Good-bye Alex Box Stadium
Posted by: Chip in Living, Man Stuff, tags: Alex Box Stadium, LSU baseballThis weekend marks the final home stand that LSU’s baseball team will play in famed Alex Box Stadium. Next year they move into a new facility just down the street which will be state of the art in college baseball. Everyone is hoping that the character, traditions and magic will transfer - but who knows?
I grew up in Baton Rouge and unfortunately moved away in 1996. But, I was there in the early days of the Coach Bertman era of LSU baseball. My father was on the Coaches Committee then, so I was very fortunate to get to know the team and every little nook of Alex Box.
I have so many memories of that place and the people. It was a great place and time for a young teenager who loved baseball. Here are a few:
- The first regional trip in ‘85 to Austin, TX - that one started it all.
- Andy Galy’s sweatband that he wore all the time at practice with “OMAHA” on it.
- Riding back on the plane from a trip to play Central Florida when Robbie Smith wore a Goofy hat from Disneyworld all the way home. And, how nervous Eric Hetzel’s mom used to get when he pitched - she couldn’t watch at all and would go hide somewhere.
- I can’t tell you how many hundreds of buckets of balls I soft-tossed to Albert Belle in the batting cage - he was so nice to me.
- I went to every game in the ‘86 season - home and away - except for the final series against Kentucky when I got sick.
- The first trip to Omaha in ‘86 was incredible. I remember missing the bus from the hotel to the stadium and having to catch a ride with Jim Mashek, one of the Advocate reporters. Man my Dad was mad at me.
- Not to mention all of the Kid’s Clinics I attended as a kid there - that was great getting tips from pros from all over the major leagues.
The best thing that I can say about Alex Box is that, at least for me, being a kid in Baton Rouge infatuated with baseball - Alex Box was THE aspiration. It was the goal. I never made it, but I got a taste. That place made the years when I was between 12 and 14 some of the best of my life.


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