Las Vegas Review-Journal

Players, fans share memories of popular San Diego stadium

‘The Murph’ hosted many of city’s best moments in sports

- By Bernie Wilson

SAN DIEGO — A major piece of San Diego’s sports history is slowly being knocked down and ground to bits. They’re tearing down the stadium once affectiona­tely known as “The Murph.”

Each day, heavy equipment obliterate­s more and more of 70,000-seat SDCCU Stadium in Mission Valley, where Hall of Fame careers were born and most of the city’s biggest sports moments occurred.

Dan Fouts guided Air Coryell to takeoff there, and Junior Seau stopped ball carriers with bone-rattling tackles.

Tony Gwynn wore out the hole between third base and shortstop, and Trevor Hoffman first trotted out of the bullpen to the gongs of “Hells Bells” at the stadium on Friars

Road.

The San Diego Chicken’s brand of fowl humor was hatched there during the rowdy ’70s.

Generation­s of fans are bummed that because of the coronaviru­s pandemic they didn’t get to say a proper goodbye to the place where they tailgated with gusto in the massive parking lot before cheering on the Chargers, Padres and Aztecs, or watched myriad other events and concerts.

It’s also melancholy for those who performed there.

“We didn’t even have one last house party for the place,” said Ted Giannoulas, 67, who is semiretire­d as the San Diego Chicken after a career of making fans laugh by poking fun at umpires, opposing players and his favorite foil, former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda.

“To see The Murph being taken apart like that is a letdown, to be polite,” Giannoulas said. “I saw it as the heart of the town, the spirit of San Diego.”

San Diego State University is demolishin­g the 53-year-old stadium while building a 35,000-seat stadium next door as the first phase of a campus expansion.

SDCCU Stadium had fallen into disrepair, and fans knew it eventually would come down. The Chargers pushed for nearly 15 years to get a new stadium built. After a 2016 ballot measure failed, they bolted for Los Angeles. San Diego State prevailed at the ballot box in 2018 to win the right to buy 132 of the site’s 166 acres.

SDSU planned to continue playing at SDCCU Stadium while building its new stadium, set to open in 2022. But when it became clear fans wouldn’t be allowed at games due to the pandemic, the Aztecs decided to begin tearing down SDCCU Stadium.

Known as San Diego Stadium when it opened in 1967, it was renamed Jack Murphy Stadium in 1981 for the late sports editor of The San Diego Union. Murphy helped persuade hotelier Barron Hilton to move his Chargers from Los Angeles to San Diego in 1961, and then championed the stadium’s constructi­on to replace Balboa Stadium. It was expanded in 1997 and renamed Qualcomm Stadium.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? A 1987 aerial view of San Diego’s Jack Murphy Stadium, former home of the Padres and Chargers.
Associated Press file A 1987 aerial view of San Diego’s Jack Murphy Stadium, former home of the Padres and Chargers.

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