Save Tiger Stadium Regardless of the logic, says Alex Bensky, there's a legacy for future generations at Michigan and Trumbull. HOWARD ROSS Special to The Jewish News A lex Bensky can give you a dozen reasons why the Detroit Tigers should continue to play baseball indefinitely in the 78-year-old ballpark at Michigan and Trumbull. He'll tell you about a city's obligation to its residents (the ballclub leases the stadium from the City of Detroit); the soundness of a proposed $26 million renovation plan, especially when compared to the estimated $180 million minimum cost for a new stadium; and the importance of maintaining baseball as an affordable "sport for the masses." But behind all that logic, buried amid all the common business sense and astute political observations offered by the Detroit attorney, is the real reason, as forthright as a line drive to center on a warm summer evening. Bensky, who attends from 58 FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1990 15 to 25 Tiger games each season and has gone to games in most every other major league city, is a baseball fan in the purest sense — the same as Tiger Stadium is the purest of baseball venues, he believes. Forget the cramped aisles and partially obstructed views, Bensky says: better to remember the batter's box from which Hank Greenberg cranked them out in the 1940s, the right field patroll- ed by Al Kaline in the '60s and the dugout manned by Sparky Anderson in the '80s. "The sense of being able to pass this (legacy) down to the next generation of fans — some of it will be lost, I'm sure, when you go to a new ballpark," he says. "Tiger Stadium is unique and I'd hate to lose it." That is why Bensky, 41, joined the Tiger Stadium Fan Club in 1988, about 6 months after its 1987 founding. It is why he volunteered his time, first to the steering commit- tee and now as a member of the board of directors for the non-profit group. The club claims nearly 7,000 members, a few from as far away as Malaysia and Europe. Bensky is an ardent sup- porter of the "Cochrane Plan," a detailed renovation and cost analysis prepared gratis by architects/fan club members John and Judy Davids which was unveiled last January. The $26 million proposal has been virtually ignored by the Tigers, despite praise from independent architects. Tigers owner Tom Monaghan and city officials have said publicly they've already decided to build a new stadium, although a site and a design haven't been selected. Bensky thinks Tigers of- ficials will eventually come around. They'll have to, he says, when the realization that a financially strapped city won't be able to commit money to such a project and when hoped-for state funds don't materialize. "Then they'll see it's business nonsense not to adopt the Cochrane Plan," he says. The plan would add 179,000 square feet to the existing stadium, including new restrooms, concessions, elevators, clubhouses, ad-