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The ballpark is the star. In the age of Tris Speaker and Babe Ruth, the era of Jimmie Foxx and Ted Williams, through the empty-seats epoch of Don Buddin and Willie Tasby and unto the decades of Carl Yastrzemski and Jim Rice, the ballpark is the star. A crazy-quilt violation of city planning principles, an irregular pile of architecture, a menace to marketing consultants, Fenway Park works. It works as a symbol of New England's pride, as a repository of evergreen hopes, as a tabernacle of lost innocence. It works as a place to watch baseball.
Topics
- Baseball
- Pride
- Marketing
- Age
- Innocence
- Planning
- Architecture
- Rice
- Speakers
- Crazy
- Empty
- Working It
- Babe
- Ballparks
- Cities
- City Planning
- England
- Eras
- Evergreens
- Fenway Park
- Lost
- Menace
- Parks
- Principles
- Quilts
- Ruth
- Stars
- Symbols
- Tris
- Violation
- Watches
- Consultants
- Decades
- Epoch
- New England
- Seats
- Empty Seats
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