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Intimidation to the power of 'N'


Yankee Stadium in the late 1920s

Take a look at this picture I found on the 'net this morning. This is Yankee Stadium in the late 1920s, just after it opened. From the bunting and warmer clothing, I'd guess this is either opening game or the World Series.

Picture the Senators leaving after a game at Griffith Stadium and boarding a train at Union Station for the trip to New York. The next day, they come to Yankee Stadium and walk on to the field for warmups. They crane their necks upward and see that huge upper deck that seems to go on forever. Beyond the right field bleachers were the brownstone walkups that were plastered with stadium adverstising. From homeplate, New York's expansiveness seemed to go on forever.

Soon, the game begins, and 45,000 cheering fans makes it impossible to hear teammates on the field. The chatter from the Yankee dugout becomes incessant. "Bronx cheers" reverberate throughout the stadium. Ruth pokes a homerun inside the foul poul and the crowd goes wild. The Nats have no chance to win.

American Presidents call the oval office the "ultimate" in home field advantage. No way. Yankee Stadium was the ultimate in home field.

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