Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A long home run

Bradenton, the Pirates’ Florida hub, has been defined by a century of baseball

- By Jason Mackey

When what was formerly known as Bradenton’s City Park opened in 1923, Major League Baseball’s commission­er at the time, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, arrived for pregame festivitie­s on a biplane piloted by a Manatee County official.

The aircraft landed in the outfield of a ballpark that was built for $2,000 and seated 1,300 fans. Like all ballparks then it was segregated. Converted fairground­s buildings served as makeshift locker rooms.

Much has changed throughout 100 years of baseball in Bradenton, Fla., including a relationsh­ip with the Pirates that dates back to 1969, but plenty has remained the same, too.

Through countless twists and turns, the Friendly City — located along the Manatee River about 45 minutes south of Tampa, Fla. — remains a hub of baseball activity, one featuring some of MLB’s best teams, dozens of Hall of Fame players passing through and a venerable ballpark surpassed by only Fenway Park (1912) and Wrigley Field (1914) when it comes to usage by a major league team.

“Without a sports team, a town is a lot different,” said Bradenton Mayor Gene Brown, who’s a fifthgener­ation Manatee County resident. “Without baseball and the relationsh­ip we have with the Pirates, our town would be a lot different.”

With pitchers and catchers reporting to spring training this week, it’s the perfect time to dig into Bradenton’s baseball past, one with ties to the Negro Leagues, the breaking of baseball’s color barrier and even the ballpark — most famously known as McKechnie Field from 19622017 — being flipped into a support facility during World War II.

“Being tasked with this, it opened my eyes not only to Pirates baseball in the area but the history of Major League Baseball in the Bradenton,” Pirates

“Being tasked with this, it opened my eyes not only to Pirates baseball in the area but the history of Major League Baseball in the Bradenton,” Pirates team historian Jim Trdinich said. “It’s really incredible.”

Humble beginnings

Bradenton’s fascinatin­g baseball history actually started with the Bradenton Growers of the Florida State League, who played at a field located slightly east of the current ballpark. A year after the Growers started, in December 1920, the Manatee County Board of Trade voted to bring MLB to the area to help the local economy.

The Growers’ president and majority owner at the time was a man named Robert M. Beall Sr., who founded the Bradenton-based department store chain bearing his last name. Beall was connected to Sam Breadon, who owned the St. Louis Cardinals (along with a citrus grove in Manatee County) and agreed to move his team from Orange, Texas, to Florida’s west coast.

The ballpark was actually constructe­d slightly east of where LECOM Park — its name since 2018 — stands today, which back then was a nine-hole golf course called the Bradenton Golf Club. (The outfield where the biplane landed was a par-5 hole.)

One problem with the original iteration of the park — known as Ninth Street Park before the Cardinals arrived, then by that name again from 1927-47 — was that second base sat 14 inches lower than home plate, and the outfield was 2 feet lower than second base before constructi­on was done to ensure the playing surface was level.

The Cardinals called Bradenton home from 1923-24. The Phillies (1925-27) and Red Sox (1928-29) had stints later in the decade. St. Louis returned in 1930 and stayed until 1936 before the Boston Bees played in Bradenton from 1938-1940.

In 1941, the U.S. Army took over, closed the ballpark and renamed it Camp Bradenton, later changing the name to Camp Weatherfor­d in April 1943 to honor Pfc. Willie M. Weatherfor­d, of Miami, who was killed in the Philippine­s during World War II.

The Boston/Milwaukee Braves were there from 1948-62 and the Kansas City/Oakland Athletics called Bradenton home from 196369. The Pirates shifted their operations from Fort Myers, where they trained from 1955-68.

“The Pirates take tremendous pride in working with the city of Bradenton, Manatee County, the Chamber of Commerce and Realize Bradenton — all the entities there that help promote the greatness of the town,” said Mr. Trdinich, who’s also a part-time Bradenton resident. “Having the Pirates as an integral part of that since 1969, it’s a great relationsh­ip to have with the city of Bradenton.”

That fit has been snug from Day One, too, starting with McKechnie Field — named after Hall of Famer manager Bill, a Wilkinsbur­g native (and former Bradenton resident) who guided the Pirates to victory in the 1925 World Series.

Foothold in history

Bradenton’s baseball history also has important ties to the Negro Leagues, with the Bradenton 9 Devils of the Florida State Negro League playing there from 1937-56. In 1950, Bradenton became the first Florida city to employ a Black baseball player: Sam Jethroe of the Boston Braves.

The Bradenton Marauders, Pittsburgh’s Low-A minor league affiliate, have been around since 2010. That was a couple of months after the Cincinnati Reds left Florida’s Grapefruit League for the Cactus League in Arizona and the Pirates purchased/uprooted the Sarasota Reds, brought them to Bradenton and changed the name.

Furthering the bond between the organizati­on and city, the Marauders are active in the community, functionin­g as a Southern representa­tive of the MLB franchise.

“It’s pretty cool to think about the history here,” said Jeff Podobnik, who served as the Pirates’ director of Florida operations in Bradenton from 1991-99 and is currently their vice president of Florida and Dominican Republic operations. “Whenever I talk to people, I tell them, ‘We aren’t going anywhere.’ It’s important that we’re part of the community.”

LECOM Park is the oldest stadium still used for spring training games, but it has undergone plenty of renovation­s: The clubhouses and press box were redone in 199293, then another totaling $10 million in 2013. That included the 19,000-foot boardwalk that lines the outfield, complete with palm trees. A new clubhouse followed two years later.

The Pirates unveiled a commemorat­ive logo celebratin­g their 40th year of spring training baseball in Bradenton in 2008, the patch displaying a classic Pirates “P” on the face outline of McKechnie Field.

Lights arrived in 2008, although the first attempt to play under them (March 7, 2008, versus the Reds) was rained out. It finally happened in a game against the Yankees on March 19, 2008.

“I’ve seen every ballpark in spring training,” said Mr. Trdinich, who before his current role spent three-plus decades as the team’s director of baseball communicat­ions. “The intimacy of it — you can get from Point A to Point B in literally under a minute. The people who work there are outstandin­g and friendly. After all, it is the Friendly City.

“The enhancemen­ts the city and Pirates have done to the ballpark have made it that much better.”

Most impressive about Bradenton’s storied history with baseball might be the stunning list of legends who’ve played there: Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron, Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio and Lou Gehrig, to name a few of the Hall of Famers.

The Cardinals’ “Gashouse Gang” of the 1930s? It originated from a gas station Dizzy Dean bought in Bradenton. Meanwhile, the modern-day greats are also noteworthy: David Ortiz, Ken Griffey Jr., Ivan Rodriguez, Frank Thomas, Derek Jeter and more.

Yet to Mr. Brown, the mayor who was 12 when the Pirates won their last World Series and still keeps a medallion from that team, the most notable baseball players Bradenton has seen remain Roberto Clemente, Willie Stargell and Bill Mazeroski, Pittsburgh baseball icons who have forged an incredible relationsh­ip with the club’s home away from home.

It’s one that brings in upward of $40 million annually, Mr. Brown said, citing the most recent economic impact study, and also a relationsh­ip the two sides hope to take to the next level for the 100year anniversar­y.

A second field will be added to the area near LECOM Park, with lights put on both. The goal is to make the entire complex a yearround destinatio­n, with the Pirates in the spring, the Marauders during the season, then various high school championsh­ip games and internatio­nal tournament­s serving as offseason programmin­g.

“We’re going to re-energize that whole area,” Mr. Brown said. We’re working on some things to make baseball even more of a staple in Bradenton, and the Pirates are obviously a big part of that.

“That’s how important baseball is to our town. Being 100 years old, it really has made a difference in Bradenton.”

 ?? Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ?? The Pirates moved their spring training home to Bradenton, Fla., in 1969. Their ballpark, McKechnie Field, was named after Bill McKechnie, a Wilkinsbur­g native who played for the PIrates and managed them from 1922-26.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The Pirates moved their spring training home to Bradenton, Fla., in 1969. Their ballpark, McKechnie Field, was named after Bill McKechnie, a Wilkinsbur­g native who played for the PIrates and managed them from 1922-26.

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