Sunday 9 August 2015

My vote is for Labatt Memorial Park in London

'Great Places In Canada' is an online contest to nominate and vote
Home of baseball's London Majors is a wonderful treasure
By Mark Schadenberg
The only good thing about the Burlington Bandits victory today (Sunday), is that it permits me good reason to finish my writing about Barry Wells, and the home of Roop Chanderdat's diamond crew.
The London Majors lost 9-4 today to Burlington in InterCounty baseball playoffs, which means Monday's Game 7 could be your last chance to watch the Majors this season at Labatt Memorial Park at the forks of the Thames River in London (Riverside Drive and Wilson Street).
First pitch is at 7:30 as the best-of-seven IBL quarterfinal is now knotted 3-3.


Dating back to 1877, Labatt Park is the longest continuously used ball park in the world. Lots of history can be doubted and debated, and some pundits may point out the home plate has shifted significantly since the park's inception 138 years ago, but in the final analysis, Labatt Park is not only home for hardball, it's more than just a diamond or a gem of a diamond, it's a destination to admire and enjoy.
Chanderdat is the long-time field manager and co-owner of the Majors, half the ownership tandem with Scott Dart.
Roop Chanderdat
Scott Dart

Who is Barry Wells then? Wells, who called Woodstock home for much of his youth, is the offensive leader of the Majors. Wells doesn't hit homers, steal bases, bat cleanup or hit the ball into the gap for a ground-rule double, but rather Wells is currently hitting a home run in promoting Labatt Memorial Park as one of Canada's greatest destinations to visit.
An online voting system can be found at www.greatplacesincanada.ca, and surprisingly three of the nominees this year are London landmarks – Blackfriars Bridge, Meadowlily Woods, and Labatt Park. Blackfriars might be historic but sadly has been reduced to being a foot / bicycle bridge. Meadowlilly is a 300-acre green space of significance, but it's not the place in London I'm voting for daily.
I'm voting for my Labatt Memorial Park. As a long-time Rogers TV broadcaster (volunteering often), I was the play-by-play voice for many majors baseball games up to about 2010. During the Canada Summer Games in 2001, I also did baseball play-by-play.


Labatt Park – with its many renovations and improvements of the years --- including hosting Detroit Tigers AA baseball, plus the semi pro independent-league Werewolves of London and many other clubs, both pro and amateur.
Here's an excerpt from the nomination Barry Wells wrote for the online contest – a voting which can only be deemed positive as it promotes and pinpoints many significant Canadian locales.
()()()()()()()()()
. . . baseball is the park’s primary attraction, with the London Majors Baseball Club, its longest tenant, calling the park home since 1925. In addition, the park is regularly used by scores of local teams in several different leagues, as well as the Western Mustangs and Fanshawe Falcons baseball teams each Fall.
Labatt Park won the prestigious “Beam Clay Award” in 1989-90 as the best natural-grass baseball field in North America for cities less than 300,000 in population. On September 7, 2011, Labatt Park was named “Canada’s Favourite Ballpark” by Baseball Canada after a three-month long, online contest.
Unique to Labatt Park is a treed picnic area just inside the park’s front gates at 25 Wilson Avenue, featuring a towering sugar maple estimated to be more than 150 years old (predating Confederation in 1867 and the opening of the park itself in 1877) and a handcrafted, four-plex birdhouse designed and built by London’s master birdhouse builder, Gordon Harrison, a birdhouse commissioned by The Friends of Labatt Park in 2013.
The city-owned park is open to the general public seven days a week during baseball season from late April to October, whether there’s a baseball game on or not at the park.
At the park are nine (9) historical plaques and seven (7) commemorative, indigenous trees. Since the Spring of 2012, a pair of Osreys have been nesting atop a light standard behind the 3rd-baseline stands, attracting considerable media attention, as they soar overhead during games and as they fish in the nearby Thames River.
()()()()()()()()()


Feel free to research and study the other nominated points of interest from coast to coast, including AA MacDonald Memorial Gardens in PEI and then westward to Grizzly Plaza in Revelstoke, BC. If you reside anywhere near London, you will quickly vote for Labatt Memorial Park daily – again and again.
This contest or balloting system is in conjunction with the national Communities In Bloom contest which yearly rates cities and towns based on their landscaping, cleanliness and municipal spirit.
Among the 2013 winners in the Great Places contest was Wortley Village in London and also Goderich. With the Lake Huron community of Goderich victim to an extensive tornado in 2011, their win was a culmination of quite a comeback as the town was renown for its unique circular downtown. Last year, London's East Village was among the winners, along with Antigonish in Nova Scotia, plus a neighbourhood in old Quebec City.

BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
In the meantime, be sure to catch Game 7 of the Majors – Bandits series as the winner will move on to the semifinals versus the Kitchener Panthers.
As for the Majors, they had an interesting season, winning their first seven contests back in May, and winning five of their last six down the stretch, so with a 20-16 mark overall, my quick math indicates the club was just 8-15 in the middle of their schedule.
With its proximity to Budweiser Gardens, Covent Garden Market, Museum London, Harris Park, Ivey Park, and naturally the Forks Of The Thames River, Labatt Park is a must-stop for anyone. Owned by the City of London, the grounds includes the historically-significant Roy McKay Clubhouse. In 1994, the park was recognized by London city council under the Ontario Heritage Act.

LINKS:
http://www.lfpress.com/2015/08/06/three-london-jewels-are-showcased-in-a-national-contest-for-great-public-places-in-canada-emanuela-campanella-looks-at-whats-behind-the-competition


Facebook:
London Majors Baseball
Twitter
@LondonMajors

Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
www.wesellwoodstock.com
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland

Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

No comments:

Post a Comment