Guest Post: Spring Training at Fort Lauderdale Stadium

Guest Post: Spring Training at Fort Lauderdale Stadium



Baseball History Comes Alive Now Ranked #2 by Feedspot Among All Internet Baseball History Websites and Blogs!

Guest Submissions from Our Readers Always Welcome!

Click here for details

Subscribe to Baseball History Comes Alive! for automatic updates (sign-up block found in right side-bar)

As a Free Bonus for subscribing, you’ll get instant access to my two Special Reports: Memorable World Series Moments and Gary’s Handy Dandy World Series Reference Guide!

 “Spring Training at Ft. Lauderdale Stadium” Photo Gallery
Click on any image below to see photos in full size and to start Photo Gallery:




We always welcome guest posts from our readers, and today we feature one from Craig Gordon, who writes about his years visiting Fort Lauderdale Stadium, the Spring Training home of the Yankees from 1962-1995. It later became the spring home for the Orioles from 1966-2009. 

Even though he’s a life-long Red Sox fan who grew up in Connecticut and has lived in South Florida for 40 years, he still has fond memories of the times he and his brother Glen spent at the now-abandoned stadium from 1974-’78, when his mother worked nearby.

As Craig put it: “Although not Yankee fans, we loved meeting and spending time with ‘the greats’. We spent so much time there the grounds crew and even George Steinbrenner knew us by name!”

Craig shared with me the story about how he got Mickey Mantle’s autographed baseball cap, which is mentioned in his story. Photos of the autographed cap are included in the gallery:

“I just remembered how I got the cap. Mickey was arguing with Steinbrenner (probably about money) over his and Whitey Ford’s fantasy camp. He came down the ramp, and just happened to be next to me and he said: ‘I’m never wearing f…g pinstripes again!’ He took off the cap and asked if I wanted it. I asked him to sign it. He said, ‘you’re pushing it’!” He did sign it then he walked off never to wear pinstripes again. So this is the last Yankee cap he ever wore.”

Anyway…I think you’ll enjoy Craig’s essay:

Spring Training at Fort Lauderdale Stadium

By Craig Gordon

Last weekend my brother and I went to Ft. Lauderdale Executive Airport to tour some WWII planes. We drove right past Ft. Lauderdale Stadium where the New York Yankees held spring training for about 40 years. They moved out about 25 years ago and then it became home to the Orioles until 2009. The stadium has been vacant ever since.

As we drove past and noticed the state of disrepair, my brother and I had the same feelings: Sadness, seeing how bad the stadium looked and at the same time happiness remembering all the good times we had there. My mother had worked at a hospital a few blocks away.

From 1974-1978 we would spend all day, every day at the stadium during Yankees’ spring training. We have always been Red Sox fans but still loved seeing the Yankee “greats” in person. We actually got autographs just for fun. It was great walking up the ramp, hearing the crack of the bat, the pop of baseballs hitting the bats and gloves. Whitey Ford was still throwing batting practice in those days.

Driving by, we saw that the player parking lot was overgrown with weeds and grass. The cement cracked. This was the same parking lot where we met Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, Manager Billy Martin, and hundreds of others. One day Reggie Jackson was sitting in his Rolls Royce and we heard his Mom yelled at him “Reggie, Mr. Steinbrenner is paying you a lot of money. Get out here and sign autographs!” He did. Mom was boss.

The entire stadium is decaying and falling apart. This is the same stadium where Mickey Mantle took of his hat, signed it and handed it to me. I was just in the right place at the right time. Yes, I still have the hat. The list of players and coaches we met is unbelievable. Catfish Hunter, Joe DiMaggio, Phil Rizzuto etc…

The day I will never forget was meeting Thurman Munson. All the Yankee players came out after practice to their fancy, expensive cars on one side of the stadium. Not Thurman. He was a blue-collar, low key guy and hated the limelight. He would sneak out on the other side. My brother, who always had a knack for knowing where and when to be somewhere to get and autograph suggested we go find Thurman. Yup, he was right. Thurman came out by himself wearing jeans, a t-shirt and holding a torn plastic Yankee bag. He quietly, reluctantly signed our autographs and got into a station wagon with the fake wood on the side. Classic.

So many great memories flooded over my brother and me as we drove by that stadium. So sad to see what was once a sports temple reduced to rubble. They can demolish the stadium but they cannot take away our memories.

Shop MLB.com. The Official Online Shop of Major League Baseball.

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Check out my latest book, recently nominated for the SABR 1919 Lawrence Ritter award: Reflections On the 1919 Black Sox: Time to Take Another Look now available on Amazon in e-book and paperback. All profits go to the Illinois Veterans Foundation

Add your name to the petition to help get Gil Hodges elected to the Hall of Fame: https://wp.me/P7a04E-57h

New Poll Question: How Do You Feel About the New 3-Batter minimum Rule for Relief Pitchers? Voice your opinion: https://wp.me/p7a04E-6UO

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. Click here to view Amazon’s privacy policy

I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

7 Comments

  1. Bruce Berger · February 23, 2020 Reply

    Fort Lauderdale Stadium was used for spring training games by the Orioles from 1996 until 2009. I attended one of the opening days of Orioles spring training in 2009 with my wife and 15 year old son. This was before games began – it was baseball paradise. The stadium was open for fans to walk in and watch practice for free, the players walked past fans to get to the field and had time to sign autographs. My son was able to sit on top of the dugout to watch practice, and a number of players spoke to them briefly. The next year the Orioles moved to one of the new spring training facilities which are all much less accessible for fans. An era gone for good. Great memories, though!

  2. vivian Kasley · May 31, 2020 Reply

    Do you remember my grandfather, Angelo Russello? 🙂

  3. Vivian Kasley · May 31, 2020 Reply

    I thought maybe Mr. Gordon might remember my grandfather. He worked with the Yanks at Ft. Lauderdale stadium from 1982 to 1995 and then with the Orioles until they left for Sarasota. My brothers and I got to grow up around so many baseball greats! I have many pictures and signed baseballs and other tokens. It was a great time for sure. I was reminiscing today about my grandpa(we lost him in 2018), and happened upon this post why looking for photos of the stadium.

    • Gary Livacari · May 31, 2020 Reply

      Thanks Vivian…that’s great information. Maybe Craig Gordon will see this and respond. Thanks for checking in.

  4. Bill · June 25, 2021 Reply

    I to was a kid who grew up in and around FtL Yankee Stadium. I used to be a bat boy there. I have so many stories and some people I do remember by name who worked in the Yankee office. I used to go there on lunch breaks and sneak in and walk the field and take pics. This place was a sports shrine and they torn it down yo put up a soccer stadium ??!!!! God help us all!!!

Leave a reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.