Great job out of Scott Proctor’s Arm walking around New Yankee Stadium with a camera.
If you sit in Section 420, sorry dude.
For more pics check out his blog or read my review (underwhelmed) which also has photos.
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What Mets fans talk about when not talking about the actual games.
Great job out of Scott Proctor’s Arm walking around New Yankee Stadium with a camera.
If you sit in Section 420, sorry dude.
For more pics check out his blog or read my review (underwhelmed) which also has photos.
www.metspolice.com
@metspolice
Some curiosities from my trip to New Yankee Stadium.
Let me say I didn’t go looking for things to complain about, I just toured the stadium but knowing I have a blog I snapped a few photos I might not otherwise have snapped.
#1. The column with the notes. This is over by the ugly staircase to Monument Park somewhere.
#2. This sign made us laugh. I know what it means, but when you look at it, it’s directing you straight into a wall. This is a good example of how ugly the ramps and staircases are. It’s NYC public school. What time ie class? If only there were some photographic history of the Yankees they could tap into.
#3. Next we have a puddle. It seems awfully early in the New Stadium’s lifespan to have standing water. This was on Saturday. It didn’t rain on Saturday. This wasn’t the only puddle.
#4. The Pipes. Everywhere you look there are exposed pipes and sprinkler systems. Maybe the same is true at Citi, but I didn’t notice it. I wasn’t looking, but I didn’t show up at New Yankee saying “man if I can get some pictures of some exposed pipes I can rock out the blog.” Others noticed them too. It’s ugly.
I kept thinking that these teams must hate bloggers. You’d rarely get one the newspapers to write things like this, or about obstructed views, but they are all over the internet….and as we see with the Times, the mainstream papers read blogs and make stories out of them (and of course we bloggers use papers for inspiration). Sorry teams, there’s obstructed views and we’re taking pictures.
There’s plenty of stuff like this out there. We will be posting throughout the day, keep checking back or click Mets Police if this is your first time visiting to get back to the main page.
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Oh man I hate writing this one. I really want to like the New Yankee Stadium, but I felt like I spent the day apoligizing for it. I used words like “nice” and “ok” and “not bad.”
The two things that kept popping into my head were Atari 2600 and Star Wars: The Phantom Menace. Both were really big disappointments.
That’s how I feel about this new new Yankee Stadium. Phantom Menace is a Star Wars movie, so it should be cool, but it, you know, just doesn’t work – and it was really hard to walk out of the theater and realize it had let you down.
There’s nothing really wrong about the stadium, it’s just….ok.
Every Yankee fan I spoke to felt the same way – it’s OK, and they too think Citi Field is better. That’s Yankees fans saying that, so it doesn’t come lightly. Red Sox and Cubs fans should come tour the place to get the strength to fight whoever needs to be fought if they ever try to replace Fenway or Wrigley.
So where to begin….
…it looks like Yankee Stadium. It’s big, it’s new, it’s open – it could be “Anytown USA” as one Yankee fan said.
Where as the Mets moved out of a studio apartment to an 8 bedroom shore house, the Yankees moved from their house where the kids grew up to one three doors down with a remodeled kitchen.
It’s nice enough but…so what.
This comment came in to Mets Police …
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So maybe the Mets are wrong and the bloggers are right? Citi Field is great and it’s way better than the New Yankee Stadium…but when even the Times is piling on, we may be onto something.
The Times offered up this photo (where you can’t see the left fielder) and several others.
It’s going to be along 50 years in some of these seats.
We’ve been writing about it all week – read this or check out my obstructed seats in Section 529 Row 3 or the Mets denial or when it first came up in February.
From The Times article:
One deck up, in Section 431, Will and Marlena Chang of Woodbridge, N.J., were happy to sit close to the field. But when long fly balls were hit to left field, he said, “you had to stand up, lean over and listen†to the crowd to determine if the ball was caught.
Basil Saunders Jr. of Queens and his son, Basil Saunders Luciano, could not see the left fielder from their seats at the top of Section 535. They could, however, see a flat-panel television mounted above them, but it was showing the game on a two-second delay.
Maybe the Mets Police aren’t just a bunch of cranks?
That being said – I loved the place. Review here.
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At the new new Yankee Stadium you’ll find the Yankees museum. It’s a nice place to kill some time when you’re freezing in April. I wish the Mets would tap into their own history for something like this.
You get to type the name of your favorite player into a screen. I picked Lee Mazzilli of course. That tells you where you will find his baseball on the wall of baseballs.
My fellow fans believe there is a ball from “every player” that played for the Yankees. I don’t know if that is accurate, but there sure an awful lot (could it be 100 years worth though?) and I did look for obscure players.
The museum is also where Munson’s locker now resides. I think that was a good call. Munson’s locker really isn’t all that interesting to look at it, but it’s still cool.
You can also sit in a modern style locker and use the digital display to put your name on the locker. Lots of kids were snapping pictures there.
For 100 years of history and all those championships and hall of famers I thought there would be a lot more to the museum. There’s really not much. The balls, some old seats from days gone by, Munson and a modern locker. While the balls are interesting, I wouldn’t wait on a line for more than five minutes.
I’d really like the Mets to rip off this idea, and I offer a free consultancy if they’d like to do it right.
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