Build it and they will come. But move the cows and corn fields first! |
"Minneapolis, MN approves a $9 million bond issue to expand Metropolitan Stadium to 41,000 seats. City alderman Byron Nelson predicts it is a "dead cinch" that Washington will move there."
THOU SHALT NOT PISS OFF THE BASBALL LORDS
It amounted to even more enticement: the refurbishing of the eventual new home for the Washington Senators and their owner Calvin Griffith. He had perhaps the worst kept secret in sports, as he had been courting suitors from other, major U.S. cities since the mid-Fifties to back the transplanting of his team. Declining attendance, poor, antiquated ballpark amenities, and a "loser" malaise had dogged the club for years. Now, Minneapolis was definitely in the lead, but huge hurdles loomed in the form of federal anti-trust congressional opposition, flack from his own team's stockholders,* plus another challenge errupting from within his fraternity of MLB owners. Just to name a few.
* all linked news items are from 1958 Sporting News editions
BASEBALL, HOTDOGS, AND APPLE PIE
Taft Pounds The Strike Zone To The Thrill Of Fans |
THE ART OF THE DEAL
Minneapolis was following the "bait & catch" model used by the San Francisco & Los Angeles city councils to attract Major League teams, namely the New York baseball Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers, back in the mid-fifties. That was to guarantee lucrative deals including new stadiums, parking, and other revenues. Now, looking back at those transactions from the vantage point of 60-plus years, we tend to think that the relocation of those clubs, including the Twins from D.C., was preordained destiny. But overall, a goal of this post is make plain the idea that it was anything but that. Lady Luck would prove to be on Grifith and the Twins's side!
Two pages from September 3, 1958 Sporting News
Hint: you can zoom
Hint: you can zoom
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