1964 Shea Stadium

 $99 Seat Backs Red, and Green Each Delivered Free Shipping 

This is an original plastic seat back RARE that was removed during 2009 demolition. Great for Autographs, matching players uniform number.   

Comes with Letter of authenticity from Authentic Stadium Seats or MLB Hologram

New York Mets (MLB) (1964–2008)

New York Jets (AFL / NFL) (1964–1983)

New York Yankees (MLB) (1974–1975)

New York Giants (NFL) (1975)

 

It comes with MLB Hologram- tamper-proof holograms unique to the MLB Authentication Program.   

The MLB Hologram- tamper-proof holograms unique to the MLB Authentication Program. Once fans receive their authenticated piece of memorabilia, they can trace the unique serial number on the Authentication database located on MLB.com  or you can click link on this website under Shea Stadium MLB Hologram on main page. 

Please Inquire on other seat backs available: (I have other numbers available please ask)

Below are some of the most popular:

 New York Mets MLB (1964-2008) : #1 Mookie Wilson, #3 Buddy Harrelson, #4 Rusty Staub (1972-1974) , #5 David Wright, #7 Ed Kranepool, #7 Jose Reyes, #8 Gary Carter,  #10 Rusty Staub (1981-1985) ,#12 Ron Darling, #16 Dwight Gooden, #17 Keith Hernandez, #18 Darrell Strawberry , #20 Howard Johnson, #26 Dave Kingman,  #30 Nolan Ryan, #31 Mike Piazza, #36 Jerry Kousman, #41 Tom Seaver  , #45 John Franco etc.… 

New York Jets NFL (1964-1983):  #7 Ken Obrien, #12 Joe Namath, #24 Freeman McNeil, #24 Darrelle Revis, #28 Curtis Martin, #73 Joe Klecko, #85 Wesley Walker, #88 Al Toon, #99 Mark Gastineau     Etc…

Ask for Quantity Discounts

 

History:

Shea Stadium was the home of the New York Mets starting in 1964, and it hosted what would be its only All-Star Game that first year, with Johnny Callison of the Philadelphia Phillies hitting a home run in the ninth inning to win the only Mid-Summer Classic held in the Queens ballpark. A month earlier, on Father’s Day, Callison’s teammate, future Hall of Fame member and U.S. Senator Jim Bunning, pitched a perfect game against the Mets.[32]

Shea Stadium hosted postseason baseball in 1969, 1973, 1986, 1988, 1999, 2000, and 2006; it hosted the World Series in 196919731986, and 2000. It had the distinction of being the home of the 1969 “Miracle Mets”— led by former Brooklyn Dodger Gil Hodges that defied 100–1 odds and won the World Series, after seven straight seasons in last or next-to-last place. Shea became famous for the bedlam that took place after the Mets won the decisive Game 5 of the World Series, as fans stormed the field in celebration. Similar scenes took place a few weeks earlier after the Mets clinched the National League East title, and then defeated the Atlanta Braves in the first National League Championship Series to win the pennant.

On October 3, 2004, it was the venue for the last game in the history of the Montreal Expos, and the Mets won 8–1.[36] Montreal’s major league story ended where it had started 35 years earlier: at Shea Stadium.[37] The following year, the Expos relocated to Washington, D.C. and became the Nationals.

The last game played at Shea Stadium was a loss to the Florida Marlins on September 28, 2008. However, the Mets were in the thick of the playoff chase until the last day. A win would have meant another game for Shea as the Mets were scheduled to play the Milwaukee Brewers in a one-game playoff for the National League Wild Card berth. Following the game, there was a “Shea Goodbye” tribute in which many players from the Mets’ glory years entered the stadium and touched home plate one final time so that fans could pay their last respects to the players and the stadium the Mets called home for 45 years. The ceremony ended with Tom Seaver throwing a final pitch to Mike Piazza, then, as the Beatles‘ “In My Life” played on the stadium speakers the two former Met stars walked out of the centerfield gate and closed it behind them, followed by a display of blue and orange fireworks.

A baseball game at Shea Stadium in 2007. The construction of Citi Field is visible beyond left field.

Three National League Division Series were played at Shea Stadium. The Mets won all three, and never lost a Division Series game at Shea.

Seven National League Championship Series were played at Shea Stadium.

^ The decisive seventh game of this series was played at Shea Stadium, marking the only time that the Mets lost the deciding game of a National League Championship Series at Shea.

Four World Series were played in Shea Stadium.

The New York Yankees played their home games in Shea Stadium during the 1974 and 1975 seasons while Yankee Stadium was being renovated.

The New York Jets of the American Football League and later, the National Football League played at Shea for 20 seasons, from 1964 through 1983 (excluding their first home game in 1977, played at Giants Stadium). The stadium hosted three Jets playoff games: the American Football League Championship in 1968 (defeating the Oakland Raiders, 27–23), an AFL Divisional Playoff in 1969 (a 13–6 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs) and the 1981 AFC Wild Card Playoff game (lost 31–27 to the Buffalo Bills).