Hidden Secrets of
FENWAY
An inside look at pro baseball's oldest ballpark
by
Christine Celli
Home
to the Boston Red Sox since 1912, Fenway Park lays claim to being
the oldest ballpark in Major League Baseball. Visitors to the
stadium will immediately spot the famed Green Monster, the retired
numbers of Red Sox greats including Ted Williams and Carl
Yastrzemski and the banners that mark the team’s achievements over
the years. But they may miss some of the features that often go
unnoticed yet make Fenway the shrine that it is to baseball fans.
These include:
- Teddy Ballgame’s Seat: Seat 21
in row 37 of section 42 of the bleachers marks the spot where,
in 1946, Williams knocked what is believed to be the longest
home run in the park’s history (502 feet), landing in and
ruining the straw hat of the patron sitting there.
- Pesky’s Pole: Just one of many
examples of Fenway’s quirks is the right field foul pole, which
is placed closer than in most big-league stadiums at 302 feet.
Since the field juts outward beyond the pole, fly balls that in
other parks would be foul balls end up as home runs. Johnny
Pesky, not exactly a power hitter when he played for the Sox
from 1942–52, wrapped a few of his six career Fenway homers
around that pole, which was christened in his honor by a
teammate.
- Manually Operated Scoreboard:
The only one left in the Majors, the game’s score is kept by two
operators who sit inside the Green Monster and monitor the game
by radio.
- Morse Code: Two of the
scoreboard’s vertical lines contain the initials of longtime
owners Thomas and Jean Yawkey, spelled out in Morse code.
- The Monster’s Ladder: If you
squint you’ll see it—a ladder 13 feet up the wall in left
center. In the past it was used by groundkeepers to fetch balls
hit into the net over the giant green wall. But now with the
four new rows of seats on top of the Green Monster, its function
is obsolete.
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