Showing posts with label Orioles Classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orioles Classic. Show all posts

Thursday, July 27, 2023

ABC Sports: MLB 1985- Detroit Tigers @ Baltimore Orioles: 1st Innings

Source:ABC Sports- Orioles outfielder Lee Lacy.

"1985-07-01 ABC MNB - Tigers at Orioles. ABC Monday Night Baseball. 


Going into this game, this looked like a great game, especially for ABC Sports prime time Monday Night Baseball, with Don Drysdale and Tim McCarver with the call of the game. Both teams having great lineups, the game at Baltimore Memorial Stadium, early July, when it's hot and humid as hell in Baltimore and in the rest of the State of Maryland, and the Orioles had Scott McGregor pitching for them. 

But after 1983, the Orioles starting pitching started falling and they became most a power-hitting team, that hit a lot of home runs and scored a lot of runs, especially at home. They added outfielder Fred Lynn, who they got from the Anaheim Angels (as I call them) and added outfielder Lee Lacy, Mike Young, to go along with Eddie Murray and Cal Ripken, to of the best all around players in all of MLB at this point. 

But as good as the Orioles offense was in the mid 1980s, their starting pitching was perhaps just as bad, with just Mike Boddicker being the only consistent started that they had. 

Orioles ace Jim Palmer retires after the 1984 season, Scott McGregor and Mike Flannagan's arms were failing them. And when you pitch at Baltimore Memorial Stadium and those other American League ballparks that have short porches and hot and humid summers, you can't afford to throw hanger after hanger and expect to succeed, especially when you are also walking a lot of hitters as well. Orioles pitcher Dennis Martinez was up and down. When he was up, he was an all star and perhaps Cy Young contender. When he was off, he would struggle to get out of the 3rd inning. 

Like I said, this looked like a great matchup going in. But when Scott McGregor was off and he was pitching against a good team, like the defending World Series champion Detroit Tigers, the were Orioles generally got blown out or won it in a slugfest.

You can also see this post on WordPress.

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Baltimore Memorial Stadium: 'Rise & Fall'

Source:Forgotten Places with a look at Baltimore Memorial Stadium.

"The story of Memorial Stadium" 


"Memorial Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium in Baltimore, Maryland, that formerly stood on 33rd Street (aka 33rd Street Boulevard, renamed "Babe Ruth Plaza") on an oversized block officially called Venable Park, which was a former city park from the 1920s. The block was bound by Ellerslie Avenue to the west, 36th Street to the north, and Ednor Road to the east. Two stadiums were located here; a 1922 version known as Baltimore Stadium or Municipal Stadium (or sometimes Venable Stadium) and, for a time, Babe Ruth Stadium in reference to the then-recently deceased Baltimore native. The rebuilt multi-sport stadium, when reconstruction (expansion to an upper deck) was completed in mid-1954, would become known as Memorial Stadium. The stadium was also known as "The Old Gray Lady of 33rd Street," and also "The World's Largest Outdoor Insane Asylum" when used by the Baltimore Colts.[6] the latter which was coined by Cooper Rollow." 

From Wikipedia

As someone who grew up in Bethesda, Maryland, just 40 miles south of Baltimore, I had an opportunity to see a lot of Oriole games growing up and I'm old enough to remember at least hearing about the Colts in the early 1980s, when I was just starting to get into sports as a young kid. 

Bethesda is literally next door to Washington, but Washington didn't have an MLB franchise for most of the 1970s and the 1980s, so the Oriole which were just about a 50-60 minute drive (depending on traffic) were the local baseball team for most Marylanders. So I got to see a lot of Orioles games growing up in the 1980s and early 90s as a kid and got to go to several Orioles games, when they were still in North Baltimore at Memorial Stadium. 

When I think of Baltimore Memorial, I just think of a great old ballpark, that was a lot of fun to be at. Perhaps not so much fun to get to, at least coming from Washington, because you have to get to the city first, which might not be so bad, but then you have to get to the stadium as well, which could be another 40-60 minutes, because the stadium is in the north of the city, it's a big city, and you have to deal with the traffic. 

Baltimore Memorial was just a big, fun, old ballpark to be at: 

Beautiful sight lines as far as what surrounded the ballpark, with no upper deck porch, so you always had a great view of the sky

The grass field and hill, the trees, the old houses beyond the outfield wall of the ballpark, 

The food was always good

The seats were close to the action, as well as on the the ground level, unlike at the cookie-cutter stadiums 

The fans were great and were always loud 

The place looked beautiful during the day and night 

Short porches but with high walls and no foul territory down the lines, which made it a great ballpark for extra base hits and for players with good speed, but it also had deep gaps and a deep center field, so pitchers could be successful there 

The garden in the left field foul territory 

Maryland crab cake sandwiches from the Chesapeake Bay and perhaps Maryland Cream of Crab Soup as well.

Yes, Baltimore Memorial Stadium was officially a multi-purpose stadium because different sports franchises from different sports, also played there. The Orioles shared Baltimore Memorial with the Colts for 30 seasons from 1954-83, there was an NASL soccer franchise there briefly in the 1960s, with the Bays. 

But similar to Cleveland Municipal, Milwaukee County, Shea Stadium in Queens, New York, Atlanta Fulton Stadium, Candlestick Park, the Oakland Coliseum,  Anaheim Stadium, Jack Murphy Stadium, Baltimore Memorial was always a baseball first stadium, that could accompany other sports, but perhaps not very well, because it was a natural baseball park. 

So in this sense, at least, Baltimore was better off the the Colts leaving in 1984 because it gave them the opportunity to make Baltimore Memorial look as beautiful as possible for baseball and get the city's act together as far as building a football stadium, that was just for football, which is one reason they were able to get the Ravens from Cleveland, in 1996.

You can also see this post on WordPress.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

BASH 953: Video: HTS: MLB-1989-Anaheim Angels @ Baltimore Orioles: Mike Deveraux's HR Wins it


This post was originally posted at The New Democrat on WordPress

This was certainly one of the highlights of the 1989 Orioles season, that again had their been a wildcard back then, the Orioles make the AL Playoffs with 89 wins, but that is a different story. The 1989 Orioles are what a good team looks like. Not a great team, not a talented team, but what a team looks like. How good a team can be when it has a lot of good players and is deep. As well as lets say average players who have big years and big moments for them. The 89 Orioles were a pitching and defense first team, that would score enough and score when they needed in order to win. Their pitching wasn’t very good in this game, so their offense backed them up and scored enough runs to win and bailout the Orioles pitching in this game.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Noel Breen: Video: ABC Sports: MLB-1983-World Series-Game 1: Philadelphia Phillies @ Baltimore Orioles: Intros


This post was originally posted at The New Democrat on WordPress

Basically just the intros of the Philadelphia Philles and the Orioles for game 1 of the 1983 World Series. With a little commentary from Al Michaels, Howard Cosell, and Earl Weaver. A brief interview of Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken and didn’t get enough of it to figure out what they were talking about, other than Cosell trying to figure out how Cal Jr felt playing for Earl Weaver with the Orioles. And The Earl talking about the fact that the Orioles lost their DH Ken Singleton. Because back then unfortunately what MLB did for the World Series, was to rotate the hitting pitcher and the designated hitter each year. One year the DH would play in every game. The next year, there would be no DH and the pitcher would hit every game. Which was unfair and gave the National League champion a big advantage during the World Series.

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Tim Fuerhardt: Video: MLB 1991-Detroit Tigers @ Baltimore Orioles: Orioles Last Game at Memorial Stadium


This post was originally posted at The New Democrat on WordPress

The story of this Tigers-Orioles game, even though it is a very small part of the Orioles 1991 season with this being their last game at Baltimore Memorial Stadium, but this game pretty much summarized their season. You would think that the Orioles management would’ve put more into trying to make sure that they had a competitive team in 91, considering this was their last season at Memorial. And they tried to do that with the Glen Davis trade, but they were horrible in 91. Very little pitching, at least consistent pitching either starters or in the bullpen. And not a lot of offense in their lineup to go with Cal Ripken.

The Orioles lost this game I believe 8-1 to the Tigers, who had a pretty good lineup that year. But the real story of this game was that it was the end of a great era not just for Orioles baseball with all the success the Oriole had at Memorial, but the end of a great era for Major League Baseball as well. Just too bad that the Orioles, especially for their fans, that after winning their last MLB World Series in 1983, they five of their last eight seasons at Memorial, were losing seasons. Including losing 108 in 88 and two 95 lost seasons in 87 and 91. But the Orioles of the 60s, 70s and 80s were one of the best franchises in MLB and all of that home success came at Memorial.

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Classic MLB 11: Video: ABC Sports: MLB-1985-MNB-Detroit Tigers @ Baltimore Orioles: Highlights


This post was originally posted at The New Democrat on WordPress

Interesting matchup between two non-contending AL East teams in 1985. The Detroit Tigers finished in third place, but fifteen games out of first. And the Orioles finished fourth sixteen games out of first. But the AL East was deep in 1985, with four teams, the Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees, Tigers and Orioles all having winning seasons. And the Boston Red Sox were a 500 club that year. So it wasn’t like the Tigers and Orioles had bad years in 85, it was just that the Blue Jays and Yankees were both very good. And had their been a wildcard back then, both the Jays and Yanks would’ve made the AL Playoffs.

The Orioles were in transition in 85 especially as it relates to their pitching with Jim Palmer retiring after the 84 season. They were still good enough to be a winning team, but no longer a serious contender for the AL East. Their pitching wasn’t nearly as good as it was in the early 1980s and 1970s. And became a power hitting team that needed big offensive games to win. The Tigers won the MLB World Series in 1984 and were still good enough to contend in 85. But they slipped back as the Blue Jays and Yankees finished first and second.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Baltimore Orioles 1954: Tribute to the Orioles at Memorial Stadium

Source: Baltimore Orioles 1954: Memorial Stadium Tribute


The Orioles in their first 10 seasons or so weren't very good at all, but by 1964 or 1965, they not only started winning but also became solid American League contenders and in 1966 not only won the American League but also their first World Series, a 4-0 sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers. And after that, up until 1986, you are talking about the winningest franchise in baseball, which included a total of three World Series championships, six American League championships, and seven AL East titles. Those are the Orioles at Baltimore Memorial Stadium that I love and respect and have been hoping will get back to that consistent winning ever since they started sliding in the late 1980s.


Sunday, March 2, 2014

Baltimore Orioles 1954: Video: Baltimore Orioles: Final Year at Memorial Stadium



I love Baltimore Memorial Stadium, but the last few years of Memorial Stadium for baseball, let's say 1986-91, were pretty bad for the Orioles, except for 1989. The Orioles had five losing seasons in that period and lost 90 or more games four times and set the modern American League record for losses in 1988, with 108, including losing their first 21 games of that season. Yet there were still great moments and Oriole games in this period, especially in 1989, when they went from last to second in the American league, finishing just one game out of the AL East race.

John F. Kennedy Liberal Democrat

John F. Kennedy Liberal Democrat
Source: U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy in 1960