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Thursday, September 28
Say goodbye to blue-collar County Stadium


County Stadium always was an acquired taste.

The drab decor and corrugated steel, exposed beams and electrical wires. The black-and-white scoreboard that made instant replays look like old newsreels.

Bernie Brewer's chalet and the huge brown beer barrel he'd slide into. The splintered wooden seats with chipped green paint. The Formica-topped concession tables.

The stench of beer nullified only by the aroma of sizzling bratwurst.

It staged very few pennant races, but plenty of sausage races. But what a view, and what a place to play.
Stadium Comparison
  County Stadium Miller Park
Year opened 1953 2001
Cost (millions) $4.8 $394
Capacity 53,192 42,474
Seating levels 3 4
Suites 2 72
Restaurants 0 2
Parking spaces 11,000 13,000
Area (acres) 84 265
Concession points 110 220
Elevators 1 9
Men's bathroom fixtures 456 309
Women's bathroom fixtures 250 320
Source: Brewers & Southeast Wisconsin Professional Baseball Park District

"It's like putting on an old pair of shoes," said Gorman Thomas, the Milwaukee Brewers' scraggly-haired slugger of the 1970s and '80s. "The new place looks fantastic, but this place is home."

At least for a few more days it is.

"You feel like getting rid of this," Brewers fan Eric Williams said. "It's not aesthetically pleasing from the outside. It looks like a garbage can. But that's why you like the stadium, because it's half-baked."

Miller Park and its retractable roof are literally on the horizon, and next year the Brewers will move into their $394 million palace with all its state-of-the-art amenities.

On Thursday, they'll play one last game at the nation's first publicly financed ballpark, built in 1953 for a scant $4.8 million – about what outfielder Jeromy Burnitz made this season alone.

Then, the wrecking ball will begin ripping down the old place where the Braves won the '57 World Series, the Brewers won the '82 AL pennant and the Green Bay Packers played for 41 years.

"It's going to be very emotional for me," said baseball commissioner Bud Selig, who brought the Brewers to Milwaukee in 1970, five years after the Braves bolted for Atlanta.

"It may not have the history and tradition and symbolism of Wrigley Field or Fenway Park," Selig said. "But in the end, it's where generations of people grew up. And it's where we'll always have a lifetime of memories."

Hank Aaron. Warren Spahn. Lew Burdette. Eddie Mathews. Robin Yount. Paul Molitor. Cecil Cooper. Jim Gantner. Jim Taylor. Willie Davis. Vince Lombardi. Paul Hornung. Brett Favre.

"I'm a historian of the game," Cubs first baseman Mark Grace said. "And I'm very proud of the fact I played where a lot of great players played. I'm very nostalgic about the old stadiums."

And there's an abundance of memories at this one.

Aaron hit a game-winning 11th-inning homer off St. Louis' Billy Muffet to clinch Milwaukee's first NL pennant here in 1957.

This was where, in 1959, Pittsburgh's Harvey Haddix pitched 12 perfect innings before losing both the no-hitter and the game in the 13th inning. And two years after that, Giants outfielder Willie Mays hit four home runs in a game.

On July 20, 1976, Aaron hit his 755th and last home run and a grounds crew member retained the keepsake for more than 20 years before cunningly getting Aaron to sign it at an autograph show and later auctioning it off.

On Dec. 18, 1994, the Packers ended a 62-year tradition in Milwaukee with a 21-17 victory over the Atlanta Falcons when Favre dived into the end zone for the winning score in the waning seconds to clinch a playoff berth.
Milwaukee County Stadium
The Green Bay Packers played their last game at Milwaukee County Stadium on Sunday, Dec. 18, 1994.
"I have a lot of fond memories there," Favre said. "And that one stands out. It was a pivotal play in our rise."

Safety LeRoy Butler said it's one of his best memories, period.

"That game put us on the map a little bit," he said. "I remember coming back and Brett diving in. That was a great feeling. The fans stormed the field and they were jumping all over us. I thought, `Wow, this is great.' "

And then Butler said good-bye to the old ballpark, just like the Brewers will do Thursday night after they play one last game, against Cincinnati.

Two All-Star Games were played at County Stadium, in 1955 and again 20 years later, when the players complained about a lousy field after 60,000 music fans had trampled the grass at concerts for the Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd.

There was Yount's 3,000th hit and Molitor's 39-game hitting streak.

Slugger Mark McGwire lost a home run here in 1998 when an umpire ruled that a fan reached over the wall. But that didn't top his list of memories.

"You now one thing I'll always remember? Those sacks of `diamond dust' the ground crews piles up in the far corner of the dugout. Sometimes those things take away two or three seats," McGwire said. "I remember a few times having to sit on that stuff."

But the field itself was known throughout baseball as one of the best.

"You rarely ever see a bad bounce," Burnitz said.

"Hopefully they can duplicate it" in the new place, shortstop Mark Loretta added.

Miller Park was supposed to open this season but the project was delayed when a crane collapse killed three workers on July 14, 1999.

Many fans are sad to see County Stadium go the way of Ebbets Field.

Dick Joyal, a business and economics professor at Northland College, said he wasn't happy about the Brewers moving into nice, new digs.

"Just to tear it down and build a fancy new thing that looks like a mall, to me that's not baseball," he said. "I understand why they are doing these things, but I hate to see tradition case aside for the sake of a new building.

"My God, that's where Warren Spahn pitched."

Jake Little of Milwaukee said he'd actually miss the rain delays.

"You got to hang out, so obviously people drink more," he said. "It gets a little crazy with all those people drinking. In the new stadium that won't happen anymore because they'll go shut the lid and it'll start right on time."

Fan Al McMurray said County Stadium represents can-do Milwaukee better than Miller Park will: "It fits in with the people, the general audience, the blue-collar town," he said.

And would he buy a souvenir?

Sure, he said: "I'm thinking a urinal maybe."

The Brewers are eager to play at Miller Park but they realize their fans will miss the intimate, old place.

"It's going to be nostalgic for a lot of people," pitcher David Weathers said. "It's a historic stadium and a lot of great people have played here."

Chief among them was Aaron, who's glum about having to say good-bye.

"When they tear this old place down," Aaron said, "they're going to take a piece of my heart with it."

And he won't be alone.