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Quotable!
"Oh, that Lankford and McGee - the trio of 'em. They're a one-man wrecking crew."
--Mike Shannon, Cardinals announcer

 

Sick's Stadium

By Patrick Mondout

Sick's Seattle Stadium (a.k.a. Sick's Stadium) was a baseball stadium built at the end of the Great Depression and used for one year by the ill-fated expansion Seattle Pilots. It was located on the corner of S. McClellan Street and Rainier Avenue S.

At a glance...
SICK'S STADIUM
Facility statistics
Location Seattle
Broke ground 1938
Opened June 15, 1938
Last Pilots Game October 2, 1969
Demolished 1979
Replaced Dugdale Field
Replaced by Kingdome
Owner City of Seattle
Surface Grass
Construction cost $350,000
Tenants
Seattle Rainers (PCL, 1938-1968)
Seattle Pilots (MLB, 1969)
Seattle Rainers (Northwest League, '72-76)
Seating capacity
11,000 (1938), 18,000 (April 1969),
25,420 (June 1969).
Dimensions
1938:
Left Field - 325 ft
Left-Center - 345 ft
Center Field - 400 ft
Right-Center - 345 ft
Right Field - 325 ft
Backstop - 54 ft

1969:
Left Field - 305 ft
Left-Center - 345 ft
Center Field - 402 ft
Right-Center - 345 ft
Right Field - 320 ft
Backstop - 54 ft

The stadium was built during the late 1930s as a replacement for Dugdale Field, which had burned down after a July 4th fireworks display in 1932. Dugdale had been home to the Pacific Coast League's Seattle Indians.

Emil Sick, the owner of Rainer Brewing Company, purchased the PCL franchise in late 1937 and renamed them the Seattle Rainers. The franchise had played at the barely adequate Civic Center since 1932, which was actually located at the current site of Key Arena. Emil built a stadium for his team which he modestly called Sick's Seattle Stadium. Sick's opened on June 15, 1938 and baseball fans in Seattle had a respectable ballpark by contemporary standards for 30 years while they patiently waited to get a Major League team.

Fly to the site of Sicks Stadium!
If you have Google Earth installed, click here to be "flown" to the site of the Sicks Stadium. Of course the stadium is no longer there, but you can see the Lowe's that has been built on the site. (If you do not have it installed, get it from Google. It allows you to view virtually anywhere on Earth in 3D using satellite imagery.)


Their waiting ended in October 1967 when the American League announced that it had awarded Seattle and Washington D.C. new expansion franchises. (Neither would last in their new cities more than three years.)

Seattle-area voters had passed a bond issue to finance a $40M domed stadium and Sick's Stadium was seen as a stop-gap until construction on that stadium could be completed. Sick's and the Seattle Pilots opened for business on April 11, 1969 with a 7-0 victory over the White Sox.

The aging stadium, however, was not without problems. Renovations took longer than anticipated and some seats for fans with advance tickets were not even ready by the time Washington Senator (the non-baseball type) Warren Magnuson threw out the first pitch. But that was the least of the fan's concerns. When the attendance was above 10,000, the water pressure in the stadium would lower rendering the restrooms, as a local newspaper put it, disgraceful. Fortunately that rarely happened as fans grew tired of the empty promises and bickering over whose fault it was and largely stopped showing up. The Pilots were eighth in a ten team league in attendance. Unfortunately, the lack of a true Major League facility and accompanying attendance figures (and a lawsuit by the PCL, which had lost one of its strongest franchises) left the new owners bankrupt.

FIRSTS at SICK'S STADIUM
Game
04/11/1969 White Sox 0, Pilots 7
Umpires Marty Springstead, Don Denkinger
  Red Flaherty, Bob Stewart
Managers Joe Schultz, Pilots
  Al Lopez, White Sox
Starting Pitchers Gary Bell, Pilots
  Joe Horlen, White Sox
Ceremonial Pitch U.S. Senator Warren Magnuson
Attendance 14,993
Batting
Batter Luis Aparicio (groundout)
Hit Tommy Harper (single)
Run Tommy Harper
RBI Rich Rollins
Single Tommy Harper
Double Bill Melton
Triple Bill Melton (04/13/1969)
Home Run Don Mincher
Grand Slam Rich Rollins (05/10/1969)
IPHR Boog Powell (08/16/1969)
Stolen Base Tommy Harper
Sacrifice Hit Gary Bell
Sacrifice Fly Bill Melton (04/12/1969)
Cycle (None)
Pitching
Win Gary Bell
Loss Joe Horlen
Shutout Gary Bell
Save Jack Aker (04/12/1969)
Hit by Pitch Gary Bell hit Ken Berry
Wild Pitch Don Secrist
Balk Bob Locker
No-Hitter (None)
Primary research by Jim Herdman & David Vincent
Courtesy of Retrosheet
.

After only one season in Seattle, the Pilots were moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin and renamed the Milwaukee Brewers (at the end of Spring Training 1970). A lawsuit that took nearly a decade to settle followed with concessions to the city from Major League Baseball. In the interim, Seattle had to settle for a class A Northwest League team, which it did not receive until 1972.

Major League Baseball finally returned to Seattle in the form of the expansion Mariners in 1977 and in the brand new multipurpose Kingdome. Sick's Stadium was finally demolished in 1979 and is now the site of a Lowe's Home Improvement Center. There is a sign marking the position of the stadium on the corner of Rainer and McClellan and a replica of home plate near the exit of the retailer.

If you would like to visit the stadium today, but can't afford a trip in a time machine, you can visit Nat Bailey Stadium in Vancouver, British Columbia. SaBR member Tom Hawthorn points out that this stadium was built in the early 1950s from the blueprints of Sick's Stadium and even features hand-operated scoreboard that was salvaged from Seattle's park in 1979.

Related Books on Ballparks
The Ballpark Book: A Journey Through the Fields of Baseball Magic by Ron Smith and Kevin Belford.
Ballpark: The Story of America's Baseball Fields by Lynn Curlee
Ballparks: A Panoramic History by Marc Sandalow and Jim Sutton.
Ballparks by Robert Von Goeben and Red Howard.
Ballparks: Then & Now by Eric Enders.
Baseball Vacations: Great Family Trips to Minor League and Classic Major League Ballbarks Across America by Bruce Adams and Margaret Engel.
Blue Skies, Green Fields: A Celebration of 50 Major League Baseball Stadiums by Ira Rosen.
Diamonds: The Evolution of the Ballpark by Michael Gershman.
Fields of Dreams: A Guide to Visiting and Enjoying All 30 Major League Ballparks by Jay Ahuja
Green Cathedrals: The Ultimate Celebration of All Major League and Negro League Ballparks by Philip J. Lowry.
Joe Mock's Ballpark Guide by Joe Mock.
Lost Ballparks: A Celebration of Baseball's Legendary Fields by Lawrence S. Ritter.
Roadside Baseball: A Guide to Baseball Shrines Across America by Chris Epting.
Take Me Out to the Ballpark: An Illustrated Tour of Baseball Parks Past and Present by Josh Leventhal and Jessica Macmurray.
The Ultimate Baseball Road-Trip: A Fan's Guide to Major League Stadiums by Joshua Pahigian and Kevin O'Connell.
Video: Story of America's Classic Ballparks
Video: Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns

Economics of Stadiums
:
City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks by Philip Bess.
Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit by Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause.
Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums by Kevin J. Delaney and Rick Eckstein.
Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums by Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist.

General Stadium Reference:
Sports Staff of USA Today. The Complete 4 Sport Stadium Guide. Fodor's, 1996.

Stadium Design and Financing References:
Philip Bess. City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks. Knothole Press, 1999.
Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause. Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit. Common Courage Press, 1998.
Mark S. Rosentraub. Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It. HarperCollins, 1997.
Kevin J. Delaney, Rick Eckstein. Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums. Rutgers University Press, 2004.
Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist. Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums. Brookings Institution, 1997.
Dean V. Baim. The Sports Stadium as a Municipal Investment. Greenwood Publishing, 1994.
Stadia: A Design and Development Guide by Geraint John and Rod Sheard. Architectural Press, 2000.
Michelle Provoost, Matthjis Bouw and Camiel Van Winkel. The Stadium: Architecture of Mass Sport. NAI Publishers, 2000.


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--Patrick Mondout



 

SICK'S STADIUM

Postcard courtesy of LCPC

Year by Year statistics: for Sick's Stadium


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