'Monster Park' (colloquially 'Candlestick', after its original and future name of 'Candlestick Park', and sometimes just simply 'The Stick') is an outdoor sports and entertainment stadium located in
San Francisco, California. Originally built as the home of the
San Francisco Giants, who played there from 1960 until moving into
Pacific Bell Park in 2000, it remains the home field of the
San Francisco 49ers NFL team, which moved in before the
1971 season.
The stadium is situated at Candlestick Point on the western shore of the
San Francisco Bay. Due to its location next to the bay, strong winds often swirl down into the stadium, creating interesting playing conditions. At the time of its construction in the late
1950s, the stadium site was the cheapest plot of land available in the city that was suitable for a sports stadium.
[1] Legend also has it that city officials and stadium designers made visits to the site during the morning when the breezes are usually calm, but not during the late afternoon and evening when the winds frequently pick up quite dramatically, even on clear sunny days.
[1]
The surface of the field is natural
bluegrass, but for nine seasons the stadium had
artificial turf, from
1970 to
1978. The "sliding pit" configuration, with dirt cut-outs only around the bases, was installed in
1971, primarily to keep the dust down from the breezy conditions.
Riverfront Stadium had introduced the sliding-pit layout in June
1970. Following the
1978 football season, the artificial turf was removed. Natural grass was re-installed before the
1979 baseball season.
Park history
Ground was broken in
1958 for the new home of the
National League's
San Francisco Giants, who were moving west from New York. The Giants officially chose the name of 'Candlestick Park' after a name-the-park contest on
March 3,
1959. Prior to that, its construction site had been shown on maps as the generic '''Bay View Stadium'''.
Richard Nixon threw out the first
baseball on the opening day of Candlestick Park on
April 12,
1960. The
Oakland Raiders played their
1961 American Football League season at the stadium. In
1971, the
NFL's
San Francisco 49ers became tenants as well.
The Beatles performed their last live commercial concert at Candlestick Park on
August 29,
1966.
The stadium was enclosed during the winter of
1971–
72 for the 49ers, with stands built around the outfield. The result was that the wind speed dropped marginally, but often swirled around throughout the stadium, and the view of
the Bay was lost. Candlestick Park has the distinction of being the sole remaining NFL stadium that started life as a baseball-only facility that underwent extensive reconstruction in order to add a football field. This accounts for the stadium's odd oblong design that leaves many seats on what was the right-field side of the stadium behind the eastern grandstand of the stadium during football games. Other baseball parks that had been converted to house football include
Angel Stadium of Anaheim and
Mile High Stadium, although Angel Stadium has long since been reconverted to baseball-only, and Mile High Stadium was demolished in 2002.
Candlestick also has the dubious distinction of being the last NFL football stadium in which upper-deck supports obstruct the sight lines from the prime first-deck seating.
The Stick was also home to dozens of commercial shoots as well as the location for the climatic scene in both the
1962 Blake Edwards thriller ''
Experiment in Terror'', starring
Glenn Ford and
Lee Remick, and the
1973 Richard Rush comedy ''
Freebie and the Bean'', starring
James Caan and
Alan Arkin.
On
October 17,
1989, the
Loma Prieta earthquake (measuring 7.1 on the
Richter Scale) struck San Francisco, minutes before Game 3 of the
World Series was to begin at Candlestick. Amazingly, no one within the stadium was injured but minor structural damage was incurred to the stadium. The World Series between the Giants and
Oakland Athletics was delayed for 10 days while the stadium's overall structural soundness (and that of nearby
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum ) was checked by engineers and while city officials tended to more pressing matters. In addition, the 49ers moved their game against the
New England Patriots on
October 22 to
Stanford Stadium.
In
2000, the Giants moved to the new
Pacific Bell Park (now called
AT&T Park) in downtown San Francisco, leaving the 49ers as the lone professional sports team to use Candlestick. The final baseball game was played on an unseasonably hot day,
September 30,
1999, against the
Los Angeles Dodgers, who won 9-4.
Reputation

Baseball configuration

"I came, I saw, I survived."
As a
baseball field, the stadium was best known for the windy conditions that often made life difficult for outfielders trying to catch fly balls. During the first of two
All Star games played in the park (one in
1961, the other in
1984), Giants pitcher
Stu Miller was forced into a
balk by a gust of wind. Two years later, wind picked up the entire batting cage and dropped it 60 feet (18 meters) away on the pitcher’s mound while the
New York Mets were taking batting practice. The wind originally blew in from left-center out toward right-center. After it was enclosed, the wind dove and swooped in all directions.
Giants owner
Horace Stoneham visited the site during the day in
1959 -- not knowing about the windy and foggy conditions that overtake the park at night.
The stadium also had the reputation as the coldest park in the major leagues, resulting in fewer home runs. It was initially built with a
radiant heating system, but it failed to work. The Giants played on the reputation to bolster fan support with promotionals such as awarding the 'Croix de Candlestick pin' to fans at the conclusion of extra-inning night games that the Giants won. Among many less-than-flattering fan nicknames for the park were "North Pole" and "Cave of the Winds."
Attorney
Melvin Belli filed a claim against the Giants in
1960 because his six-seat box, which cost him almost $1,600, was unbearably cold. Belli won in court, claiming that the "radiant heating system" advertised was a failure. (Source: ''How Do Astronauts Scratch an Itch?'' by
David Feldman)
Name changes
Candlestick Park was named for Candlestick Point, a point of land jutting into San Francisco Bay. Candlestick Point is itself named for the indigenous "candlestick bird" (
Long-billed Curlew), once common to the point.
The rights to the stadium name were licensed to
3Com Corporation from
1996 until
2002. During that time, the park became known as '3Com Park at Candlestick Point'. In 2002, the
naming rights deal expired, and the park then became officially known as 'San Francisco Stadium at Candlestick Point'. On
September 28,
2004, a new naming rights deal was signed with
Monster Cable, a maker of cables for electronic equipment, and the stadium was renamed 'Monster Park' (many people erroneously assume the Monster Park name is associated with the well-known
Monster.com job search website).

Candlestick Park interior
The City and County of San Francisco had trouble finding a new naming sponsor due in part to the downturn in the economy, but also because the stadium's tenure as 3Com Park was tenuous at best. Many local fans were annoyed with the change and continued referring to the park by its original name, and many continue to do so to this day, regardless of the official name. The Giants reportedly continued to call the stadium "Candlestick Park" in media guides. Freeway signs in the vicinity were recently changed to read "Monster Park" as part of an overall signage upgrade to national standards on California highways.
A measure passed in the
November 2,
2004,
election states that the stadium name will revert back to Candlestick permanently after the current contract with
Monster Cable expires in
2008. This highlights San Francisco's extreme distaste for corporate naming. Many San Franciscans refer to
AT&T Park, where the Giants play, by its original name, Pac Bell Park, despite its having undergone two name changes in the stadium's relatively short life. Monster Park is similarly almost universally referred to as 'Candlestick Park' by both locals and much of the media despite the name change. The Monster Park moniker is confined to the 49ers' front office and to some radio and television broadcasters, all of whom are contractually required to use the corporate sponsor's name whenever referring to the park, just as they were with 3Com.
On
August 10,
2007, San Francisco
mayor Gavin Newsom announced that the playing field would be renamed 'Bill Walsh Field' in honor of former San Francisco 49ers' coach, the late
Bill Walsh, who passed away on
July 30 that year, pending the approval of the city government. However the stadium will retain its current name as is contractually obligated.
[3]
Future

Pregame, 2006
Main articles: New 49ers Stadium
Plans were underway to construct a new 68,000-seat stadium at Candlestick Point
[1]. However, on November 8, 2006, the 49ers announced that they would abandon their search for a location in San Francisco and begin to actively pursue the idea of building a stadium in Santa Clara. As a result, San Francisco withdrew its bid for the 2016 Olympics on November 13, 2006, as its centerpiece stadium was lost. However, 49ers ownership is still willing to hear any offers San Francisco may want to bring, including the
Hunter's Point Naval Shipyard.
See also
★
Dakin Building
★
Humphrey the whale, the humpback whale who was beached and rescued south of Candlestick
References
1. http://www.stadiumsofnfl.com/nfc/MonsterPark.htm
2. http://www.stadiumsofnfl.com/nfc/MonsterPark.htm
3. 8,000 turn out at Monster Park to say goodbye to Bill Walsh
External links
★
Monster Park Official Site
★
USGS aerial photograph showing football layout, a 2004 image from Microsoft's
TerraServer-USA website