Shea Stadium, for many older fans, has come to represent a bridge between 1950s baseball and today’s game that features stadiums named after banks and players who often seem more concerned with launch angles, hair styles and hugs than they are with advancing a runner with less than two out or catching a fly ball.
I remember Shea as being a cathartic for fans still mourning the loss the of the Dodgers and the Giants, but also as an informal place, kind of hokey and primitive at times, but with none of the superior take it or leave it attitude one was likely to encounter at Yankee Stadium. At Shea, you were likely to meet an usher with his jacket buttons misaligned to the button holes and vendors who merged the athleticism of a Harlem Globetrotter with the wit of Johnny Carson.
This history of Shea Stadium starts with the Ice Age 75,000 years ago and ends with construction of Citi Field and the conversion of Shea Stadium into a parking lot. In between, Silverman hits all the highlight events and key personalities and does so with clear and concise writing. The baseball Mets and the football Jets are the featured players, but Silverman’s text is rich in cultural context and the discussed events include the Vietnam War, the Beatles concert and a papal visit.
Built on a former dump site and the site of the New York’s World’s Fair of 1939-1940, Silverman presents a balanced history (warts and all) for the Shea Stadium era (1964-2008), starting with a piece on the stadium’s namesake, Bill Shea and concluding with the dismantling of the stadium during the winter of 2008-2009. Highlights include the Mets championship seasons and 1969’s miraculous Jets team, but my favorite chapters are those recalling anecdotes about the many characters that played, coached and managed there. Shea Stadium certainly had its low moments (ask Elliot Maddox), including the 1975-76 invasion by the Yankees and football Giants while Yankee Stadium was being renovated. Shea “cuisine”, mascots, airplane flyovers and promotions all receive due attention and most of these accounts are laced with an affectionate and wry humor.
A marvelous book for sports fans, both for those who lived through the era and those who are younger and might want to know what “the ancient ones” are talking about when they mutter about today’s game going to hell in a shopping basket. Matthew Silverman’s SHEA STADIUM REMEMBERED is an interesting, insightful and fun trip back to those less hysterical times before media hype and marketing has emerged to subsume the sport by relentlessly battering both ballgame attendee and TV viewer alike with the grandiose importance of just about everything except the game itself.
Sixteen pages of photographs, most in color. Three appendices (including all time records), index & bibliography (includes youtube video links, one to the infamous Jets-Raiders Heidi Bowl fiasco).