by JuggernautJ » Fri Sep 04, 2015 12:53 am
"Never had the pleasure.
Maybe someone can show me next July...
"One can also "miss" a stadium from the television.
I enjoyed watching the games from Milwaukee as a kid because they were so different..."
There are many times when a venue, or any location, are embedded in the mind and evoke fond memories
regardless of the participants.
County Stadium is one such place - not for the Braves and certainly not for the Packers - but for the iconic cover
of the first issue of "Sports Illustrated."
It is hard to imagine there is a sports fan who saw it and does not remember it.
Other venue have a similar effect -
Yankee Stadium, for example, the home of one of the three greatest dynasties in the history of Sports.
You just associate the place with winning, with chamionships, with excelllence year after year -
just as the same feelings are evoked by mention of the (old) Boston Garden or The Forum in Montreal.
The names of the players on those teams changed and many are forgotten but where they played remains
long after the games have faded.
Football does not have a house like that yet and probably never will.
The numbers to surpass are far too great and the consecutiveness of some of those number is beyond reasonable expectation.
Many a game was enjoyed at Yankee Stadium and the list of heroes is long.
A few games at Boston Garden over the years were thrillers - even before Havlicek stole the ball and the Bird flew off
to the land of legends.
Never was a game witnessed at the Forum in Montreal except on television but the memory remains of those Canadiens
clobbering the Rangers.
So... yes; one can "miss" a stadium or arena without ever having been there.
County Stadium in Milwaukee can be "missed" just because of a magazine cover.
Mention "Milwaukee" and two things come to mind: the SI cover and that legendary brew known as "Milwaukee's Finest Beer."
Well, okay... maybe Al McGuire and the NCAA Championship too... maybe...
after all, he was a NYC boy with a brother who played a little hoop and another brother, an NYPD guy who played the ponies.