Dodgers game at the Coliseum. Attendance: 115,000

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Oh boy!
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Just announced on local radio. Guinness people are on hand to certify it as the largest attendance of a MLB game.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I guess they had that super tall screen out there in left field for Saturday's game too.

And I bet the standing orders for all pitchers included Down&In to lefthanders and work the outside paint for right handers....heh

Hard to believe that ManRam didn't take this opportunity to sit down on the left field warning track and let the SS and 3B handle any fly balls his way.
 

Official Rx music critic and beer snob
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Meanwhile the Civil Rights Game between the Mets/White Sox in Memphis drew 7717.
 

Oh boy!
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http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...bo.coliseum.exhibition.2nd.ld.writethru.1130/

Red Sox beat Dodgers 7-4 before 115,300 fans at Los Angeles Coliseum

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Dodgers used a five-man infield against the Boston Red Sox. Too bad they weren't allowed to put a player or two in the Los Angeles Coliseum stands.

Kevin Cash and Kevin Youkilis hit cheap homers off Esteban Loaiza to account for five runs in the first three innings, and the Red Sox beat the Dodgers 7-4 Saturday night before an announced crowd of 115,300 - largest ever to watch a baseball game.

The previous record of about 114,000 attended an exhibition between the Australian national team and an American services team during the 1956 Melbourne Olympics.


This exhibition game was part of the Dodgers' 50th anniversary celebration of their move west from Brooklyn in 1958. They played at the Coliseum for four years before making Dodger Stadium their permanent home in 1962.
In the last baseball game played at the Coliseum, on Sept. 20, 1961, Sandy Koufax pitched all 13 innings in a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs before a crowd of 12,068.

The Coliseum was built for track and football, not baseball.

Routine fly balls, even popups, soared over a 42-foot high screen in left field, where the distance from home plate to the foul pole was just 251 feet. Meanwhile, drives to right and center of more than 400 feet were easy outs.

The distance to the left-field foul pole for this game was 201 feet and the screen was 60 feet high. And the fences around the rest of the field were far closer to home plate than in the old days.

Cash lined a two-out, three-run homer to left-center in the second - a ball that might have split the gap elsewhere but certainly wouldn't have gone out. Youkilis connected with two outs in the third, popping the ball over the screen with a runner aboard.

"It was pretty cool,'' Cash said. "I would have rather it had been a regular-season game.''

Regarding his homer, Cash smiled and said: "I thought I hit it good. You put it at Yankee Stadium, it's probably not a home run. It was a home run here.''

Surprisingly, there were only two more homers, a solo shot by Dodgers' first baseman James Loney in the seventh off Bryan Corey, and a two-run blast by rookie Blake DeWitt off Jonathan Papelbon in the ninth.

"I thought it was a heck of a show,'' Dodgers manager Joe Torre said. "I didn't see any empty seats. That's pretty imposing. Everybody seemed to have a good time.''

While Loaiza struggled, Boston knuckleballer Tim Wakefield excelled, allowing five hits and an unearned run in five innings to make a mockery of catcher Jason Varitek's pre-game forecast of doom.
 

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