Season 7 • Birmingham, AL • Oct. 13 - 16, 1997
Key moments from our 1997 Birmingham adventure
With Ted Darby managing the money, we ended in the black for the very first time and made our first charity donation.
Playing at America's oldest ballpark, built in 1910, home to Negro League teams and countless baseball legends.
13-man field trip in a stretch Hummer limo to Anniston, including getting chased out of a trailer park by an aggravated man with a shotgun.
Rich Bellis breaking his neck rounding third, Bill Brockway one-hopped the wall at age 70, and John Costigan homering in golf shoes.
Season 7 at Rickwood Field
With Darb managing the money, we end in the black for the very first time and make our first charity donation, a thousand bucks, to the preservation group Friends of Rickwood, the oldest ballpark in America. Built in 1910, the park was home to Negro League teams and just about everyone in baseball history stepped foot on it at one time or another. In 1919, the Pittsburgh Pirates held spring training at Rickwood. One of their outfielders was 28-year-old Casey Stengel. The Alabama Crimson Tide played home football games at Rickwood for 16 seasons (1912-1927).
Pre-tournament action included a 13-man field trip in a stretch Hummer limo to nearby Anniston that included getting chased out of a trailer park by an aggravated man brandishing a shotgun, plus a stroll through a metal detector en route to a truly remarkable acrobatic circus.
On the field, a hollow neckbone caused founding member Rich Bellis to break his neck rounding third base, Bill Brockway one-hopped the left-centerfield wall with a blast at age 70, John Costigan homered to left in golf shoes and had to go retrieve the ball since no one else would. Bellis, wired and immobilized in a neck and head halo, and prone in the hospital intensive care unit, got iced in his groin area by Bob Moyer and The Chairman, who left the scene as the attending nurse arrived.
On October 25th, Tim Mayer's son Charlie (13) passed away after a freak bicycling fall. The same evening, half a world away under the ugly shadows of Moscow street light, Sasha Muratov lost his son Vladimir, then 21 and one of Russia's best ballplayers, to a savage street murder, a crime that remains unsolved.
This was also Harley Kane's rookie season. Harley mentioned he hadn't gotten iced, an oversight soon remedied.
Celebrating the people who made 1997 special
Supporting Friends of Rickwood Field in 1997