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  <title>255:  Minnesota's Metropolitan Stadium - With Stew Thornley</title>
  <description>Baseball historian, Minnesota Twins official scorer and  Episode 114 guest Stew Thornley (&amp;quot;Metropolitan Stadium: Memorable Games at Minnesota's Diamond on the Prairie&amp;quot;), returns for a fond look back at the semi-iconic structure that helped secure &amp;quot;major league&amp;quot; status for the Twin Cities in the early 1960s. &amp;amp;nbsp; Known simply as &amp;quot;The Met&amp;quot; by area locals (or even the &amp;quot;Old Met&amp;quot; to distinguish from the downtown Minneapolis Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome that effectively replaced it in 1982), Bloomington's Metropolitan Stadium opened in April of 1956 with the stated hope of luring a Major League Baseball franchise to the region - just as the sport was beginning to chart its modern-era manifest destiny. &amp;amp;nbsp; While ultimately luring Calvin Griffith's Washington Senators to become the Twins in 1961 - as well as the expansion NFL football Vikings that same year - the Met was mostly the exclusive home of the minor league American Association Minneapolis Millers for its first five years of existence, save for a handful of annual NFL preseason exhibition games and two regular season Chicago Cardinals matches in 1959. &amp;amp;nbsp; In 1976, it also became the popular outdoor home of the North American Soccer League's Minnesota Kicks - and its legions of young tailgate-crazy fans. &amp;amp;nbsp; Ahead of its time in the mid-50s, Met Stadium was nearly obsolete by the end of the 70s - decent for baseball, not so much for football - and rumors of at least the Vikings absconding for another to-be-built stadium in the area (including concepts for a domed enclosure or a new football-only facility between it and the nearby indoor Met Center) swirled around the community as early as 1970. &amp;amp;nbsp; Alas, after only 21 seasons each for the Twins and the Vikings (six for the Kicks), Metropolitan Stadium succumbed to poor maintenance and the allure of a new, winter-proof Metrodome.&amp;amp;nbsp; Demolished in 1985, the Met gave way to what is now the country's largest shopping center - the Mall of America. </description>
  <author_name>Good Seats Still Available</author_name>
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