BleedGopher
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per Axios Sports:
42 years ago today, Chicago's Comiskey Park descended into madness during the most ill-advised promotion in major league history. (Yes, even worse than 10-cent beer night.)
The backdrop: Disco had usurped rock as the most popular music genre in the 1970s, ruffling plenty of rock-fanatics' feathers — none more so than Chicago-based shock jockey, Steve Dahl.
Win Twins!!
42 years ago today, Chicago's Comiskey Park descended into madness during the most ill-advised promotion in major league history. (Yes, even worse than 10-cent beer night.)
The backdrop: Disco had usurped rock as the most popular music genre in the 1970s, ruffling plenty of rock-fanatics' feathers — none more so than Chicago-based shock jockey, Steve Dahl.
- The White Sox devised "Disco Demolition Night" with Dahl's radio station, 97.9 WLUP, to drum up attendance amid a lackluster season.
- The plan was to let any fan trade in a disco record for a 98-cent ticket to the White Sox-Tigers doubleheader, and between games Dahl would blow up the lot of them.
- Fans stormed the field, riot police followed and the damage was so extensive that the second game was ruled a White Sox forfeit.
- Fun fact: This remains the last AL game to be forfeited. In the NL, that honor belongs to the Dodgers after a 1995 baseball giveaway promotion went awry.
Win Twins!!