the booth that he “can’t believe what I just saw” for Gibson. Maybe it was the 31 year veteran of the booth that showed that he too was a fan when Ozzie launched a home run into right field and all the golden voice could say was “Go crazy folks! Go crazy!”. He would again show that he respected, loved and was a fan of the game when Mark McGwire broke the single season home run record when he simply asked the audience “Pardon me while I stand and applaud.”

For many of us Cardinal fans, Jack is the voice in the background of our memories. He is the announcer in our memories of the team. He was the reason we took small radios to the baseball game. Personally, I fell asleep to the sound of Jack describing the game far more times than I fell asleep to a bed time story or reading a book. My father loved the game and he taught me to love it too. My father drew the picture, Jack filled it with enough color to last a lifetime.

In the early 2000′s it became public knowledge that Jack was suffering from Parkinson’s disease. It would keep him off the road and limit the number of games fans would hear him. It would turn him, physically, into a shell of the man he once was. When baseball returned to action after the horrific events of September 11, 2001, he stood on the field and delivered a poem that left very few dry eyes in the crowd. Very few people knew what to make of it. The sound of his voice saying “Should we be here? YES!” was a resounding call to all of America.

It was nine years ago today, June 18, 2002 that the world lost Jack Buck. The majestic voice was gone. The booth in St. Louis would find a new inhabitant soon. No one would ever compare. No one could even try.

In one of my first articles I wrote for Baseball Digest I wrote the phrase “I miss Jack Buck”. That phrase is as true today as it was then. Last year I had the privelage of visitng with his daughter, Christine, and you can read that here.

The game simply doesn’t sound the same anymore.

Bill Ivie is the editor here at I-70 Baseball as well as the Assignment Editor for BaseballDigest.com.
He is the host of I-70 Radio, hosted every week on BlogTalkRadio.com.
Follow him on Twitter here.

Posted in Cardinals, ClassicComments (1)

UCB Round Table: Day 5 – Cardinal Memories

Every season, the United Cardinal Bloggers feature round table discussions with the members of the group, featuring a question from each website, and answers from various bloggers willing to participate. It is Day 5 of the round tables (you can read all of the round table discussions on the official site) and that means I-70 Baseball gets to participate. Here is the email that I sent out to the group for discussion:

As a young man growing up in Missouri, my father took me to a lot of Cardinal games. We were “Bleacher Bums” and would spend hours at the stadium waiting to get tickets (back then, bleachers went on sale 2 hours before game time). I was an autograph hound and would meet the visiting ball players as they walked across the street from the Marriott. I collected autographs in this manor from the time I was 8 years old until I moved out of my parents’ house and no longer went to as many games.

Throughout those years I seen Ozzie do countless backflips, I seen Felix Jose hit a home run that struck the right field scoreboard above my head, I met the “Mayor Of The Bleachers” and listened for hours to his memories, I seen the arrival and departure of more players than I can count that would wear the birds on the bat, and I now have countless stories that I share through the “Classic” sections of the sites I write for.

For today’s roundtable, I ask you to dig deep into your memories. I want to know a Cardinal memory that you have. One of those moments that meant something to you, even if it wasn’t a historical moment to the rest of the world. It doesn’t have to be a World Series win or a playoff walk-off, it can be anything that you remember vividly and can say “I was there for that” or “I was watching that” or even “I saw it through Jack Buck’s eyes on the radio”. Here, I’ll give you one of mine to start with:

Bill Ivie – i70baseball
Andres Galarraga had joined the Cardinals as a very huge acquisition in a trade with the Montreal Expos for pitcher Ken Hill. Galarraga had one year left on his contract and the Cards hoped to catch lightning in a bottle with the “Big Cat”. Renovations had just been completed at Busch Stadium that brought the fences in a little, installed shrubs and flowers along the walls, and placed a large grassy area in the center field “batter’s eye”. Galarraga was hit by a pitch early in the year and sidelined with a fractured bone in his wrist or hand, I honestly do not remember which. When he came off the Disabled List, many fans, announcers and writers started making a big deal out of the fact that he had never hit a home run in St. Louis. With my father, my mother, and I sitting in the bleachers in right field, Galarraga launched his first Busch Stadium Home Run into the center field grassy area. My father jumped the wall and retrieved the ball, bringing it back to me to jump up and down with. A few minutes later, security arrived and escorted my dad, and my souvenir, to a small area near the bathrooms. He was given the option of forfeiting his seat and the ball and being allowed to sit in the very last row of bleachers and stay for the game. If he chose to keep the ball, they would press charges for trespassing as he entered a restricted area of the stadium in order to retrieve the ball. Despite my objections, he turned the ball over to security and took his assigned seat. Galarraga left as a free agent at the end of that season, having hit only 10 home runs in a Cardinal uniform, and heading to Colorado to hit 172 of his 399 career bombs. But, for a brief moment, I held the first one he ever hit in St. Louis in my hands.

Pip – fungoes
In high school, my friends and I sneaked and fibbed our way to any place at Busch Stadium where were weren’t allowed to be, which was usually anywhere but the upper deck. After getting kicked out of the box seats, we got the wild idea to try to meet legendary organist Ernie Hays. After the game, we sweet-talked our way to his booth, where he received us like we were old pals. We asked him about the music he played for the various players, and I asked him if he remembered what he played for Keith Hernandez, who hadn’t been with the team for several years. “Let’s see,” he said. “Ah, yes, it was Jethro Tull — Thick as a Brick.” You just can’t get that kind of info from the internet.

Daniel Shoptaw – C70 At The Bat
There are a lot of memories in my years of following the Cardinals. We went to a few games when I was growing up back in the late ’80s. I actually made it to a Cardinals/Cubs game in ’02, I believe, with Mark Prior on the mound for the Cubbies. There was Ken Griffey Jr.’s #500th home run, and of course the amazingly great memories made this season at the Social Media Extravaganza.

Still, probably the most lasting of memories came from one of those trips to St. Louis when I was growing up. We usually stayed for 2-3 games and, one year, it was camera day back at the old cookie cutter they called Busch Stadium back then (and we lovingly refer to as Busch II nowadays). It must have been ’89, the summer before my ninth grade year, and was on the field behind the ropes with my parents and brother.
I still have a lot of those pictures. Guys that just passed through like Tom Brunansky. The old Redhead, shaking hands. Willie McGee, Vince Coleman, Joe Magrane. Even Fredbird got into the action. Looking back on those pictures now really is a kick.
However, there is one picture that got more prominence. Because all the Cardinals participated in this event, and that meant my hero.
When Ozzie Smith walked around to that spot, numerous kids ducked under the ropes to have their picture taken with him, and I was no exception. Granted, I was about 5-6 years older than the rest of them, but this was Ozzie Smith!
Being around Ozzie’s height worked out, because as he gathers all these kids together, he says, “Where’re we looking?”. I pointed straight to my mother, who was taking the picture, so that Ozzie and I are looking in the same spot while the other kids were looking away at their parents. I wonder how many of them still have that picture and wonder who that goofy kid in the middle was?

That memory got a new tint last summer. After spending the day at FanFest, my wife and kids joined a friend of mine and his family at Ozzie’s restaurant. While we were there, Ozzie actually came in and sat in a private room right behind our table and talked to my son for a while. When Ozzie left, he stopped by our table to say thanks for coming, and I was able to get him to pose with my son. So now both of us have a picture with the Wizard.

Mark Tomasik – RetroSimba
The Glenn Brummer steal of home with two outs in the 12th inning to beat the Giants in St. Louis on Aug. 22, 1982.

I was with two buddies in the third-to-last row from the top of the upper deck behind home plate at Busch Stadium II on that Sunday afternoon. The game was in extra innings and it looked like it might get away from the Cardinals. The steal was so unexpected and so startling that we literally were awestruck. Then, everyone around us started hugging and high-fiving one another and bouncing up and down, total strangers just letting loose and reveling in the joy. The celebration carried on for quite a while as the crowd spilled into downtown St. Louis. The straight steal of home by a reserve catcher to win a game was so emblematic of that ’82 Cardinals season: full of hope and spirit and a sense that anything was possible. It carried right on through the World Series. Pretty special.

Dustin McClure – Welcome To Baseball Heaven
My girlfriend’s Aunt and Uncle had been discussing making the trip to St. Louis to visit us from out of state and bringing their kids (Sonnie 8, Kail 5) so they could attend their first major league baseball game. The time chosen to visit was in the middle of June when the Oakland A’s would be in town. We attended the Saturday night game which was the 2nd game of the series and featured Adam Wainwright on the mound. Our tickets were in the 5th row of the right field bleachers next to the Cardinal’s bullpen.

I’ve never seen as much joy in a 5 year olds eyes as I did in Kail’s the first time we came to the top of the steps to our section and the Busch Stadium playing field was in his view. I tried not to steal too much thunder from his Dad but I had such a great time explaining everything I could to Kail as the game progressed. Filling his head with way more information then he could handle I’m sure.

Going into the bottom half of the sixth Blake Hawksworth appeared from the Cardinal pen to warm up right fielder Ryan Ludwick. As Blake made his way back towards the pen he made eye contact with Kail’s Dad and pointed at Kail as he threw the ball. And with that young Kail took home a lifetime memory that he and his Dad can share for years to come. I was just glad to be a part of it.

Tom Knuppel – Cardinals GM
September 29, 1963, my older brother took me to Stan Musial’s last game. I didn’t realize the significance at the time but knew something was big. The commissioner spoke along with Gussie Busch. I knew it was a long ceremony. Then the game and I remember the loud and raucous cheer for “The Man” every time he batted. Musial had 2 hits that day. I didn’t know till later when I read it later, as I was 11 years old when I attended but Gary Kolb was the pinch runner after Stan’s 2nd hit of the game.I still have the ticket stub for the game!

The other two do not have dates as they are random happenings. I live 3 hours from St Louis and my parents allowed me, a 16 yr old kid, to take 2 friends for the entire weekend several times a year. Now remember, this was the 60′s and we didn’t view the world as a scary place. We always went for take your camera on the field day and things like that. On one game day we got there early , as usual, and watched batting practice. One of my friends dropped his comb accidentally over the center field wall. Gerry McNertney stuck it in his glove and threw his glove up to me to retrieve the comb. For a split second or two we looked at each other and thought about making a run for it with his glove but thought the better of it.

Another weekend we had 2 experiences. The first was away from Busch Stadium. We always stayed around Collinsville area and drove in. I was the only one of the group that did not drink alcohol but i was the oldest. They convinced me to attempt to purchase beer for them. So we drive about a mile out of town to a bar in the middle of the afternoon. I stroll in very cool, calm and collected and order a case of beer. The guy looks at me and asks, “have any ID?” I tell him I don’t as I left my billfold back at the hotel. He gives me a sneer and gets the case to purchase. What do I do next? I pull out my BILLFOLD and pay him He looks at me and laughs out loud and takes my money. I walk out of there shaking my head as I realize I am a big moron!

The second one that same weekend at the ballpark is short. We arrived at the stadium a few minutes later than we wanted, batting practice had started. We are coming down the steps in left center field and a batting practice ball comes careening off the concrete in front of us and continues bounding away. I sprint after it, dive on the concourse to get it among a few other people. When I dove, I knocked a man off his crutches and he hits the ground with a “thud” I got the ball and being a 16 yr old, I am too cool to apologize and stroll away as quickly as possible. My buddies, of course, are laughing their heads off.

We figured we drove to STL about 6 weekends per summer for awhile and the stories mount up. FYI, I never allowed my kids to drive to St Louis at that age (and now you know why)!

Jacqueline Conrad – Cardinal Diamond Diaries
Memories of the Cardinals. Asking me to choose just one is difficult because I’m not good at narrowing down. An extremely memorable and emotional game for me was the very last regular season game at Busch II on Oct 2, 2005. I loved that stadium because it was all I had ever known as home to the Cards. So many memories were tied up in that huge concrete bottle cap. I had deeply mixed feelings that day.

During the actual game against the Reds, I tried to imprint everything that happened for the last time. I remember the National Anthem and the players running onto the field for the last time. I remember silly things like getting my last beer and hot dog from the vendors and waiting in line for the lovely women’s bathroom. For some reason, I remember saying “That’s the last time I’ll see Jimmie Edmonds catch a fly in center field.” Why I vividly remember him I have no idea. I don’t remember whether we won or lost.

But the most emotional part was the long ceremony after the game. No-one left. Everyone stood and yelled and cried. We were celebrating four decades of memories in the stadium. They honored so many people and players. I cried the whole ceremony. My dad was not able to come and the ceremony was not televised by FSMW, so I called him and gave him the minute by minute account of what was happening and who was there. Of course the Hall of Famers were there, but so were loads of players from the 60’s, 70’s, 80’s and 90’s teams. I was particularly excited to see my favorite player growing up, Tommy Herr. I know people around me thought I was loony, screaming and crying into my phone to my dad details of what was going on. But the thing that was the most emotional to me was when the Clydesdales appeared and clip clopped around the stadium with everyone standing and singing ‘Here Comes the King’.

So from the very first time I saw that stadium, that to me was like the Roman Coliseum, to that very last game, Busch II will always hold a place in my heart.

Bill Ivie is the editor here at I-70 Baseball as well as the Assignment Editor for BaseballDigest.com.
He is the host of I-70 Radio, hosted every week on BlogTalkRadio.com.
Follow him on Twitter here.

Posted in Cardinals, Classic, FeaturedComments (2)


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