Friday, June 15, 2012

Florida's Greatest Rivalry


        


When one thinks of history’s greatest rivalries, certain names immediately spring to mind. 

Hatfields vs. McCoys…Coke vs. Pepsi…PC vs. MAC…Ali vs. Frazier…Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus… 

Well folks, I think it’s time to add a new twosome to that formidable list:

MARLINS vs. RAYS

That’s right, for this stadium review I was lucky enough to witness the unfolding of yet another chapter in the greatest rivalry in the history of Florida baseball.  These two titans of the diamond have been slugging it out since May 22, 1998 when the Miami Marlins gained the upper hand over the Tampa Bay Rays by a score of 3-2 in the first game of what would become a storied rivalry.  The overall series record between these two aquatic autocrats is a razor thin 42-37 in favor of the Marlins and this game certainly lived up to its billing.  Pitches were thrown, balls were batted and nachos were consumed.  Before we get to all of that though, I suppose I should back up a day.

As I’m sure you all will recall, back in 2008 when I was visiting Comerica Park in Detroit, the Celtics happened to be coming to town to play the Pistons in the playoffs.  Steve was in Ohio for work and drove up to meet me for the game (See generally Summer of Matt, post 21, IT’S UNANIMOUUUSSSSSSSSS!!!!” detailing experience of Celtics/Pistons playoff game).  Well, I booked this trip to Marlins Park with Steve a few months ago and wouldn’t you know it, the Celtics happened to be following me to town for another playoff game!  After some quick stub hubbing we were on our way to the top row of American Airlines arena for Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals!



Unfortunately, you all know by now that even the 4 midgets in the second row who were dressed as leprechauns couldn’t help Celtics squeeze out a victory.  It was a good game though and the Heat did genuinely beat us in the 4th quarter so it was hard to argue with the result.  In any event, it was great to be there and get a sports two-fer on the weekend.

On my original trip in 2008 the Marlins received the lowest grade.  Dolphin Stadium was an absolute pit and no place to watch a baseball game.  The Marlins’ new park, while new and shiny, similarly fell short in a number of areas.

Game Notes: 




The outside of the stadium was nice enough (the second shot is with the roof open after the game).  Despite being in East Havanna, the stadium itself felt like it belonged in downtown Miami where the buildings are new, the people are fit and there’s generally much more bling.  The building was very large, very bright, there was rap music playing everywhere and a general air of extravagance pervaded.  If you watch this video (which was filmed off the coast of Miami) you’ll get the idea:

OK, fine, maybe nothing to do with baseball but I really wanted to link to the I’m On A Boat video :)

One other cool thing before heading inside the stadium was the Mario Kart inspired rainbow road looking sidewalk outside.  If you squinted hard enough you could almost see Toad, Princess and Yoshii in the distance.


When I walked into Marlins Park it felt very similar to Houston and Arizona.  Those are two other stadiums that have retractable roofs.  The air conditioning was blowing, yet there was natural grass in front of us.  Always kind of weird.  I assume this was also the reason the field itself was in by far the worst condition of any park in the country (congrats, Cleveland, you no longer own this distinction).  We’re only a few months into the season and already there were dirt patches all over the field.  I’ll give the Marlins the benefit of the doubt though and chalk it up to “first season woes”.  They should really figure out a better irrigation and sunlight plan for next year though.  Also, speaking of air conditioning, these things were massive!


Steve and I continued a stroll around the park and I’d have to say the best thing the Marlins did was to create a theme and acknowledge the identity of their city and fan base.  When I was in San Diego I absolutely knew I was in the southwest, from the motif to the food to the general atmosphere.  The same sensation applied at Marlins Park.  The Latin-American influence was ubiquitous, with bright colors, up tempo Cuban music and plenty of local food choices.



There was also a “taste of Miami” food section that was completely packed and offered all kinds of locally inspired dishes.  I also knew I was in Miami because things were freaking expensive.  A generic hot dog cost $6.00!  Beers were $8.50 for a 16 oz domestic or $10 for an import.  And, because I know you care, at the Celtics game the beers were $13.50!  Granted, that was for 24 oz…but still.

Continuing around the park we found a gluten free food cart, which I’ve now seen at a couple of other parks.  It was not nearly as large as the one at the Mets’ new Citi Field though.  Also, I would have liked to see the stadium completely open just for comparison sake.  The massive left field wall seemed to be split into sections and placed on train-tracks, so I bet it opens and closes.  The same with the roof.  Steve actually spent considerable time marveling at the engineering of the whole stadium given its gigantic size and moving parts (this also made sense given that Steve’s chosen profession is….you guessed it, an engineer!  I smiled and nodded politely).  You can see the tracks in this pic:


The lap did not take us that long and we soon settled into some seats.  To be honest, there just wasn’t that much to see at the park.  Places like Milwaukee and San Diego took me forever to complete a loop because of all the displays or unique areas to view the game from or historical information or fan activities to check out.  Marlins Park, despite being new and shiny, was lacking in those types of indulgences.  It felt like Pittsburgh to me whereby the shell was pretty but it did not offer much on the inside.  I ended up taking 9 pictures of the left field wall simply because that seizure-inducing creation on the right of this pic was the most interesting thing going on.


(Side note: for those keeping score at home, the dimensions of the field went 344/418/335 left to right and it is this author’s opinion that the curved nature of the center field wall will lead to trouble for opposing outfielders as they track down hard hit balls to center)

I have no idea what this is but I think it lights up and goes crazy after a Marlins home run.  We didn’t see any of those.  Boo that.  For good measure, here’s a close up:


Anyway, I mentioned that we found some seats and I soon dove into one of my most extravagant food purchases at any ball park.  The Marlins offered nachos!

What’s that?  Nachos aren’t unique?  Well, it was pretty unique that you could get them served in a batting helmet…and not one of those small ones that the ice cream comes in.  This thing was regulation size!  Check it…



Yikes!  What a poor decision.  Points to me for not finishing them though.

High Points:

-Aside from the general theme, the best thing the Marlins did was to keep the park small and intimate.  The capacity is 37,442 with standing room (more on that below) and everywhere in the stadium felt like we were right on top of the action.  That’s a big plus in my book.  I remember sitting in the upper decks of St. Louis and Baltimore and feeling like I was literally a mile away from the game.

-We were never hassled by ushers and we moved seats about 4-5 times.  Always a plus.

-It was “bark at the park” day which means the Marlins let fans bring their four-legged friends to the game.


-There were not as many scoreboard gimmicks during the game and in between innings as I was expecting but you could still tell the game was between two small market teams.  Despite my earlier pomp and circumstance, the crowd wasn’t nearly as into Florida’s greatest rivalry as I might have made it seem.

-Interchangeable batting lineup cards on pillars around the stadium and fully stocked condiment bars with all the fixins always get thumbs up in my book.

-The Marlins provided a phone number for fans to text about unruly conduct occurring in their section, thereby enabling the most discrete form of tattling in the history of baseball park tattling.

-I was too embarrassed to ask so I surreptitiously snapped a photo of the Friars Tuck before the national anthem.  I have NO idea what they were doing there.


-The bobblehead museum concept by itself probably would have been a little corny but they made most of the heads actually "bobble" inside the glass case!  I’m guessing they pumped in a steady stream of air or something.  Whatever it was it made the effect must cooler.



Low Points:

-As previously mentioned, there just wasn’t that much going on inside the park.

-Except for a small handful directly behind home plate, all of the seats in the park were the same uncomfortable hard plastic.  You’d think if you’re paying for infield box seats you’d get a little more comfort, no?

-I complained about this the first time around, but the Marlins seem almost embarrassed by their World Series victories in 1997 and 2003.  Once again the only acknowledgement is two small banners down the left field line.  Take some pride guys!

-Citizens Bank Park in Philly and Citi Field in NY have had really really great standing room areas.  The Marlins fell woefully short in this department.  I suppose the argument can be made that if you’re the Marlins and you generally don't sell out, why the need for standing room?  But that seems shortsighted.  If the Marlins are in a new stadium and, as they did this year, start spending on free agents and actually win some games, they may soon start to fill their little bandbox.  Foresight, no?

-The roof finally opened at the end of the game.  It wasn’t nearly as special as I was hoping though.


Additional note: we missed the Sox coming to town by 1 day!

-Being Miami, we had no problem walking up to the ticket window an hour before the game to purchase tickets.  Two lines over from me there was a very unfortunate incident when a kid who was drunk (before noon?) tried to put his beer down and spilled it all into the teller’s window “trench” where the money/tickets exchange hands.  That caused quite a bit of commotion and I’m glad I wasn’t in that line!

-It was wholly unclear why the security guard and ballboy had to sit so uncomfortably close together amidst all that foul territory.


-Despite all the talk of the huge AC units, it was still pretty warm and muggy inside the stadium, especially in the upper rows.


Overall Grade: B-


Game Stats: 

Teams: Marlins vs. Rays
Final Score: 4-2 Rays
Extra Innings: 0
WP: James Shields
LP: Anibal Sanchez
S: Fernando Rodney
Time: 2:45
Announced Attendance:  31,111 (84.1% full)
Ticket Price: $15.00
Parking Price: N/A

Trip Stats:

Home team record: 24-10
Best Anthem: Tropicana Field
Miles Driven:  10,702
Speeding Tickets: ZERO!
States Visited: 27
Countries Visited: 2
Districts of Columbia Visited: 1
Beds slept in: 36
Highest Gas PPG: $4.19 [$4.81 if you count Canada]
Next Stop:  I dunno…some team has to build a new stadium!!
Favorite Park:  Petco Park (Padres)

Stadium Grades:

Marlins (2008): D
Rays: B
Braves: B-
Rockies: B+
Mariners: B
Giants: A-
Athletics: C
Angels: B-
Dodgers: B+
Padres: A
Diamondbacks: B
Rangers: B-
Astros: B-
Blue Jays: C
Tigers: A-
Indians: B-
Reds: B+
Cardinals: B
Royals: B
Twins (2008): B-
Brewers: A-
White Sox: B
Cubs: B+
Pirates: C+
Orioles: B
Phillies: A-
Nationals: B
Mets: C+
Yankees: B
Red Sox: A-
Twins (2010): B+
Mets (2010): A-
Yankees (2010): B-
Marlins (2012): B-

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Update


Update:

Hello again world!!  (or, more likely, my children…and grandchildren…who I’m making read this blog some day).

It’s been close to another two years since my last update but, I suppose, it’s not really my fault if new baseball parks haven’t been opening, right?  There aren’t any currently scheduled openings for the next few years so I’m going to have to make this next post count. 

Side note: this is a really interesting Wikipedia page.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_stadiums

And if you want my input for which stadiums need an upgrade, I’m looking at you, Toronto and Oakland…give the people what they want!

Anyway, back to the update.  So a lot has happened since my last post.  I had the absolute time of my life in Edinburgh.  I saw castles and highland cows and drove on the wrong side of the road and met great friends from all over the world!  I also managed to graduate from law school and land myself a pretty good gig working at a law firm back in Washington, DC (for those who don’t know, I spent a few years down here after college working as a paralegal). 

Things are going pretty well and I just recently got back from a trip to Miami to review Marlins Park.  It was certainly and upgrade over Dolphin Stadium, but that isn’t saying much given that they received the lowest grade on my original trip.  I went with Steve and, similar to our meet up in Detroit back in 2008, the Celtics fortuitously happened to have a playoff game and we were able to score tickets!  The result didn’t work out quite as well as last time but it was still a nice little weekend trip.  I’m going to write up my review as soon as I can and I’ll share it with all [three?] of you, my loyal readers, shortly.

Regards,
Mgmt

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Concrete Jungle Where Dreams Are Made Of...



OK, I think some of you may come to the conclusion by the end of this post that I really did not give the new Yankee Stadium a “fair shake” due to the circumstances of my trip; however, I assure you that is NOT the case. But if anyone out there reading, especially you Yankees-Front-Office types, wants to pony up the cash to bring me back to review the stadium again, I’d welcome another trip to NYC! In the meantime, here’s a little background to provide color for my Yankee Stadium trip, 2010 style.

To get over to Edinburgh for school this year I was required to get a UK student visa. I thought this would be fairly straightforward but it turned out to be a lot more complicated than I thought. I won’t bore you with all the gruesome details but after a couple of rejected applications, I ended up having to take one of my whirlwind “leave-at-4AM-get-home-after-midnight” trips (*patent pending*) to NYC on Wednesday September 8th when I was scheduled to depart for Edinburgh on Friday September 10th! Yikes!

Well, if you’ve read the other posts, you know by now that it all worked out and I’m over ‘cross the pond safe and sound but August was an extremely stressful month. Anyway, I had to go to New York to have an in-person interview with a member of the UK consulate in order to get my visa. But, that also meant I could scoot over to Yankee Stadium for some day baseball and my last stadium review. I had my interview in the morning and then headed over for a 1PM game against the Orioles. I only got to stay for about 7 innings because I had to return to the consulate to pick up my visa at 4pm but that hardly made a difference in my opinion of the stadium which, by the way, was quite low.


Trust me, this shot says a lot more than just “Yankee Stadium.” It actually says:

“Hi, Matt, welcome to the new Yankee Stadium! From the outside, our new behemoth of a ballpark looks really regal and impressive, much like Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, but it is actually the epitome of a character-less, sterile, unfriendly environment to watch a baseball game, epitomizing the stereotype of corporate greed that helped bring down the economy of a once-great nation.”

Yeah, that’s what it says. OK, maybe that’s a little over the top, but it’s at least along those lines. Like I said, the outside of the stadium and even when I first walked in looked “typically impressive.” Like, what is “supposed” to be impressive. Except, it just wasn’t.




This concourse was really big and that’s always nice, it was just…maybe too big? It certainly didn’t feel like I was at a baseball game; more like a Las Vegas convention. And, unfortunately, that feeling of being underwhelmed by over-abundance was a theme that pervaded my entire day at the ballpark. I commented on this back in the San Diego post about being so impressed by everything and taking tons of notes, contrasted with the Angel’s stadium where I just didn’t write that much down. Well, at the new Yankee Stadium I just didn’t write that much down.

Game Notes:

Initially on my lap around the park, I was nodding with approval at the open concourses the Yankees had incorporated into their new park. Obviously they took care of the MASSIVE congestion problem from the old stadium, right? Not so fast…


What the heck?! This is in a major area of the ballpark (under the bleachers in the outfield) and the space couldn’t have been more than 8-10 feet wide for tons of people to squeeze through. What’s that all about? Not a good start, Yankees, not a good start.

Next thing I found was pretty cool though. Granted, if you wanted a sandwich with this meat it cost literally $15.00, which I passed on, but taking a picture was free and pretty neat.


Nothing like a butcher shop at the old ballpark, huh? Speaking of food, the variety was there, much like the Mets, but the options didn’t really feel unique. Maybe they were and I was just having a bad day but I’m willing to wager dollars to donuts that it had more to do with the Yankees lack of variety and not me. Check out these options though:


It’s good that they give you the calorie information I suppose, but the vast majority of the food places just seemed like standard ballpark fare, unless Joe the Plumber wants to pay a week’s salary to get some of the fancier options. Personally, I went with the foot-long dog and a beer and called it a day.


Look at the standing room number though. I can’t say for certain as of this writing, but I think the Yankees sell tickets for standing room counters. Wow. Standing room should be just that – room to stand at different areas around the park to move around and get a different flavor. Now we’re going to limit that to one’s little area of a half-counter? I don’t like it. Also, no cup holders like the Mets had!

One more note about the food I have to mention was the terrible condiment selection. I took a picture but I won’t bore you with it. In an interesting twist, the Yankees offer Frank’s Red Hot Sauce with their catchy slogan – “I put that sh*t on everything” – but other than that it’s just standard ketchup and mustard (but again, points for spicy). That’s it. I was upset with the Twins but I’m REALLY miffed at the Yankees, especially after seeing what the Mets did. It’s not like these other stadiums are keeping secrets from people. For the record, having a large condiment selection is a good thing!! Especially when people are paying an arm and a leg to get into your stadium – give back to the people, you know?

Speaking of that though, this is a good time to mention my ticket price. You could argue that I paid $17.95 for my ticket. And, I guess technically I paid $17.95 to walk into Yankee Stadium but it felt like I got a better deal than that. Since I went to a game in the middle of the week, in the middle of the day, in September after the kids have gone back to school, StubHub was practically giving these things away! There were all kinds of deals for “special” areas of the stadium – various suites and such. Looking back I probably should have checked this out for the Mets game too. Oh well. Anyway, I ended up paying $4.00 for my ticket in the upper deck, right behind the plate – my favorite place to watch a game. However, the person selling them only sold them in pairs so that kicked it up to $8. Then with fees and charges and whatnot I paid $17.95 for two tickets and didn’t use one of them. I guess I could have tried to scalp the other one but I think people are really suspicious of print-at-home tickets – especially right outside the ballpark. But overall, not bad.

Meanwhile, while Matt was going off on various tangents, the Yankees decided to close off the lower bowl of the stadium to those unworthy peons who only pay money just like everyone else to get into the stadium. What? Yeah, the lower bowl is only open for 40 minutes from when gates open. So, unfortunately, I didn’t know this before the game and I wasn’t allowed into the bourgeois area of the park to bring you some of my patented batting practice shots.


I did, however, get to take a trip up to the furthest parts of the ballpark. And let me tell you, they are FAR away. This happened at the original, or should I say “last version” of Yankee Stadium and they didn’t fix it.


Not as bad as St. Louis but the players still looked like ants down there. Wait a second! Maybe the other side of the outfield would be better?


Nah. Course not.

Other than that, nothing really stood out about my lap around the park. I mean, the entire thing ballpark is really just sterile concrete and honestly, felt pretty “worn out” despite the fact that it hadn’t been open for 2 years by the time I saw it. So I settled in, somewhere above home plate to enjoy the game.


High Points:

-One of the few parks in the country to have Bank of America ATMs. Though credit for that high point probably should go to BoA rather than the Yankees who, in reality, likely just accepted the highest bidding bank.

-I’d say the thing the Yankees did best was to absolutely nail the scoreboard set up, much like Minnesota. There was a TON of information at my fingertips, they didn’t repeat information like the Mets did on their new boards and the scoreboards could be seen from virtually the entire park! Have a look…


-The ironic introduction music struck me and, I’m guessing, very few other patrons at the park that day. For some reason, the Yankees played the theme music for the Empire and/or Darth Vadar and/or whatever the bad guys in star wars were called during the Orioles’ introductions. Then, during the Yankees’ own introductions they played the Resistance or the Rebel Alliance music! Of course this is ironic to a Red Sox fan because Larry Lucchino famously (locally at least) referred to the Yankees as the “Evil Empire” back in 2002. Ha!

-Having a cooler with “Retro Beers” was pretty sweet – even if they were something like $9 a pop. For those keeping score at home this thing included: PBR, Ballantine XXX, Schafer, and Schlitz.


On a related note: Stella Artois and other premium beers could be had for a relatively low price of 24oz for $11.00.

-The Yankees had a nice, understated tribute to the Boss out in center field. Regardless of any controversies through the years, that man was good for the game of baseball.


-Hmm, I don’t know what other high points there were about the day…maybe the fact that I got my visa?! Haha, the Yankees didn’t help with that one though…

-Oooh, here, this! I got a small bottle of hand sanitizer courtesy of New York Presbyterian Hospital


Yeah, so there’s that…um, let’s move on to the low points.

Low Points:

-I think a note I made right in the middle of my page sums up my day pretty nicely. It says, and I quote:

“What am I supposed to write about?”

That should never happen at a baseball game. At least not for someone like me, who is reviewing the stadium and it’s my very first trip to a place which has just opened to much fanfare and is the home of the most iconic team in Major League Baseball.

-I even wrote down the dimensions of the ballpark which I hadn’t done since some of my first stadium reviews. There just wasn’t that much going on! Of course, those dimensions came into play, especially last year when home runs seemed to be flying out of right field in record numbers. FYI, left to right it’s 318, 399, 408, 385, 314.

-The Yankees decided to bring a whole new level of “lame” to the game when, instead of the gawdawful “kiss cam” they decided to take it a step further and make a “smile cam.” Good grief.

-Again with the computer generated races – this time it was three different New York City trains racing back into town. I think they had this at the old stadium too though. Speaking of which, it’s gone now but I honestly liked that one better than this new monstrosity.


-I couldn’t get into Monument Park again. Also, in the next picture take a look at the bullpens. I mean, no frills is fine but some teams actually made awesome bullpens (see: Detroit Tigers). If you’re building a brand new stadium I think things like that should be thought about.


-I again disliked the pre-recorded national anthem. Why not sing it live?

-Still confused by the cheers that go on in the right field bleachers when the game starts. Who starts it, how do the people know what to say, etc?

-I have complained about this at virtually every Orioles game I’ve been to around the country but one stupid O’s fan managed to do the “O!” thing during the anthem again.

-The “Farmer’s Market” in New York had more options than the little cart in the heartland (Minneapolis) but it all looked old and paled in comparison to the Mets offering.

-Not really a low point but the Yankees obviously have a lot of retired numbers. Well, Mariano Rivera is number 42 and will certainly be in the baseball Hall of Fame as well as have his number retired by the Yankees. What happens then? I ask because number 42 is already retired by baseball in honor of Jackie Robinson. Does JR’s just stay a lighter shade of blue? Tough situation there!


So I guess that’s it. So long, Yankee Stadium, try to do better next time around, k??


Oh, PS, did I mention what a long day it was??


Overall Grade: B-

Game Stats:
Teams: Yankees vs. Orioles
Final Score: 3-2 Yankees
Extra Innings: 0
WP: Joba Chamberlain
LP: Koji Uehara
Time: 2:44
Announced Attendance: 44,163 (84.5% full)
Ticket Price: $17.95 (though arguably $4 I guess?)
Parking Price: N/A

Trip Stats:
Home team record: 24-9
Best Anthem: Tropicana Field
Miles Driven: 10,702
Speeding Tickets: ZERO!
States Visited: 27
Countries Visited: 2
Districts of Columbia Visited: 1
Beds slept in: 35
Highest Gas PPG: $4.19 [$4.81 if you count Canada]
Next Stop: I dunno...some team has to build a new stadium!!
Favorite Park: Petco Park (Padres)

Stadium Grades:
Marlins: D
Rays: B
Braves: B-
Rockies: B+
Mariners: B
Giants: A-
Athletics: C
Angels: B-
Dodgers: B+
Padres: A
Diamondbacks: B
Rangers: B-
Astros: B-
Blue Jays: C
Tigers: A-
Indians: B-
Reds: B+
Cardinals: B
Royals: B
Twins (2008): B-
Brewers: A-
White Sox: B
Cubs: B+
Pirates: C+
Orioles: B
Phillies: A-
Nationals: B
Mets: C+
Yankees: B
Red Sox: A-
Twins (2010): B+
Mets (2010): A-
Yankees (2010): B-

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The X Factor


OK, time to clear the guilty conscience. While I did manage to visit all the newly opened parks during the summer of 2010, I was a bit delayed in writing up the posts. That, however, might help me make a point about the Mets’ new Citi Field. I know I’ve mentioned it before and at the risk of joining the ranks of those working in the department of redundancy department, some stadiums have just got it, and some don’t. If you don’t know, I’m now in Edinburgh, Scotland for my third year of law school and there is a show on over here in the UK called “The X Factor.” It’s just the equivalent of American Idol in the States where they try to find the person who has “the X factor” – well, let me be the first to tell you that Citi Field certainly has the X factor and no, I’m not talking about Xavier Nady! …Random 2006 reference? ...Anyone?

Anyway, Siobhan was kind enough to lend her couch for me to crash on so I Amtraked it (yes, that’s a verb, but did I spell it right?) down to NYC for a night of baseball and merriment - thanks SioTime! And fahhgettaboutit guy, the Mets done good. Sometimes it almost felt like some smartypants in their offices actually read my blog and took some criticisms to heart when designing the new Citi Field! (see generally Summer of Matt, post 36Meet the M-E-T-S: The 19 Hour Odysseydiscussing lack of condiment selection, waste of space, and general unfriendliness of stadium) Similar to the feeling at Comerica Park, Miller Park, and the other highly rated stadiums, I knew immediately Citi Field would be a good one. They kept one of my favorite parts about Shea, and that’s putting that day’s lineup in the form of huge baseball cards right when you walk in.



Before heading inside though, there were a few things I liked about the outside of the stadium. What was Shea is totally gone and paved over to provide parking for Citi Field’s patrons. All I could find that was left was the giant Home Run Apple that used to be in center field at Shea and would pop up with lights and fanfare whenever the Mets homered. The Johnsons were making their annual pilgrimage to NYC for a Mets game. They live in Oklahoma now but Roy, the dad, grew up in Queens and takes his wife and two sons there every year. He just got laid off last year though, from his job as a software developer, so this trip was extra special to him and his family. Apparently, they scraped what they could and saved every penny here and there in anticipation of the weekend. Good for them! Plus, I guess their car broke down on the drive over and they almost didn’t make it but a trucker pulled over and helped them out right on route 95! Anyway, enough about them, here’s a picture of the Home Run Apple and the Johnson family.



Did I get you? Hope so! That was all made up, I just couldn’t get a picture of the apple without some stupid family jumping in the way. Anyway, they also had some really cool “then and now” banners. My favorite was the one with Darryl Strawberry and Jason Bay. Don’t ask me why. The other thing I liked about the outside of the stadium were the bricks paid for by sponsors of the stadium. Can you find the funniest brick in the picture? I’ll give you a hint, it says “Go The Mets!” WTF? I would be so embarrassed if I were Chad Hemenway and Family.



So anyway, when I walked into Citi Field I was greeted by an impressive multi-level concourse.



On the bottom was a huge tribute to Jackie Robinson as well as the Mets Hall of Fame. The HoF had some absolute gems in it. For example, there were tons of pictures of Mr. Met and the championship teams and plenty of reminders about what happened in a certain year involving a certain city and a certain team who’s certain first baseman didn’t make certain that a certain ball rolled slowly into his glove, which led to certain panic among certain fans in the said certain city. Certainly didn’t need to be reminded about that as often as I was! There were some awesome things in the HoF though, like Donrus baseball card packs! This brought back SO many memories as soon as I saw them. ’89 Donrus cards were pretty much the height of my card collecting days.



Also, I found one magical loogey! I mean Keith Hernandez. Related: I didn’t help him move.



Moving along…

Game Notes:

I loved my walk around Citi Field. There were SO many good things about the stadium to take in. First, the condiments jumped right out at me. If you remember, Shea stadium had ketchup, mustard (albeit spicy brown) and that was it. No frills. Well, the Mets certainly changed all that in the new joint.



These carts were self-serve and had almost any topping you could want. Ketchup, mustard, relish, jalapenos, sour kraut, lettuce, tomato, and on and on. AMAZING! Seriously, best condiment selection in the country. Well done. Also, BEERS.



Wow! Seriously, almost anything under the sun. Of course, the old adage of “buy-the-draft-because-you-get-20-oz-for-$7.00-instead-of-paying-$7.75-for-16-oz-poured-into-a-cup” rang true once again but the selection was nevertheless impressive. The prices, overall, however weren’t so hot. I mean, it was New York so I was expecting to pay through the nose for just about everything, but still. The counter to this, of course, is that Citi Field offers you any kind of food you could possibly want. The selection and unique variety really stood out. The Mets certainly are turning the experience of a baseball game into more of a night on the town than your father’s hot-dog-and-a-soda-boom-done kind of night. The best thing about this paragraph is I promise it's the only one to use so many hyphenated word combinations. The best thing about the food at Citi Field, though, was the alternative options.



Wow! They had gluten free hot dog, sausage and hamburger rolls, and gluten free beers! Excellent. They also had something similar to the Twins’ farmer’s market except this thing was apparently international.



I’ll move on from food now, but the overall selection pretty much tops anywhere else in the country. Walking around was relatively easy too – save for the very top concourse. The Mets had enough room to build the new place and the concourse at the top of the stadium could have been wider, considering the amount of fans up there for any given game. Another thing that was cool about walking around were the freaking cup holders on the standing room railings!! The Phillies had, yes had, the best standing room places in the country until now, but the Mets one-upped their neighbor to the South. They put cup holders into the standing room railings so now the beers wouldn’t fall over and you have more room for your food. Genius. The irony, though, is that the Mets don’t offer standing room tickets for sale. Kinda weird, no?

The Mets also borrowed right-center field from the Phillies. Well, no, not literally, but this looks an awful lot like the standing-room concourse out in the outfield in Philly.



The last bit from my lap around the stadium was the upper right field corner. If you remember, I went to the very furthest seat down the right field line in Shea and took a picture. I was high up and FAR away. Seriously. But in Citi Field it wasn’t nearly as bad (nor as steep!) except the view surrounding the stadium left a little to be desired. See both below.






OK, that’s probably enough about walking around. How ‘bout some high points and low points, huh?

High Points:

-It was Irish night! That means I got an Irish themed Mets cap and there were tons of Irish steppers and a bunch of fiddlers banging around before the game. These kids on the big screen were banging away for a solid 15-20 minutes before game time.



The players didn’t know how or where to warm up because there were so many little tikes whirling and dancing all around the outfield. Also, the last song that was played lasted over 9 minutes. These kids had SO much energy and endurance.



-The Mets, unlike an unnamed other team who happens to be from New York City as well, allowed fans unfettered access to the lower bowl of the stadium during batting practice for to make with the taking of the pictures. I got some great shots of nearly every angle of the stadium. That’s how to do it, guys!



-The luxury space at Citi Field looked really nice from the outside but I really couldn’t see too much of it, which was yet another good thing (are you listening, Cleveland??).

-Despite seeming like a very large park, Citi Field still retains its intimacy – much more so than St. Louis or the other parks that got lost somewhere along the way.

-They called it “fried dough,” which is what it is. It’s not “funnel cake.”

-The amount of little kid and family oriented activities was on a par with or exceeded that offered at any other park.

-OK, this next one is NOT laughing at the gentleman in the wheel chair. It’s to make fun of the captain-obvious security person who gave me a chuckle. These fans were trying to find their section and some of them had seats right up the stairs and as I walked by I heard an exchange that included, from the security woman, “well, you guys can go up, but the chair has to stay down here…” Ummm, yeah, thanks a lot captain obvious!



-The bathrooms were spacious and clean – throughout the entire game.

-A high point that was mentioned at Shea back in 2008 was the hearty “YOU SUCK!” that greeted the very first Giants player to step to the plate. Well, the Mets fans still got it. Every single player on the Phillies was booed heartily after he was announced. I know they have a division rivalry and all but I get the feeling this had more to do with Joey New York Fan than the Phils.

-The striking presence of the structure as one exits the subway, the aforementioned beer prices, food selection (gluten free!), cup holders on railings, and the hat I got for Irish night were also high points.

-Also, it’s just a pretty park.




Low Points:

-The biggest drawback about Citi Field, and I mean by a long shot, were the scoreboards. Honestly, they maybe couldn’t have got this worse, especially after seeing the bang-up job the Twins did with their new place. The Mets, for some inexplicable reason, make fans stare at two giant, almost duplicative scoreboards when some of us are just craving something, anything else! Look at this and zoom in:



We get that it’s Raul Ibanez, twice. The line score for the game, twice. His BA, HR, RBI, OBP, SLG percentages, each twice. His position, twice. His picture, twice. Seriously? I mean, counter argument would be that not everyone can see the scoreboard like in St. Louis. But I’m here to refute that – I thought the scoreboard sightlines were great all over the park. So what gives, NY? On a related note: the out of town scoreboard is tucked way high up in left field and hardly anyone can see it and certainly wouldn’t notice it unless they were looking for it.

-Food Prices were too high, but it was still New York.

-Forgot to mention – I got fries with some sort of bacon flavored cheese dip. This would have been good in theory but the cheese stuff was practically frozen and made for tough going. Low point.



-The closed captioning on the scoreboard was woefully behind – jokes were ruined, fire/escape instructions were being relayed during candy bar ads, and it was just bad all around.

-A couple in front of me got into an absolute BRAWL and were trying to be quiet, but we’re talking New Yorker quiet. Eff bombs were flying this way and that and it was pretty distracting.

-Speaking of my seat, I got kicked out by fans with real tickets in the bottom of the fifth inning. What the heck? I thought LA was on the west coast??

-Does everyone know what LEED Certification is? Basically, LEED certification provides independent, third-party verification that a building project meets the highest green building and performance measures. I should have mentioned this, but the Twins’ new park is LEED Certified! And while the Mets claim to have undertaken a green initiative:

http://www.allbusiness.com/environment-natural-resources/pollution-monitoring/8940322-1.html

They clearly have not. I only snapped one picture but all over the park there were bags full of aluminum cans mixed in with trash. The flip-side to this argument is that “it gets sorted out at the landfill” but I’ve been quite dubious of that position for years now. The Mets get a thumbs down in this category until someone takes me to the landfill and proves otherwise.



-The last low point was that there just wasn’t much happening during the game. For all the hype and buzz in the stadium early on, it all just faded away and the game was quite boring. The fans weren’t that into it, the scoreboard didn’t do too much to help (which is good, in theory, when the fans are into it on their own. see e.g. Fenway Park!).

I think that’s all I’ve got! See you on the other side of New York!


Overall Grade: A-

Game Stats:
Teams: Mets vs. Phillies
Final Score: 8-4 Phillies
Extra Innings: 0
WP: Roy Halladay
LP: Jenrry Majia
Time: 3:09
Announced Attendance: 30,071 (78.7% full)
Ticket Price: $23.00
Parking Price: N/A

Trip Stats:
Home team record: 23-9
Best Anthem: Tropicana Field
Miles Driven: 10,702
Speeding Tickets: ZERO!
States Visited: 27
Countries Visited: 2
Districts of Columbia Visited: 1
Beds slept in: 35
Highest Gas PPG: $4.19 [$4.81 if you count Canada]
Next Stop: Yankees (Yankee Stadium)
Favorite Park: Petco Park (Padres)

Stadium Grades:
Marlins: D
Rays: B
Braves: B-
Rockies: B+
Mariners: B
Giants: A-
Athletics: C
Angels: B-
Dodgers: B+
Padres: A
Diamondbacks: B
Rangers: B-
Astros: B-
Blue Jays: C
Tigers: A-
Indians: B-
Reds: B+
Cardinals: B
Royals: B
Twins (2008): B-
Brewers: A-
White Sox: B
Cubs: B+
Pirates: C+
Orioles: B
Phillies: A-
Nationals: B
Mets: C+
Yankees: B
Red Sox: A-
Twins (2010): B+
Mets (2010): A-