By Roger Wallenstein
I picked the right Opening Day.
Was it because I simply couldn’t wait four days to see the retooled White Sox? Did I have a premonition that the Sox and Cleveland would play in near-blizzard conditions at The Cell on Friday? Or as the featured match-up between Chris Sale and the A’s Sonny Gray was too intriguing to pass up. (Gray got the stomach flu, possibly the first sign that luck just might be on the Sox side this season.)
No, I just happened to be a lot closer to Oakland than Chicago last week, and I’d never seen a White Sox road opener. Nor had I ever visited the, ah, Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. I mean, the O.co Coliseum. Correction: the Oakland Coliseum. Possibly Overstock.com didn’t pay its bills. Hence the new moniker for the decrepit stadium, built in 1966 for football.
Whatever they call it – since the A’s moved to Oakland in 1968, the place also has been the Network Associates Coliseum and the McAfee Coliseum, a salute to nearby Silicon Valley – this is not the place where baseball should be played. You might even declare the venue off limits to children 12 and under.
Read More
Posted on April 11, 2016