May
1975 … three neighborhood buddies, two sisters, one set of parents …
road trip to Cincinnati … the Reds and the Atlanta Braves … baseball,
hot dogs and Bat Day … Oh, wow!
As if on a journey to Oz, we wound our way— up
from our hometown on the Hoosier banks of the Ohio — till we arrived at
the gates of that pearly stadium gleaming on the water's edge.
Riverfront Stadium teemed with some 50,000 fans circling above that
synthetic green baseball diamond. To a 13-year-old fan, Riverfront in
the 1970s was baseball's Emerald City.
So, it's hard to fathom that after this
season, the once-touted "Gem on the Ohio" will be no more. In 2003, the
Cincinnati Reds will move into a new ballpark being built next to
Riverfront (known as Cinergy Field since 1997). It's hoped the new park
will help revive the franchise that — much like Cinergy Field — has
lost its luster in recent years.
In the mid-1970s, it was a different story.
Cincinnati was the center of the baseball universe. And on that May
weekend in 1975, the Big Red Machine, powered by Hall-of-Famers-to-be
Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan and Cooperstown-calibre Pete Rose and Tony
Perez, was on its way to a World Series Championship. The Reds would
repeat as World Champs in 1976.
Though the Ohio River ran Cincinnati Red past
my hometown, especially in those days, that carload I road in was a bit
of an anomaly. There wasn't a Reds fan among us. The family I was with
all rooted for the Braves. My other buddy was a St. Louis Cardinals
fan. I was a New York Mets fan.
I was not as excited about seeing the Reds and
Braves as I was about seeing my first major league game between the
Mets and the Cardinals the year before. Still, I was thrilled to be
going to Cincinnati. The Reds were a team for the ages with power and
poise. All of baseball respected its players and manager, Sparky
Anderson. And, like the Reds at that time, that stadium was larger than
life.
No one knew then those big "multi-use" arenas
built for baseball and football in the mid- and late- 1960s would
become obsolete so soon. By the 1980s, baseball fans, sports writers
and movies became nostalgic for baseball's golden days. The beauty of
unique confines like Wrigley Field and Fenway Park was rediscovered.
Baseball and host cities accommodated by building "retro parks"
individually designed to offer wonderful sight lines for fans and the
deluxe suites for business. The retro parks drew sell-out crowds and
lots of dollars and spelled doom for the big cookie-cutters.
It's even kind of ironic: when the Reds moved
to its new home on Cincinnati's riverfront in 1970, the beauty of its
namesake was ignored. Reds fans didn't know what they were missing in
their big bowl until the left and center field portions of the stadium
were knocked down last year to make way for the new park. Suddenly, a
view the Ohio was opened to fans. The new ballpark will take advantage
of the location.
Riverfront allowed record numbers of fans to
see one of baseball's great dynasties. But in the long run, some of the
intangible closeness with the team and the game might have been lost
amid all the concrete and artificial turf.
To a kid in 1975 impressed with size and
numbers, though, those first moments at Riverfront were awesome.
"Intangibles" meant nothing.
In the Sunday game that May weekend, we saw baseball's 1,000,001st
run score. All day the giant scoreboard in center field counted to the
big landmark millionth run until it got to 999,999. Then, Reds
shortstop Dave Concepcion hit a solo homer in the fifth inning. All
50,000 of us thought he'd done it — and we'd seen it. It didn't matter
to me that we were almost in the last row of seats at the top of the
stadium. But then, moments later, the scoreboard announced that Bob
Watson of the Houston Astros scored the millionth run while Concepcion
was rounding the bases. Still, it was Bat Day, and I still have my Pete
Rose bat.
Years later, another trip to Riverfront would bring similar bittersweet feelings. That was 1984.
I
copped some tickets in January for Opening Day to see the Reds and
Mets. In 1983, my boyhood hero, pitcher Tom Seaver, returned to New
York after five seasons in Cincinnati to presumably end his
Hall-of-Fame career where it started. Obviously, he would be the Mets
Opening Day pitcher at Cincinnati April 2. That's what I thought, at
least.
But days after I got the tickets, the Chicago
White Sox shanghaied Seaver away using some cockamamie thing called the
"Free-Agent Compensation Pool." The Mets, rebuilding with young talent,
left the aging star off its list of "protected" players. Two months
later, I was still fuming as I skipped classes at Indiana University
and drove to Cincinnati. It was a beautiful spring day, but the Reds
hammered the Seaver-less Mets 8-1.
Other Riverfront memories included a game
between the Mets and the Reds the year before, when both teams were
cellar dwellers. Seaver didn't pitch, but at least I saw him warming
up! That game's highlight was watching a rubber chicken thrown around
the stands along the third-base side before landing on the playing
field in front of the Mets dugout. When a Mets player non-chalantly
tossed the fowl run-afoul into the dugout, the crowded started
chanting, "We want the chicken, we want the chicken."
So the Mets, who in the meantime had cut the
chicken's extremities off, tossed it back into the stands piece by
piece. The fans lost interest. The scoreboard then announced that a
limited number of chicken sandwiches were available at concession
stands. Oh, the Mets lost that game, too, 6-3.
In all the years I've proudly worn my Mets
orange and blue to Riverfront, I have to hand it to Reds fans: they
never treated me the way I've heard New Yorkers treat opposing fans —
except maybe once — April 30, 1988. That was the night of the infamous
Pete Rose-Dave Palone game.
During the close game, Rose, then-Reds
manager, disputed a critical call with Palone, the first base umpire.
During the argument, Palone accidentally poked Rose with a finger. Rose
retaliated with a hard shove. Rose was ejected and the crowd went
crazy. For 15 minutes debris rained onto the field, driving Palone from
the field. The Reds faced a forfeit. When the game finally resumed, the
Reds ended up losing 6-5.
Outside Riverfront that night, three drunken
Reds fans stopped me. But it wasn't my blue Mets jersey that initially
brought trouble. It was the red Indiana University sweatshirt I pulled
over the top of it for camouflage before leaving my seat. First they
said obnoxious things about IU. Then one noticed the orange and white
trim and blue of the jersey peeping up around the collar, and added,
"Oh …! He's also a … Mets fan," peppering the phrase with words
straight out of the standard Bob Knight dictionary.
My friend and I escaped unscathed only after
the other two guys sobered up enough to drag their buddy away. My Pete
Rose bat could have come in handy that night!
The next day, I came back, neutrally dressed,
with the sports editor of the newspaper where I was a photographer. We
had media passes. From the field, I saw actor Dustin Hoffman sitting
near Reds owner Marge Schott. He was in town making the movie "Rainman."
Then I saw the Mets clobber the Reds 11-0.
Afterward, Rose, addressed the media in his office. Growing impatient
with the questions about the Palone incident the night before, he
abruptly and effectively ended the news conference when he stood up
from his desk and took off his pants in front of us all.
That shove later cost him a month-long
suspension. This, of course, was nothing compared to the lifetime
banishment from baseball he received a year later for allegedly betting
on baseball.
In the following years, I made occasional
trips. My last trip to Riverfront was in 1991. The strike of 1994 left
a bitter taste in my mouth toward the game that took awhile to pass.
And, after visiting a few of the new retro parks over the past several
years, including the Indianapolis Indians' beautiful minor league park
in downtown Indianapolis, I've decided Riverfront really isn't such a
great place to watch a game after all.
But, this year, I will try to make one last
trip to Riverfront for old time's sake. Since turning 40 in January,
I've become awfully nostalgic about the places echoing from my youth,
especially those that are now lost or on the verge of passing. Unlike
the Ohio, the queen river flowing persistently past Cincinnati's
downtown, Old Man Riverfront won't keep rolling along after this
season. But these memories and many others made there over the years
fortunately always will.
Richard G. Biever is senior editor of Electric Consumer.