Recalling the Oakland Coliseum: A Nostalgic Journey Through Baseball History

Memories of the Oakland Coliseum



Today, the Oakland Athletics will play their final home game ever. They have played in the Oakland Coliseum ever since the team moved from Kansas City in 1968. The Coliseum has set the scene for World Series triumphs and collapses. It has been home to the greatest basestealer in the history of the world, some of the most magnificent mustaches the game has ever seen, and at least one possum.

The Coliseum opened in 1966, part of the wave of multipurpose stadiums that swept the country. The concrete behemoth was never the warmest stadium, but its character was unmistakable. In recent years, it hasn’t exactly fallen into disrepair; rather, it’s been deliberately pushed. Like the team on the field, it’s been allowed to atrophy in order to demonstrate how badly the organization needs (never wants) out of Oakland.

After last night’s game, groundskeepers patiently scooped dirt from the field for grateful fans who wanted a memento. Below, some of our writers share their memories of the Coliseum and the A’s in Oakland. We encourage you to share your own memories in the comments section.

– Davy Andrews Tess Taruskin

I would go with my brother and our friends to every bobblehead giveaway, and we would show up at like 8 am to get in line. We would usually play this card game called MLB Showdown, which involved cards and a special set of dice, and almost always got unnecessarily competitive. Once inside, with the bobbleheads secured, we would go down to field level for BP, and see how long we could stay there until the ushers sent us to our third-deck seats, sometimes lasting several innings into the game. One bobblehead giveaway I attended was for Rich Harden, and I went down to the field before the game to see if I could get him to sign it. As I was pulling it out of the box, the head came unglued from its spring, and rolled into the on-field bullpen dirt. Rich Harden picked it up and asked whose it was. I raised my hand, but said, “I guess it’s your head…?” and he chuckled and signed the bill of the cap before handing the head back to me. As soon as I learned that you could show up for BP before non-bobblehead games, I started getting there that early for every game I went to, and was often one of very, very few fans in the stands during BP. At one such game, I was out by the left field foul pole, and Mark Mulder was out there shagging flies. A ball came right to him and he bowed forward and caught it behind his back – very circus-y and impressive – but he was on the warning track behind the rest of the guys out there and they weren’t watching, so Mulder started looking around to see if anyone saw that and spotted me in the seats. I just nodded at him, and he fist pumped and tossed the ball to me.

Ben Clemens

The first time I went to the Coliseum, no one was there. I covered the 2020 Wild Card series, the year that fans weren’t allowed at games because of the pandemic. The place felt eerily silent – the loudest cries of the day came from the White Sox staffers seated a section away from me. Luis Robert Jr. hit a long home run and you could actually hear players gasp at the sound of it. It was a great experience, but a strange one too. I thought that’s how the Coliseum always was – quiet and empty. Then I went back for last year’s reverse boycott game and saw what it can be like at its best. A’s fans packed the house even though the team was awful. It was boisterous and fun. People were equally excited to jeer John Fisher and cheer for the team. The organizers of the event had planned a few pre-arranged cheers, but there were way too many people there for any semblance of order. After one tense inning, ended by a fine defensive play, I could feel the place shaking. The stadium still sucked – the bathrooms weren’t nice, the food was abysmal, and the seats weren’t comfortable – but the atmosphere made up for it. It’s a strange and correctly maligned stadium, but when the fans are at full roar, it’s an amazing place to be.

Davy Andrews

I don’t remember anything about the game. I don’t have a picture in my head of the field or the stadium, aside from a vague sense of being overwhelmed by concrete. I just remember the souvenir ball and the bathroom. I must have been so excited to be at an A’s game, though. In my youth league, kids stayed on the same team year after year, so all the way from tee-ball through age 12, my siblings and I played for the A’s — the red A’s, the blue A’s, and finally the green A’s, with real Oakland jerseys and snapbacks. At the time, the A’s were the team, making the World Series when I was four, five, and six years old. My glove had Jose Canseco‘s signature scrawled across the palm, and even though Little Leaguers aren’t allowed to take leads, when I reached first base, I still copied Rickey Henderson’s stance from the picture on my bedroom wall: legs spread wide, fingers dangling nearly to the dirt. My only trip to the Coliseum came during a family vacation to the Bay Area. We saw the redwood forests. But I just remember the bathrooms, which haven’t changed in all these years. There still aren’t any urinals. Instead, one entire wall is lined with long, low troughs. Well, they’re low if you’re an adult. To a child too young to visit a ballpark bathroom without his dad, they were high enough to be awkward. Two things compounded that awkwardness. The first was the stark, brutalist perspective on humanity awaiting my innocent, roughly crotch-level eyes as I stepped up to the packed trough. I was blindsided. The second was a souvenir baseball with an A’s logo printed in the middle of the horseshoe, loosely sealed in a flimsy plastic bag. I wouldn’t put it down; it was too precious. You know what happened next. I tried to unbutton my pants. The ball tumbled from my left hand and absorbed a fusillade as it caromed crazily down the length of the trough. How much do your parents really love you? In most cases, the answer to that question is just a sense inside you, constructed piecemeal, shaped and reshaped by moments big and small. I got my answer all at once. When the ball made it past the firing squad and settled at the far end of the trough, I watched my dad reach in to retrieve it, rinse and remove the packaging, and — although I don’t remember this part, there’s no way it didn’t happen — wash his hands for the next 35 to 40 minutes. At some point, my brothers and I tried to use the souvenir ball in a game, but it was too poorly constructed to withstand contact with an actual bat. It went lopsided and the logo blurred, but even grass-stained and dirty, the imitation leather never quite lost its waxy sheen. It always stood out as just a little bit brighter than the rest. For years, it sat under the deck in the backyard with our other baseballs. It might still be there today.

Michael Rosen

For 10 years, I lived in the East Bay. The Coliseum was a short BART ride away, and the tickets were cheap, and I was poor. And the Mariners were there a lot, so I was there a lot, many times a year. I just scrolled back through my Instagram and saw that I chronicled at least four separate Félix Hernández starts. I cherish these memories. Others in this piece might express this sentiment, but the Coliseum received far too much hate. Yes, it is a giant hunk of concrete — so is Dodger Stadium. The…

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