Riverfront Stadium
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Riverfront Stadium | |
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Location | 201 East Pete Rose Way Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 (now demolished) |
Broke ground | February 1, 1968 |
Opened | June 30, 1970 |
Closed | December 12, 1999 (NFL) September 29, 2002 (MLB) |
Demolished | December 29, 2002 |
Owner | City of Cincinnati |
Surface | AstroTurf 8 (1970-2000) Grass (2001-2002) |
Construction cost | $45 million |
Architect | Heery & Heery FABRAP |
Former names | |
Riverfront Stadium (1970-1995) Cinergy Field (1996-2002) |
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Tenants | |
Cincinnati Bengals (NFL) (1970-1999) Cincinnati Reds (NL) (1970-2002) |
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Capacity | |
1970-2000 – Baseball: 52,952; Football: 59,754 2001-2002 – 39,000 |
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Dimensions | |
bracketed values are measurements between 1970-2000 Left field: 325 ft (99 m) 330 ft (101 m) Left-center field: 370 ft (113 m) 375 ft (114 m) Center field: 393 ft (120 m) 404 ft (123 m) Right-center field: 373 ft (113 m) 375 ft (114 m) Right field: 325 ft (99 m) 330 ft (101 m) Backstop: 41 ft (12 m) 51 ft (15 m) bracketed values are measurements 2001-2002 Left field: 325 feetLeft-center field: 370 feet Center field: 393 feet Right-center field: 373 feet Right field: 325 feet Backstop: 41 feet |
Riverfront Stadium, later known as Cinergy Field (1970 - 2002) was the home of the Cincinnati Reds National League baseball team and the Cincinnati Bengals National Football League team. Located on the Ohio River in downtown Cincinnati, the stadium was best known as the home of "The Big Red Machine," as the Reds were often called in the 1970s. Construction began on February 1, 1968 and was completed at a cost of less than $50 million. On June 30, 1970, the Reds played their first game at the stadium against the Atlanta Braves. Hank Aaron would hit the first ever home run in the park that game. Two weeks later on July 14, Riverfront hosted the 1970 Major League Baseball All-Star Game. This game is best remembered for the often-replayed collision at home plate between the home-grown Pete Rose and catcher Ray Fosse of the Cleveland Indians.
In 1996, Riverfront Stadium was renamed "Cinergy Field" in a sponsorship deal with Greater Cincinnati's energy company, Cinergy Corporation. In 2001, to make room for Great American Ballpark. The seating capacity at Cinergy Field was reduced to 39,000. There was a huge wall in Center Field visible after the renovations. The stadium was demolished by implosion on December 29, 2002. Video clips of its demolition were featured in the music video for the song MakeDamnSure by Taking Back Sunday.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] "Cookie Cutters"
Riverfront was one of a number of multi-purpose, circular stadia built in the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s as communities sought to save money by having their football and baseball teams share the same facility. Riverfront, Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta, Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Shea Stadium in New York, RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C., Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego and Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia all opened within a few years and were largely indistinguishable from one another.
The site on which Riverfront Stadium sat originally contained the birthplace and boyhood home of cowboy singer and actor Roy Rogers.
[edit] Big Red Machine
Riverfront Stadium quickly earned a place in Cincinnati's century-long baseball tradition as the home of one of the best teams in baseball history. The World Series had visited the Reds' previous home, Crosley Field, just three times in its final 31 years, (1939, 1940, 1961) but it came to Riverfront in its first year (1970) and a total of four times in the stadium's first seven years, with the Reds winning back-to-back championships in 1975 and 1976. The World Series would return in 1990, with Cincinnati winning the first two of a four-game sweep of the Oakland Athletics at Riverfront.
Baseball purists disliked Riverfront's artificial turf, but Reds' Manager Sparky Anderson took advantage of it by encouraging speed and line drive hitting that could produce doubles, triples and high-bouncing infield hits. Players who combined power and speed like Joe Morgan, Pete Rose and Ken Griffey, Sr. thrived there. On defense, the fast surface and virtually dirtless infield (see photo) rewarded range and quickness by both outfielders and infielders, like shortstop Dave Concepción who used the turf to bounce many of his long throws to first. Catcher Johnny Bench and first baseman Tony Perez also played here. The artificial turf covered not only the normal grass area of the ballpark but also what is usually the "skinned" portion of the infield. Only the pitcher's mound, the home plate area, and cutouts around first, second and third bases had dirt surfaces. This was the first stadium in the majors with this "sliding pit" configuration. The new stadiums that would follow (Veterans Stadium, Royals Stadium, Kingdome, Metrodome, Skydome) would install sliding pits as the original layout, and the existing artificial turf fields in San Francisco, Houston, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis would change to the cut-out configuration in the early to mid-1970s.
Riverfront hosted the MLB All-Star Game twice. First in 1970 with President Richard Nixon in attendance, and again in 1988.
[edit] Professional football
Despite Cincinnati's love of baseball, it was the prospect of a professional football team that finally moved the city to end twenty years of discussion and build a new stadium on the downtown riverfront. After playing for two seasons at the University of Cincinnati Nipert Stadium on campus, the Bengals built on the Reds' success in the stadium's first year when they recorded their first winning season and first playoff appearance in 1970, just their third year of existence.
The most memorable football game at Riverfront was the AFC Championship on January 10, 1982. The game became known as the Freezer Bowl and was won by the Bengals over the San Diego Chargers, 27-7. The air temperature during the game was -9 °F (-23 °C) and the wind chill was -59 °F (-51 °C), the coldest in NFL history. The win earned the Bengals their first of two trips to the Super Bowl while playing at Riverfront.
Riverfront Stadium also hosted the 1988 AFC Championship, as the Bengals beat the Buffalo Bills 21-10 to advance to their second Super Bowl appearance.
During the Bengals' tenure, they posted a 5-1 record in playoff games played in Riverfront Stadium, with victories over the Buffalo Bills (twice), San Diego Chargers, Seattle Seahawks, and Houston Oilers. Their only home playoff loss came to the New York Jets.
[edit] Baseball-only
When the Bengals moved to Paul Brown Stadium in 2000, the Reds were left as Cinergy Field's only tenant. Prior to the 2001 baseball season, the stadium was remodeled into a baseball-only configuration, and the artificial surface was replaced with grass. To allow room for the construction of Great American Ball Park (which was being built largely over the grounds the stadium already sat on), a large section of the left and center field stands was removed and the distance to the fences was shortened by five feet. Consequently, in its last years, the stadium achieved an openness and a degree of aesthetic appeal that it had lacked for most of its existence. In the Reds' final seasons in the stadium, ongoing construction on Great American was plainly visible just beyond the outfield walls while the team played their games.
[edit] Milestones
[edit] Baseball
- First stadium to have its entire field covered by AstroTurf, except for the cutouts around the bases and pitcher’s mound.
- First hit: Felix Millan, June 30, 1970.
- First home run: Hank Aaron, June 30, 1970.
- First Presidential Visit: Richard Nixon, July 14, 1970.
- First upper deck home run: Tony Perez, August 11, 1970.
- First World Series game ever played on artificial turf: October 10, 1970 (Reds vs. Baltimore Orioles).
- First no-hitter: Ken Holtzman, June 3, 1971.
- First pitcher ever to pitch a No-hitter and hit two Home runs in the same game: Rick Wise, June 23, 1971.
- Hank Aaron ties the all-time home run record with number 714: April 4, 1974.
- First stadium to display Metric distances on the outfield walls (100.58 meters down the lines, 114.30 to the alleys, 123.13 to center): 1976.
- Highest season attendance, 2,629,708: 1976.
- First rain checks issued: August 30, 1978.
- First player to Hit for the Cycle: Mike Easler, June 12, 1980.
- Pete Rose breaks the all-time hit record with number 4,192: September 11, 1985.
- First player ever to be caught stealing four times in one game: Robby Thompson, June 27, 1986.
- First perfect game: Tom Browning, September 16, 1988.
- Longest home run, 473': Mark McGwire, May 5, 2000.
[edit] Football
- First Touchdown: Sam Wyche, September 20, 1970
- First Field goal: Horst Muhlmann, September 20, 1970
- Corey Dillon breaks the single-game rookie rushing record with 246 yards: December 4, 1997.
[edit] Concerts
- Led Zeppelin, April 19 and April 20, 1977.
- The Eagles, August 16, 1978.
- The Rolling Stones, September 14, 1989.
- Paul McCartney, May 5, 1993.
- Grover Washington, Jr., July 25, 1999.
- George Strait, May 21, 2000.
- *NSYNC with Christina Milian, July, 2001.
[edit] References
- Dittmar, Joseph J. (1997). Baseball Records Registry: The Best and Worst Single-Day Performances and the Stories Behind Them. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-0293-8
- Munsey & Suppes (1996-2004). Riverfront Stadium. Ballparks.
- Smith, Ron (2000). Riverfront Stadium. The Ballpark Book. The Sporting News. ISBN 0-89204-703-8
- Riverfront Stadium Opens. BaseballLibrary.com.
[edit] External links
- A Farewell to Cinergy Field. MLB.com.
- Cinergy Field: Kiss it Goodbye. Cincinnati.com.
- Riverfront Stadium/Cinergy Field. Ballparks of Baseball.
- Riverfront Stadium/Cinergy Field. Stadia of NFL
- Cinergy Field. BaseballLibrary.com.
- USGS aerial photo
- [1]. Cinergy Field Implosion.
[edit] See also
Preceded by Nippert Stadium 1968–1969 |
Home of the Cincinnati Bengals 1970–1999 |
Succeeded by Paul Brown Stadium 2000–present |
Preceded by Crosley Field 1912–1970 |
Home of the Cincinnati Reds 1970–2002 |
Succeeded by Great American Ball Park 2003–present |
Preceded by RFK Stadium |
Host of the All-Star Game 1970 |
Succeeded by Tiger Stadium |
Preceded by Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum |
Host of the All-Star Game 1988 |
Succeeded by Anaheim Stadium |