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Your Ballpark Guide

Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum / Los Angeles Dodgers / 1958-1961

Seating: 93,000 (1958), 94,600 (1959)
Original cost: $954,000 (1923); $950,294 (1958 retrofitting for baseball)

When the Los Angeles Coliseum was constructed for the 1932 Olympics, no one ever envisioned that it would be used as a baseball stadium. But when Walter O'Malley moved the Brooklyn Dodgers to Los Angeles after the end of the 1957 season, he decided that the Coliseum would be a great place to play baseball while Dodger Stadium was under construction. Why? Sheer capacity. O'Malley must have drooled at the prospect of cramming 90,000 paying customers into a stadium to see the Dodgers. And while Wrigley Field (the former home of the Pacific Coast League's Los Angeles Angels) or even the Rose Bowl would have made a more appropriate home for a baseball team, they lacked the sheer capacity that the Coliseum had.

And so began the great experiment. Some basic work was done to make the Coliseum appropriate for baseball: dugouts, three banks of lights and a press box were added. Because of the orientation of the diamond, there was a ton of space in foul ground down the left-field line, but very little space between the right-field line and the bleachers. The baseball diamond was crammed into one end of the stadium, resulting in a left-field line measuring only 250 feet. A 40-foot screen was constructed to counter the intimate dimensions, but it didn't do that much good: the balls flew out of the park because of the intimate dimensions. In fact, the disparity between home runs hit to left and home runs hit to right field was staggering. In 1958, 193 home runs were hit in the Coliseum -- 182 to left, 3 to center, and 8 to right. SABR's Hugh Mechesney describes the the two soft fly ball home runs over the left field screen by Pee Wee Reese that ended up as home runs -- and probably would have been routine outs anywhere else.

The main entrance to the stadium was at the opposite end of the stadium from home plate (the main entrance was where the concrete columns are located; in the picture below, Sandy Koufax is near the infield and the main entrance was behind him). Since the stadium was only one tier, there were some pretty bad seats located far, far away from the action -- oldtimers recall that they considered themselves barely in the stadium when sitting in the outfield bleachers.

On April 18, 1958, the Dodgers played their first game the Coliseum, defeating the Giants 6-5 before 78,672 fans at the Coliseum. On that day the Coliseum became the largest stadium ever in major-league baseball -- a record that still stands. The size of the stadium allowed the Dodgers to set the all-time single-game attendance record on May 7, 1959: a crowd of 93,105 showed up to see former Dodger great Roy Campanella honored during an exhibition game between the New York Yankees and Dodgers.  In 1958 the Dodgers drew over 1.8 million fans (good enough for second in National League attendance -- the Milwaukee Braves drew over 1.9 million fans to County Stadium), and in 1959 and 1960, the team drew over 2 million fans -- records at the time.

It wasn't a bad run for the Dodgers in the Coliseum -- the team won a World Series while playing there, and interest in the Dodgers certainly was whetted by the Coliseum's enormous capacity. The Dodgers finished their occupancy on September 21, 1961, and then moved to Chavez Ravine for the 1962 season. Over the years the Los Angeles Coliseum has been the home of the University of Southern California (USC) football team (still to this day, as a matter of fact) as well as the NFL's Los Angeles Raiders and Los Angeles Rams. 

The Los Angeles Coliseum also did duty as a baseball stadium in 2001, representing other ballparks in the HBO movie 61, Billy Crystal's account of the home-run race between Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle in 1961. To look like Baltimore's Memorial Stadium, new fences were put in the outfield, dugouts were planed in the infield, a facsimile scoreboard was erected, and an infield was cut out of the existing sod. We put the fences exactly, the old scoreboard, and cut an infield. A "Green Monster" was then erected in left field to mimic Boston's Fenway Park, while another wall and repainted dugouts represented Washington, D.C.'s Griffith Stadium.

STATS

Dimensions
Year LF LC C RC RF
1958 250 425 425 440 301
1959 251.6 417 420 375 300
1960 251.6 417 420 394 300
1961 251.6 417 420 380 300

 

Year Attendance Average Rank in League Record Standing
1958 1,845,556 23,968 2nd out of 8 71-83 7
1959 2,071,045 26,552 1st out of 8 88-68 1
1960 2,253,887 29,271 1st out of 8 82-72 4
1961 1,804,250 23,432 1st out of 8 89-65 2

Related Books

The Dodgers Move West

True Blue: The Dramatic History of the Los Angeles Dodgers

Lost Ballparks

Ballparks

The Stadium: Architecture of Mass Sport

City Baseball Magic

The Ballpark Book : A Journey Through the Fields of Baseball Magic

Blue Skies, Green Fields: A Celebration...

Take Me Out to the Ballpark: An Illustrated Guide to Ballparks Past and Present

Ballparks of North America: A Comprehensive Historical Reference to Baseball Grounds, Yards and Stadiums, 1845 to Present

Storied Stadiums: Baseball's History Through Its Ballparks

Baseball Parks (Sports Palaces)

Next Page: More Pictures of the Los Angeles Coliseum

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