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Read More...Wednesday, though, Leyland got a little sentimental. After a 65-minute stoppage in the fifth inning, he let Justin Verlander go back into the game and get the two outs he needed to pick up the victory.
“Since I got here in 2006, that guy has been our horse, and tonight was a reward for that,” Leyland told FOX Sports Detroit’s Shannon Hogan after Detroit’s 11-7 win over the Indians. “I stretched it for five minutes because of what he’s ...
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1. Derb posted on November 11, 2012 at 12:26 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Yes. That place is sacred ground to a lot of Detroiters. They would get over it, but there would be a ton of uproar if construction began on that site with no plans to "honor" the history.
I lived in Detroit this summer... there were a lot of hipsters about. Cheap rents, y'know.
The vacant site at Tiger Stadium is kind of sad but it's also wonderful that it's available and open to the public, with the infield and mound still there. I visited it sometimes and shared memories of the park with other Tiger fans. Parents and kids play there, people have softball tournaments there... it's a lot better than what some of the alternatives might have been.
I didn't read the article, but the thing I don't understand about the whole Tiger Stadium issue is this: There is nothing but vacant lots in downtown Detroit. If you want to build an auto dealership, a casino, a university campus, or a Great Wall of China, you can do it in about a hundred other spots in Detroit that won't upset anyone's memories.
I don't see the harm in just leaving the old Tiger Stadium site as it is, until the other land is used up. It's certainly not a bustling, growing neighborhood, and I can't believe it costs the City of Detroit (or whoever owns it now) much for upkeep.
The best solution is probably to just make it into a park, keeping the diamond chalked and the grass trimmed. Come. Close your eyes. Watch the ballgame.
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