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Colt Stadium / Houston Colt
.45s / 1962-1964
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Seating: 32,601 (1962), 33,010 (1964)
Original cost: $2 million
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This will not go down in the annals of
baseball as one of the most beloved stadiums ever constructed.
In fact, there are very few folks who seem to have fond
memories of Colt Stadium, the three-year home of the expansion
Houston Colt .45s. MLB didn't put a lot of thought and
research into facilities in Houston before awarded an
expansion franchise to Judge Roy Hofheinz, who had been
negotiating for a Continental League franchise. As part of the
agreement for the Continental League going away, both the
American League and the National League expanded by two teams.
So with this relatively unexpected bounty, team owners needed
to find a suitable facility, and came up with Colt Stadium, a
$2 million temporary stadium
constructed while the Astrodome was constructed. Located in
what would become the north Astrodome parking lot, Colt Stadium was
arguably the worst major-league ballpark used in the last 50
years. Imagine playing outdoors in Houston in the summertime,
and then imagine cramming 10,000 sweaty bodies into a
temporary stadium -- the perfect environment to attract tens
of thousands of mosquitoes.
The
design of the stadium was on the simple side: a single-tier
grandstand went from foul pole to foul pole, with half of the
seating flamingo-colored seats and the other half bleachers. There
were additional bleachers in both left and right field, while
the scoreboard was located in center field (which didn't do a
lot of good for those sitting in the outfield bleachers).
Because the entire stadium was a single-deck stadium, there
was no second deck to provide any shade. (No wonder that the First-Aid room
was regularly visited by those suffering from heat exhaustion
-- almost 80 during one memorable 1962 doubleheader.) In a
show of mercy, the National League suspended a rule against
Sunday night games so the Colt .45s could get out of the hot
Houston midday sun. The infield was rock-hard and hot, and
players took salt tablets during the game. If the sun didn't
get you, the bugs did, although insect repellant was available
at the concession stands. The scoreboard itself was an oddity
when the ballpark opened, as it displayed hits ahead of runs
in the line score.
The first game at Colt Stadium was on April 10, 1962,
with the expansion Colt .45s beating the Chicago Cubs 11-2
before 25,271 fans. Despite this score, the .45s didn't
exactly pound the cover off the ball in Colt Stadium,
finishing last in the National League in hitting and runs
scored. Part of this was due to the team being an expansion
franchise, of course, but a larger part of the issue has to do
with the attributes of Colt Stadium itself. Even when the team
played games in the evening, the Houston weather did not
cooperate, as anyone who has spent a summer in Houston knows;
the humid, sticky hot air in Houston tended to keep balls
within the park. And the dimensions of Colt Stadium -- a very
spacious 427 feet to the power alleys and 420 to dead center
field -- also kept many a well-hit ball in the stadium. Two
Colt .45s threw no-hitters (Don Nottebart in 1962 and Ken
Johnson in 1963), but there was no doubt that both were aided
by the conditions at Colt Stadium.
That's why there were very few tears
shed on that final Colt Stadium game on September
24, 1964. With the end of Colt Stadium also came the end of
the Houston Colt .45s: when the team moved across the parking
lot to the Astrodome for the 1965 season, they adopted a new
team name -- the Houston Astros -- that reflected the national
interest in the space program and Houston's central role in
the race for space.
Colt Stadium stood for a year, used
mostly for storage; Astros owner Judge Roy Hofheinz painted
the stadium gray so that it could not be seen in aerial photos
of the Astrodome. After Harris County declared that it was
still indeed a structure and was therefore liable for property
taxes, Hofheinz dismantled it, where it sat in the parking
lot. Colt Stadium had a second life as a pro
baseball stadium when it was sold to the Torrean Cotton
Pickers of the Mexico League
team for $100,000 and used for several years there. (Locals
called it "El Mecano.") It was moved once more to
Tampico, where it was home to the Tampico Stevedores. It was
almost moved a third time to Mexico City to be the home of the
Tigers, but some wiser heads prevailed and the structurally
weakened ballpark was torn down, with some of the seating
going to a factory workers' league near Pasteje and the rest
to a public playground in Tampico,
Mexico.
STATS
| Dimensions |
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| Year |
LF |
LC |
C |
RC |
RF |
| 1962-1964 |
360 |
427 |
420 |
427 |
360 |
| Year |
Attendance |
Average |
Rank in League |
Record |
Standing |
|
| 1962 |
924,456 |
11,413 |
7th out of 10
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64-96 |
8 |
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| 1963 |
719,502 |
8,883 |
10th out of 10 |
66-96 |
9 |
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| 1964 |
725,773 |
8,960 |
10th out of 10 |
66-96
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9 |
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Related Books
A Six-Gun Salute: An Illustrated History of the Houston Colt .45s, 1962-1964.
An in-depth look at the Colt .45s and Colt Stadium.
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
Next Page: More Pictures of
Colt Stadium
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