https://youtu.be/TCE0XOFpxy8
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Won't miss it. Never won anything there. If I could go back to Fulton County Stadium tomorrow, I might.
Lots of great teams, lots of good memories, but damn it seemed like that place was cursed.
Nice stadium but just didn't seem as intimate (nor intimidating for opponents) like Fulton County was.
I had some great (and not so great) memories from Fulton County Stadium, but I also had some great ones at the Ted.
I have zero nostalgia for FCS. I liked what happened there, but it wasn't exactly a nice place to catch a ballgame.
It feels like Turner Field died a too early death. I was only able to make the pilgrimage once, in 2013, but I was impressed with what I saw. I really loved the retired number monuments and the Braves museum, and I hope those get transferred to the new ballpark.
There was something magical about Fulton County Stadium. Perhaps my judgement is clouded from my childhood memories of that park.
The Ted was cursed. Just a place for other teams to celebrate.
There is no question The Ted should have lasted another 10-20 seasons, but if Suntrust lets us have a bigger player payroll then so be it.
Mixed feelings about it all.
Some good and awful memories from a baseball standpoint. Getting to the World Series in 99. The young guys coming up in 05. Heyward's homer in his first at bat, though the vision of him becoming the face of the franchise was never realized.
But then, it was mostly disappointment. We had to watch the Marlins, Padres, Cardinals, Dbacks, Giants, CUBS, Astros, Giants and Cardinals again end celebrate on our field and the embarrassment of Atlanta fans throwing **** on the field on the outfield fly rule call.
But I think the main memories I'll take away from it are the times at the park with my dad. We went to the very first one, the exhibition against the Yankees. NLCS game 2 in 97, NLDS game 2 in 98, World Series game 2 in 99. The last time we made it there was Father's Day 2014. Got to see Mike Trout and Albert Pujols, two future Hall of Famers and enjoy a Sunday night win.
I'm just old enough to remember the last two seasons at Fulton County Stadium, so I grew up with Turner Field. It was an excellent place to watch a ballgame, and it's still a shame there was a lack of vision from all angles to keep it going. I hope Georgia State will do well by it.
I look forward to the franchise hopefully becoming a dominant force in the new park. I hope the results are better than the pre-planning that has led to it.
One of my favorite moments was Brooks Conrad hitting a very surprising walk-off Grand Slam against the Reds when the Braves scored 7 or 8 in the 9th inning to win.
If anyone is having trouble playing the Dansby Swanson Turner Field video, here is a direct link.
http://m.braves.mlb.com/atl/video/to...d=clubMEGAMENU
There is something a little disingenuous about the tearful memorials the Braves have put together for Turner Field- it's like a son shooting his still-healthy parents to get their inheritance earlier, then giving a sad eulogy mourning the loss of the greatest human beings he has ever known.
Yeah, it hits an odd note.
Literal collapse? No, but there's definitely a level of decrepit that can justify leaving a stadium. No one gave the Pirates and Reds crap for abandoning their old cookie cutter stadiums, and if the A's and MLB ever figure out what the hell to do in Oakland no one is going to say they left the Coliseum too early. Turner Field is still a perfectly pleasant stadium.
That said, we all understand, and the Braves have made clear, that the move to Cobb has nothing to do with Turner Field and everything to do with the area around it, however you want to interpret that.
Good thing for the convoy that the last game ended around 6 PM on a Sunday vs. 6 PM on a Tuesday.
Recorded the post-game festivities, just now getting around to watching them. Pretty awesome job they did with it.
Something a bit on the lighter side
https://youtu.be/P065elDU6tk
One thing that was kind of cool to me was at the end of the ceremony, seeing Hank Aaron do the chop.