Straight up: I love Coors Field.
This may be sentimentally impacted by the fact I grew up in Denver or the way
I've seen it change downtown Denver from a place that everyone deserted every
night to a place that I can actually go hang out with friends. I have
fun memories of meeting my mom at her work and walking the two blocks
The talk has died down recently, but in the first few years of the Rockies' existence, and in 1995, Coors' first year, a lot of people talked about offensive statistics in Coors Field being somehow illegitimate. I remember Mark Grace predicting that the person to break Roger Maris's home run record would probably be a Rockie. He was wrong, but that's not the point--the point is the uproar it caused among some media and fans. Well, before I continue, I would like to defend Coors Field and the statistics of the players who play there. --First off, you never hear people talking in
reverse, about the horribly deflated pitchers' statistics of Astros or Cardinals
or Marlins or Dodgers or whatever.
--Second, a whole lot of players have inflated batting statistics from hitting in bandboxes. The Polo Grounds was only 257 feet down the right field line. Mel Ott's career numbers are therefore unfairly high, and Ott would not have succeeded as well in another ballpark. Should we give him an asterisk? No. Neither should we tinker with Andre Dawson's 1987 MVP award for the Cubs or Jim Rice's career home run numbers. You play where you play, and you can't penalize a player for exploiting his environment. --Third, Coors Field already has very, very
deep dimensions...over 330 down the lines and quite deep in the alleys, 5-10%
more than most other stadiums. Scientists tell us the ball travels 5-10%
farther at a mile high than at sea level. I will grant that people
will hit the ball more often at Coors, because curves
--Finally, let's take the case of Andres Galarraga. Some believe Coors saved his career. Remember when Galarraga hit a home run of over 500 feet, way up into the third deck (and still rising), that original estimates put as the longest homer ever, longer than Mantle's? So do I. It was at sea level. In Florida. Off of one of the best in the biz at the time, Kevin Brown. So let's stop talking about this altitude
crap, okay? Okay. Now that that's
Dad had season tickets the year of my semi-obligatory Overeducated Generation X Member's Return To The Parental Home. I sold bets at a dog track (yes, really) and generally was surly and eagerly awaiting saving the money to get out of the folks' basement. The trips to Coors were among the few bright spots of that year. We sat in the 25th row, just to the
first-base side of home plate most days, right behind what clearly were seats
set aside for family and friends of the visitors. Somebody's cousin from
Colorado Springs or somebody's buddy from Boulder was always in front of us,
silently rooting for the Pirates or Astros or whatever.
Twice we got foux-foux tickets in wonderful places. Dad got tickets from the hospital in the second deck, right at first base, which included--honest to God--a buffet. So I assembled a ham and cheese sandwich on a sourdough roll and settled into my seat, where an usher let me know that if I wanted anything else, I should just wave a menu. Dad arrived a few minutes later and asked me what I thought of the seats. I announced that the quality of the seats had convinced me to go to medical school. Another time Dad's testosterone got the best
of him at a charity auction, and he outbid all comers for a set of four
three-rows-behind-home-plate seats and restaurant privileges for a game against
the Reds. I took Jennifer, the namer of the original Erotic Love and
Baseball Stadium Tour. Jennifer elected not to tell the then-boyfriend
that she was going to a game with me,
Lots of memories from just 12 games, lots of family and friends, and lots--I mean lots--of home runs. All in an unmistakably Rocky Mountain setting. It's a great ballpark: one of my favorites. UPDATE 2008: After a
10-year hiatus, I returned to Coors for a few games in 2008 as I introduced my
wife to the locations of my Colorado youth. It is interesting to re-visit
this park with new eyes; all
I noticed some stuff in the
'00s that I would have missed when I was a regular in the '90s. First of
all, they've added some art (or at least I've noticed it for the first time).
My favorite piece was a mural behind the batter's eye that depicts what life
might have looked like on the site of Coors Field from Native
And, incidentally, if anyone wonders where Santa works during the summer, it's in the Coors Field elevator by the left-field foul pole. Here he is with my wife, who is both naughty and nice (after all, she's 3 month pregnant for this photo). Check it out...his name tag actually says "Santa--North Pole" and co-workers actually call him that. "Ho, ho, ho! Only 136 days left!" he told us.
BASEBALL STUFF I'VE SEEN HERE: Game 1 of the 1995 NLDS. Braves 5, Rockies 4. Chipper Jones hits two homers, including the game-winner in the ninth. The Braves turn four double plays. The Rockies do just enough to Greg Maddux to stay in the game--including a Vinny Castilla home run. But Don Baylor goes to his bench too often, so that by the time the bases are loaded with two out in the ninth and the pitchers' slot due up, nobody is left to pinch hit. He uses Lance Painter, a pitcher, as a pinch-hitter, and he strikes out against Mark Wohlers to end the game. Bryan Rekar wins in his major-league debut. Andres Galarraga goes 6-for-6 in a game against Houston. I see a game in which opposing pitchers, Kevin Foster and Marvin Freeman, homer off of each other. Barry Bonds homers. In my 2008 return, Lastings Milledge hits two home runs in one game for the Nationals. Greg Maddux picks up a win for the Padres--13 years after I watch him pitch here in a playoff game for the Braves. Next stadium (chronologically) Written August 2001, updated August 2008. since May 31, 2005. |