So Long, Tiger Stadium
Thursday, July 10th, 2008Demolition crews smashed the walls of Tiger Stadium, punching through to the interior of the ballpark that stood for decades, as they intensified their efforts to bring down the venerable park. The Detroit contractor and MCM Management Corp. of suburban Bloomfield Hills started demolition of the ballpark last week. They expect to make an estimated $1 million by selling scrap from the park. City officials say an Aug. 1 deadline still stands for a nonprofit group to raise enough funds to preserve the field and part of the stadium between first and third base.
Outfield walls cleared by Yankees legend Mickey Mantle as well as Tigers sluggers Norm Cash and Cecil Fielder began to come down as contractors intensified their efforts to bring down the venerable park.
Backhoes and excavators, sometimes hard to see through dust and spraying water, whizzed around the site, picking up debris and dumping it in oversize bins. During one flurry, an excavator smashed through the exterior wall beyond left field, throwing support girders to the side.
The scene was tough to take for longtime Tigers fan Chas Matreal and his 23-year-old son, Ryan.
“All beautiful memories,” Chas Matreal said. “It is something beautiful that we’re destroying, and it’s history.”
The 49-year-old bricklayer from Milford, Mich., said he attended 400 to 500 games at Tiger Stadium, many with his own father, starting in 1966.
“Demolition means progress,” declared signs on a construction vehicle at the site. But Matreal disagreed, saying priceless memories are being lost.
“It’s a natural museum of a hundred years that they’re destroying,” he said.


