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Being There
Over the years I would have to say I attended between 150 and 200 games at Shea Stadium. I never got a season ticket, except the 2008 season when I had a Sunday plan. I've been there for some memorable occasions, though.
-- In 1970, I attended a game against the Phillies in April in which Nolan Ryan allowed a single to Denny Doyle, leading off, but allowed no other hit. The Mets defeated Jim Bunning in the game.
--Also in 1970, I watched Tommie Agee hit for the cycle (a single, double, triple and home run) against the Cardinals.
--In July 1978, I watched Pete Rose tie Tommy Holmes' then-NL best consecutive games hit streak (38 games). Rose would eventually tie Willie Keeler for the MLB all-time second-best at 44 games.
--Rose again: in May 1986 I saw Rose hit a rare 3-run single to beat Dwight Gooden (it can happen on a 3-2 count with two out and all 3 runners on base in motion). The game snapped a 7-game Mets win streak. At the time, the Mets were 20-5 and your webmaster had attended two of the losses. The first was in Philly, the only game I was ever in Philly's Veterans Stadium, when the Mets dropped a 9-8 14-inning game. Later that year, I attended the Mets' final regular season home game. There was a party atmosphere as Daryl smashed a grand slam and the Mets pounded Pittsburgh.
--In April 1987, the Mets met the Atlanta Braves in an early season contest. This was the game in which Dion James killed a rock dove with a fly ball. He hit it toward Kevin McReynolds in left, who lined up for the catch, but watched in disbelief as the ball struck the bird and, both bird and ball plopped in front of him. It was a bad sign for Bob Ojeda and the Mets, who went on to get pounded 12-3 with Doug Sisk (who else) allowing 3 of the runs.
--On July 24, 1988 I attended Tom Seaver Day at Shea, when his number was retired. At the end of Seaver's remarks, he went to the mound and bowed four times in each direction. He would repeat this, briefly, on September 28 when the stadium closed. The Mets then lost to Atlanta.
-- On May 23, 1998 I attended the newly-acquired Mike Piazza's first game as a Met. He came through with a run-scoring double as Al Leiter beat the Brewers. There was a lot of walkup business that day, but the Mets did not sell out. Amazingly, Piazza was plagued by boo birds during his first weeks with the Mets as he slumped slightly, but he quickly righted himself. That year the Mets were in the thick of things, but dropped their last five to let any postseason hopes slip away.
--On September 29, 1999, the Mets desperately needed a victory to once again keep playoff hopes alive. John Olerud came through with a grand slam and the Mets beat Atlanta.
--September 25, 2003 marked broadcaster Bob Murphy's retirement party and Mike Piazza's debut at first base. The Mets asked Piazza to shift to first base to perhaps give new life to his bat, but in 2004 it became painfully obvious Mike was not a first baseman. On this night, he took over first base in the 9th inning and the first batter hit a line drive right to him. He also made the next two putouts.
And then there was September 28, 2008...









Before the game I walked around the upper deck to get the full panoply from right to left field.


I wonder if any Mets ever hit the HR Apple. Remember the Abe Stark "Hit Sign Win Suit" campaign at the Dodgers' Ebbets Field?





J-E-T-S!
Though I never saw the Jets at Shea I'd be remiss if I didn't mention them. They moved from the Polo Grounds, along with the Mets, in 1962. At Shea the former Titans changed their uniforms from blue and gold to green and white and became the Jets. The team rarely played any important games at Shea, since the Jets rarely made the playoffs during their time there from 1964-1983, but Shea saw the rise of Joe Willie Namath and one of the most important games in club history on December 29, 1968, defeating the Oakland Raiders 27-23 in the AFL Championship Game to ascend to the Super Bowl, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami on January 12th, 1969. The Jets shocked the world by beating the heavily favored Baltimore Colts. The Mets would similarly shock the Baltimore Orioles a few months later.
Two other Jets playoff games occurred at Shea Stadium: on December 20, 1969, the Kansas City Chiefs, enroute to their own Super Bowl victory, dropped the Jets 13-6; on December 27, 1981 in a wild card playoff game, the Buffalo Bills jumped off to a fast start, the Jets mounted a furious comeback but were short circuited when Richard Todd was intercepted in the Bills' end zone. The Jets would make the playoffs again in 1982, but their three playoff games were on the road including the "Mud Bowl" in Miami in which Todd was picked off five times. The Jets moved to the New Jersey Meadowlands as co-tenants with the New York Giants for the 1984 season. In the Jets' final game at Shea on December 10, 1983 they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers, 34-7, in Terry Bradshaw's last season.
Shea Stadium was the first dual-use stadium with seats that could move on underground tracks to make the field football-ready.



Home and home. Throughout 2007 and 2008, Citifield rose beyond the center field wall. From 1967 well into the 1990s, the outfield wall was plexiglass in front of the bullpens so binocular-wielding fans could see who was warming up. Advertising won out over this feature, however.
The Scoreboard
Shea Stadium was, perhaps, the second MLB ballpark with a massive, full-featured scoreboard (I think Bill Veeck's White Sox' "exploding scoreboard" was the first in 1960). It was replaced with a completely new board in 1988.






It's strange to remember now but for many years, into the 1970s, the main television shot at Shea was not from centerfield, but from behind the plate. This meant that the umpire and catcher obscured the spot where the ball crossed the plate, so that fans watching at home couldn't tell where the ball was. The centerfield cameras attained prominence in all of MLB in the 70s.


The Last Game






In the closing ceremonies, 43 veterans from 46 seasons were introduced and walked out from the left and right bullpens, glad handing fans in the front row all the way. From 1969, Seaver, Jerry Koosman, Cleon Jones, Ed Charles, Ron Swoboda, Art Shamsky, Jim McAndrew, Ed Kranepool, Wayne Garrett, Bud Harrelson and "Little" Al Jackson (who played briefly for the Mets in 1969) were there. The house went nuts when out came 1986's heroes, Keith Hernandez, Ron Darling, Lenny Dykstra, Gary Carter, Howard Johnson (the Mets' 2008 hitting coach was still crestfallen from the game earlier), Wally Backman, Sid Fernandez, Jesse Orosco, Tim Teufel, Bob Ojeda, and especially Dwight Gooden and Daryl Strawberry. I was especially glad to see guys from the Wilderness Years of the 1970s and 1980s such as Dave Kingman, George Foster, John Stearns, Craig Swan and Doug Flynn. And, there were guys from that first season at Shea like Jack Fisher, Ron Hunt and Frank Thomas. Yogi! Willie Mays, always a New York hero and a Met in 1972-73. Oh, and Mike Piazza was introduced second to last, just before Tom Seaver.






The Mets will see you in 2009 at Citifield.
Inspiration: the Mets of 1969, 1973, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007 and 2008. Consult METSBLOG, ULTIMATEMETS, FAITH AND FEAR IN FLUSHING, and LOGE 13. For much, much more on Shea Stadium see Paul Lukas' ESPN page.
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Photographed September 28, 2008. Page completed October 11, 2008
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©2008