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Inside
Baseball
The
new UO stadium plan stinks
BY
ERIC JONES AND PAUL MARTONE
The new deal to build a baseball stadium
for the UO and the Eugene Emeralds in the parking lot of Autzen
Stadium undermines the appeal of minor league baseball and poisons
the local fan's love of the game. It eviscerates our connection
to legends of the past and demolishes our shared history. To put
it simply, the new deal stinks.
It stinks for a number of reasons. First, it's a
tragic, mind-boggling continuance of Eugene's sad history of bulldozing
old, historic buildings in the name of modernity or expediency.
Cases in point: the historic courthouse, the armory, Mac Court.
In place of the courthouse, we have an eyesore that contributes
nothing historically, architecturally or aesthetically to downtown,
and with Mac Court we lose not only a building, but also our vital
connection to teams of the past, our communal moments of heartache
and celebration. All of it, gone.
This latest deal also marks the demise of one of
Eugene's most unique landmarks. Built in 1938, Civic Stadium was
a Works Progress Administration project and is one of the oldest
stadiums in the country still hosting minor league baseball games.
Enter the words "Civic Stadium" in Wikipedia's search engine and
discover the rich history of our beloved ball park, a national envy.
It has been the Emeralds' home since 1969 when the team moved to
Civic Stadium from Bethel Park.
Prior to becoming the permanent home field of the
Ems, Civic Stadium hosted the Eugene Caseys of the Cascade League
in the 1940s and 1950s. Its construction is uniquely Eugene, with
giant timbers felled from the local forests and an old fashioned
scoreboard operated by local school kids.
The new deal, which promises to destroy Civic Stadium
in two years, also lets the 4J School District completely off the
hook for their quiet, avaricious campaign to sell off or profit
from the prime piece of real estate that the stadium occupies. By
seeking a court ruling that allows the district to sell the property,
4J forced the Ems to seek other opportunities to stay in Eugene.
So the Ems struck a deal with the UO, which only wants a new baseball
stadium to complement its new football and basketball facilities.
There appears to be a total and complete unwillingness
on the part of 4J, the city and the UO to think creatively about
ways to generate revenue from the site and preserve Civic Stadium.
Couldn't a portion of the land be converted to retail space? Won't
the city step up to fund some of the necessary renovations? Is the
university so focused on building new sports facilities that it
can't see the potential for a truly unique stadium? With the recent
boom in all things "throwback," certainly Nike can understand the
potential of Civic Stadium. After all, it isn't simply the sport
of baseball local fans cherish; it's summer nights at the ball park,
where people of all ages put aside their differences and come together
to cheer on the team; it's the camaraderie, the feeling of community,
it's the authenticity of place.
Ems fans, it's time
to take action. We vow to support our team for two more summers.
For two more summers, we will "walk over the hill," sit in the sun,
eat ice cream out of a helmet, drink a microbrew and soak in the
history of those giant timbers. For two more summers, we will watch
kids change the runs, hits and errors in the scoreboard and wonder
which of the current crop of Ems might make it to the Bigs; for
two more summers, we will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with family
and friends and root, root, root for the Emeralds. For two more
summers, we will say to ourselves, as we drive by Volcanoes Stadium
in Keizer, "Thank god we don't have to watch baseball in a parking
lot."
Eric Jones works for the National Forest Foundation;
Paul Martone is an instructor at LCC and a published writer of fiction.
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