Vintage Toronto Ads: Give the Gift of Baseball

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'Tis the season for gift certificates. Whether you're scratching your head trying to figure out what to give to an impossible recipient or selecting your loved one's favourite store or service, the selection of certificates, cards and vouchers seems unlimited. More than a few local sports woke up on Christmas morning three decades ago to find one of today's passes for the Blue Jays' second campaign as a stocking stuffer.

The Jays finished their debut season in a familiar spot for expansion teams, last place in the American League East. Despite a record of 54 wins and 107 losses, over 1.7 million fans cheered for the team at Exhibition Stadium. Orioles castoff Bob Bailor led hitters with a .310 average, while Dave Lemanczyk led the pitching staff with 13 victories. Of the players who took the field that year, only pitcher Jim Clancy and catcher Ernie Whitt were still in Toronto uniforms when the Jays made their first trip to the playoffs in 1985.

That the team had a store in Commerce Court wasn't a great surprise, as the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce was one of the original owners of the franchise, along with Labatt's Breweries and Imperial Trust. The bank retained an ownership share until it sold its last interests when Rogers Communications bought the team in 2000.

Source: The Toronto Star, December 3, 1977

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Comments (2) [rss]

What would $6.50 buy you at a Jays game, nowadays?

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And a sad note: Don Chevrier, one of the first announcers for the Blue Jays died in Florida yesterday.

The Ex was so spectacularly bad as a stadium of any kind that it was almost charming. I still keep an aerial photo of the place (from the pre-Jays era) on my desk. Good times.

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