Saturday, January 19, 2019

Kids Days at the Vet

As the Phillies push again toward the post season, I can't help but remember the highs and lows as a Phils fan. Thankfully, the past few years have been more highs! Becoming a fan during the teams losing era, it was nice to experience 1980, and again the current run from 2007 through today.

My brother and I, along with many of our friends, spent a good deal of our youth at Philadelphia Veterans Stadium, known to Philly sports fans as "The Vet". Some remember it more as "The Big Toilet" because of the state the City of Philadelphia left it in for a good part of it's history. But as kids, we didn't even think about the condition of the concrete octorad at Broad Street and Pattison Avenue. All we were concerned about was taking in Phillies games and having fun, both watching the games and otherwise.

Back when the stadium first opened in 1971, the cost of a general admission ticket was just $0.50. That's right, fifty cents! If I remember correctly, adults paid $1.50. You can't by a ticket anywhere for that low an admission price anymore, so every day was Kid's Day. We would spend at least one day out of the weekend there whenever the team was in town, sometime both Saturday and Sunday if we could swing it timewise. Not that we had a full schedule as kids, but as I moved into my teen years and held two jobs on the weekend making stroboli at Pizza Shack and busing tables at The Forum caterers, I had less time for ballgames.

What was amazing was that even the Sunday giveaway day games were at that low admission price for the first few years. After a few years, they raised the general admission rate to the adult price of $2.50 for the gift days, and eventually kids had to pay that same amount every game. And that didn't last long either. After the 70s, the cost of a ticket anywhere in the Vet went higher. General admission - the famed "700 level" - was pricier than the cheap seat days that I remembered as a kid. Sneaking down into the box or reserve seats somehow left me feeling less guilty after the increase.

AND YOU MAY REMEMBER...

...
Being able to see double-headers for the price of one admission. This was the era before what is now known as Day/Night Double Headers, where games are now played first in the afternoon, and again in the evening, a separate ticket purchased for each game.

... The events that often occurred between the double headers. I remember being there when Karl Walenda, aka "The Great Walenda", walked the tightrope over The Vet. Being a dweller of the 700 level, we were there when he came down into the crowd after his walk. A crowd of us were there to see  him afterwards. Sadly, Mr. Walenda died a number of years afterward when a gust of wind took him off the wire during a stunt in Puerto Rico.

... Charlie Frank, the king of the hot dog vendors. His cries of "Doggie-ho!" were famous, so much so that he appeared in some TV commercials and the Phillies had a special day to commemorate his service. Some folks were known to try to get tickets in his section after that for a while.

... Nasty stadium food - The Vet could never be called a real ballpark. Wilted hot dogs would be forgettable (sorry, Charlie) were they not so mediocre. The fries weren't bad, but then again, it's hard to mess up fries. The food available at The Bank - Citizen's Bank Park - is gourmet by comparison.

... The animated boards in the outfield that predated the hi-res screens found in today's ballparks. In 1970s technology they seemed to be spectacular. Today they would seem woefully outdated except for in a museum.

... Philadelphia Phil and Phylis, the two colonial figures that stood in the outfield. Kind of a pair of mascots that served the Phillies prior to the arrival of the Phanatic, although they didn't do anything to fire up the fans or satisfy the kids - they were after all, made of fiberglass.

... The hike up the long concrete ramps when you sat in the cheap seats - or anywhere above the 300 level. It was good for a workout, but not so good if you were older or had a handicap.

3 comments:

jaan said...

hi, i just moved to philly from new york, and seriously philly reminds me of new york alot. theres a misconception that new york is just midtown, and times square, but actually new york is nothing but a hodge podge of italian irish jewish, spanish and asian cultures rubbing against each other. and now that they r tearing all the older neighbordhoods down with urban renewal and all, i moved to philly, looked around and it reminds of of new york city alot.

Brian R. Bennett said...

Hello Jaan,

Indeed, the cities are very similar. In Philly, you'll find much of South Philly to be Italian, especially Bella Vista and the (dare I say it)Italian Market. The area around 7th St. in So. Philly used to be heavily Jewish until the 1970s when the Jewish population headed for N.E. Philly and the burbs. You'll find a large Polish population in the Fishtown (used to be fisheries along the river) and Port Richmond. Back to South Philly, you'll find a predominantly Irish culture around Two Street (or 2nd Street for those who don't know better). Center City is akin to Midtown Manhattan, but all the other places I mentioned are just like your home city's boroughs of Queens, Staten Island, Brooklyn, and the Bronx.

Much of the older Philly I remember still exists, but like NYC and other big cities, development takes it's toll on history. May I suggest you check out Phillyhistory.org if you want to see this city through the ages. Enjoy, and thanks for your comment.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.