Posts tagged "baseball"
siphotos:

Bill Mazeroski celebrates after hitting a walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series between the Pirates and Yankees. It was the first walk-off home run to win a World Series in baseball history. (AP)
GALLERY: Classic Photos of the Pittsburgh Pirates

siphotos:

Bill Mazeroski celebrates after hitting a walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series between the Pirates and Yankees. It was the first walk-off home run to win a World Series in baseball history. (AP)

GALLERY: Classic Photos of the Pittsburgh Pirates

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: November 16, 1966
Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente wins the National League MVP. [Wikipedia] 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: November 16, 1966

Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente wins the National League MVP. [Wikipedia] 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: October 4, 1902 
The Pirates finish with the highest winning percentage in MLB history, eclipsed by the Cubs 4 seasons later. [Wikipedia; Baseball Revisited] 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: October 4, 1902 

The Pirates finish with the highest winning percentage in MLB history, eclipsed by the Cubs 4 seasons later. [Wikipedia; Baseball Revisited

It’s supposed to be fun. The man says ‘Play Ball’ not ‘Work Ball,’ you know.
Willie Stargell (via mightyflynn)
thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: September 3, 1902 
The Pirates beat the Braves for their second straight National League Pennant with a whole month left. The team will go on to a 103-36 franchise record. [Wikipedia] 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: September 3, 1902 

The Pirates beat the Braves for their second straight National League Pennant with a whole month left. The team will go on to a 103-36 franchise record. [Wikipedia

onefootinthegrave:

wherewereyouwhensidslid:

beat ‘em Bucs!

249 plays

wherewereyouwhensidslid:

beat ‘em Bucs!

249 plays
thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: July 25, 1956
At Forbes Field against the Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente hits Major League Baseball’s first (and to date only) walk-off inside-the-park grand slam.

The Great One

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: July 25, 1956

At Forbes Field against the Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente hits Major League Baseball’s first (and to date only) walk-off inside-the-park grand slam.

The Great One

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

Forbes Field, 1909 (via) 
On This Day in Pittsburgh History: June 30, 1909 
Forbes Field, named after the head of the British forces in 1758, General John Forbes, was dedicated; 30,338 persons watched the Pirates lose the opening game there to Chicago, 3 to 2. [Historic Pittsburgh] 
From The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, by Robert Dvorchak, 2009: 

The father of Forbes Field was Barney Dreyfuss, the Hall of Fame owner who wanted a fireproof structure of steel and concrete to replace Exposition Park, located in an industrial neighborhood on the North Side that was prone to flooding.
With $1 million of his own money ($24 million in today’s currency), he built the park on land acquired with the help of Andrew Carnegie, acclaimed at the time as one of the richest men in the world.
Had Mr. Dreyfuss had some other hobby than betting on horses, Forbes Field may not have been a one-of-a-kind destination. Architect Charles A. Leavitt Jr., who had designed the grandstands at Belmont and Saratoga racetracks, was brought in. Forbes Field was his only ballpark, and the day it opened, the newspapers called it the greatest baseball palace in the world.
Its revolutionary design featured lavatories specifically designated for women, public telephones, an underground parking garage and ramps instead of steps. (One could, however, sit in the left field bleachers and not be able to see home plate because of obstructed views.)
The place was named after John Forbes, the British general whose forces built a road through the Pennsylvania wilderness to evict the French from Fort Duquesne in 1758. In his after-action report, the general called it “Pittsbourgh,” and the name stuck even if the spelling didn’t.
An overflow crowd of 30,338 — to that point the largest throng ever to witness a baseball game — attended the opener as Mayor William Magee threw out the first pitch. Days later, during the Fourth of July weekend, Forbes Field was the altar upon which the marriage of baseball and fireworks was consummated. Pyrotechnics were set off in the evening there following an afternoon baseball game.
The Pirates gave the city its first World Series title and first championship parade the year Forbes Field opened as Honus Wagner outplayed Ty Cobb in a showdown of superstars. (more)


aaaaand, they tore it down to build the ugliest building on Pitt’s Oakland campus.
Assholes.

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

Forbes Field, 1909 (via

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: June 30, 1909 

Forbes Field, named after the head of the British forces in 1758, General John Forbes, was dedicated; 30,338 persons watched the Pirates lose the opening game there to Chicago, 3 to 2. [Historic Pittsburgh

From The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, by Robert Dvorchak, 2009: 

The father of Forbes Field was Barney Dreyfuss, the Hall of Fame owner who wanted a fireproof structure of steel and concrete to replace Exposition Park, located in an industrial neighborhood on the North Side that was prone to flooding.

With $1 million of his own money ($24 million in today’s currency), he built the park on land acquired with the help of Andrew Carnegie, acclaimed at the time as one of the richest men in the world.

Had Mr. Dreyfuss had some other hobby than betting on horses, Forbes Field may not have been a one-of-a-kind destination. Architect Charles A. Leavitt Jr., who had designed the grandstands at Belmont and Saratoga racetracks, was brought in. Forbes Field was his only ballpark, and the day it opened, the newspapers called it the greatest baseball palace in the world.

Its revolutionary design featured lavatories specifically designated for women, public telephones, an underground parking garage and ramps instead of steps. (One could, however, sit in the left field bleachers and not be able to see home plate because of obstructed views.)

The place was named after John Forbes, the British general whose forces built a road through the Pennsylvania wilderness to evict the French from Fort Duquesne in 1758. In his after-action report, the general called it “Pittsbourgh,” and the name stuck even if the spelling didn’t.

An overflow crowd of 30,338 — to that point the largest throng ever to witness a baseball game — attended the opener as Mayor William Magee threw out the first pitch. Days later, during the Fourth of July weekend, Forbes Field was the altar upon which the marriage of baseball and fireworks was consummated. Pyrotechnics were set off in the evening there following an afternoon baseball game.

The Pirates gave the city its first World Series title and first championship parade the year Forbes Field opened as Honus Wagner outplayed Ty Cobb in a showdown of superstars. (more)

aaaaand, they tore it down to build the ugliest building on Pitt’s Oakland campus.

Assholes.

siphotos:

Pirates outfielder Andrew McCutchen poses for a 2011 SI portrait. McCutchen drove in all three runs of Pittsburgh’s 3-2 win over Kansas City on Sunday, the team’s fourth  straight victory. The Pirates are now tied for first place in the NL Central, the first time they’ve occupied the top spot this season. (Al Tielemans/SI)
LEMIRE: The Pirates are baseball’s hottest teamGALLERY: Classic Pics of the Pittsburgh Pirates

siphotos:

Pirates outfielder Andrew McCutchen poses for a 2011 SI portrait. McCutchen drove in all three runs of Pittsburgh’s 3-2 win over Kansas City on Sunday, the team’s fourth  straight victory. The Pirates are now tied for first place in the NL Central, the first time they’ve occupied the top spot this season. (Al Tielemans/SI)

LEMIRE: The Pirates are baseball’s hottest team
GALLERY: Classic Pics of the Pittsburgh Pirates

mightyflynn:

From the Pirates clubhouse to their dugout
PNC Park (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Photo by aarondoster

mightyflynn:

From the Pirates clubhouse to their dugout

PNC Park (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)

Photo by aarondoster

(via mightyflynn)

pirates:

The Great One. 

are yinz following the official Bucco Blog on tumblr? 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: May 7, 1925
Glenn Wright completes only the fifth unassisted triple play in MLB history when he throws out future hall of famers Jim Bottomley and Rogers Hornsby of St. Louis in the 9th inning at Forbes Field. [Wikipedia] 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: May 7, 1925

Glenn Wright completes only the fifth unassisted triple play in MLB history when he throws out future hall of famers Jim Bottomley and Rogers Hornsby of St. Louis in the 9th inning at Forbes Field. [Wikipedia

do you have…

  • nothing to do tomorrow night?
  • a desire to drink beer with strangers?
  • a love of the Battlin’ Bucs?
  • willingness to sit in the outfield of PNC Park with me and my drunk bros?
  • ten bucks?

then, my friend, I have just the thing for you: a ticket to Free Shirt Friday!

get at me on here, or my email or whatever. If I don’t hear anything I’ll just scalp it, no biggie.

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

The 1909 Pirates in a poster celebrating their National League pennant. Frank Chance of the Chicago Cubs and John McGraw of the New York Giants, two teams the Pirates beat for the pennant, are being made to walk the plank. (via) 

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

The 1909 Pirates in a poster celebrating their National League pennant. Frank Chance of the Chicago Cubs and John McGraw of the New York Giants, two teams the Pirates beat for the pennant, are being made to walk the plank. (via

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