Baseball Crowds Are Down (USA Today)

USA Today has an interesting piece today about how different teams are marketing this year.   The excerpts below don’t really capture the essence of the article (go read i t) but I thought I’d grab the Mets and Yankees parts.
Even David Howard admits that maybe those empty seats are unsold…..and I thought everyone was just up getting chicken fingers.  Who knew?


The New York Yankees have learned that opening a $1.5 billion stadium and spending $440 million on players this offseason doesn’t mean folks will pay exorbitant prices to watch them. They cut prices on selected premium seats at the end of April, and attendance remains down 11.9% compared with last year.

..

The Yankees slashed prices in April on selected premium locations, including cutting some tickets to $1,250 from $2,500. The Mets’ prices are cheaper at Citi Field, with their top ticket selling for $595 a game, but David Howard, Mets executive vice president of business operations, concedes about 10% of seats have not been sold.

..

Every dollar counts in a recession. Outside the New York Mets’ new Citi Field, Patti Lettieri is using an old money-saving trick: bringing her own food and drink to the ballpark.
“For me, to spend $7 on food and $8 on a beer is ridiculous,” says the native New Yorker. “The money I save on food allows me to come to an extra game or two.”

Nearby, Beth O’Brien from Bay Shore, N.Y., and Claire Schmaeling from Levittown, N.Y., are toting in soft-sided coolers packed with food and water from home. “If you have a family with four kids, you have to do it,” O’Brien says.

Full article here.

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Mailbag: Acela Club, Obstructed Views and Jimmy Buffett

First a question for everyone – I don’t know the answer, can anyone help?

Acela Club – is there anywhere that the menu is posted? Can anyone get in? Can you stay there all game? Do you need reservations? Is there a phone number? That little outside porch looks sweet and we saw the beer coming out in real pilsner glasses. I would buy an $11. ticket if I could stay in there all game. It was relatively empty but like my son said “Who wants to have a $41. lunch on a Sunday?”

And speaking of the Acela Club:

We ate at the Acela Club last week, and were served by the very same waiter as the first poster. Yuri was extremely courteous and attentive to our every need — and I was wearing a Phillies cap! 

Next topic..obstructed views


Obstructed Views Citi Field Section 105“:

r u smoking crack. the seats are **** useless. no one would want to sit there for free. i work for my money and when i go to a game i want to see home plate. its morons that think these seats are decent that allows freddy to continue to **** us.keep drinking the kool aid and all the seats will be $100. wake up, 2 years ago i sat 10 rows behind the dugout for $64.now those seats are $250 and bleacher seats cost $75 



DyHrdMET has left a comment on your post “Florida Marlins New Stadium To Have New York Mets-…“:

i think they were just careless. or it was intentional to get people to walk around and buy tickets with access to the expensive restaurants. 

P-Cat has left a comment on your post “Florida Marlins New Stadium To Have New York Mets-…“:

Still don’t understand how the Mets let obstructed seats into their new Stadium. It makes no sense. 



The Uncensored Unoffical Guide To Citi Field“:

I have season tickets at sec523. I would take freddy to small claims court if my seats were obstructed. david howard lies,its his job. you should all email to francesa with pictures and video. would freddy accept 70% payment for the obstructed view seats. rt field foul pole blocks the second seat in every (20) row, should of made the aisle there, a disgrace.we are addicted to baseball,so i sneak down like i did at shea and pay as little as possible. freddy knows how it feels to get **** MADOFF, but he won’t **** me . 

Jimmy Buffett’s naming right’s deal with the Dolphins: JImmy Buffett’s Miami Dolphins Song“: 


You know, I’m a big parrothead also, and I applaud Jimmie for his business acumen. So many artists can’t make a dime, and Jimmie knows how to sell his brand. Just because he is a good marketer doesn’t diminish his music and attitude. I wish I had half of his business sense. 

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Peter’s Trip To New York Mets Citi Field

A guest post:

We were at Sunday’s Pirate game, Excelsior level (Left Field Landing), sec
334, row 7, next to the Acela club windows.


We were in shade as the sun hit at about row 4-5.


Could not see the big scoreboard which is usually not such a problem. There
were several flat screens which appeared to show either the big scoreboard
or the SNY feed but they were behind us so you had to look five rows back
and over to the next section if you really wanted to see the scoreboard.

The field was partially obstructed. We could not see the warning track or
back wall in left or center field. We could see Beltran and Murphy in
position but any ball hit in back of them was lost to view.

There were two balls hit off the wall by Delgado and Beltran that went for
doubles. I was an outfielder for 10 years and have a pretty good grasp of
when home runs are going out right off the bat. At Shea these would have
been home runs but from where I was sitting there was only confusion because
we just didn’t know what was going on. While I think that extending the
height of the wall makes for more exciting play I was very disappointed that
I couldn’t see it.

Excelsior level is sort of like its own isolated club. Blocked on one side,
you can only get up there from the CF food court, nobody checked tickets and
we had a constant stream of “visitors” looking for better seats.

On the plus side, Nathan’s got its game back. Foot longs with mustard and
half sauerkraut and half onions made my day. They also had someone watching
over the condiments so no one screwed with them.

Again I agree with most of your staff that you would barely know that the
Mets play there. Also, while it is nice to honor Jackie Robinson, he never
played for the Mets. I grew up in Jackson Heights and used to sneak on the
number 7 after school and go watch them drive the pilings into the swamp
which would become Shea Stadium. I couldn’t wait for the Mets to play there.
I went to a lot of games in my teens when they couldn’t buy a win and had
the time of my life. In those days you could bring signs and airhorns and
anything you wanted to make noise with and we did. I had mixed emotions
about 1969. Yes, we finally won and had some respect but it was also a
little less fun. Useless trivia – Ed Charles quit baseball after 1969 and
joined a bowling league in Elmhurst, the Goodfellows”. I also bowled in that
league. Ed didn’t really bowl much and was always trying to sell baseball
themed lamps made out of small bats as I guess he was never paid that much
as a Met.

Anyway, I got way off the track. My point was that I am 57 years old and
never saw Robinson play. He is a historical figure to me even though he
accomplished greatness. I just don’t see the point in making him the focus
of the stadium in place of the Mets. Honored?, yes, of course. But the
number of fans 60 and older who actually do remember him will diminish
rapidly. If we really want to honor Jackie Robinson let’s start building
some ball fields in “black” neighborhoods or we won’t have any black
baseball players left. Then he will have accomplished nothing.

Our biggest problem is that we, the Mets, have no one to replace him. 48
years and we have only retired one player’s number??? How sick is that?
Let’s at least get Piazza up there before someone writes a book about him.

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Why Does Major League Baseball Keep Taking Down The New York Mets Citi Field Gary Baba Booey Dell’Abate Video?

If you try to watch Gary Dell’Abate’s awful first pitch at the Mets game you will likely find that “this video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by MLB advanced media.”

I can understand that MLB wants to horde all their highlights on mlb.com (short sighted, but I can understand it) – but why this one?

How is their business going to be harmed if this video is available in the wild?

Do they plan to make mlb.com/bababooey to horde all the page views?

Will there be a special DVD about it?

The only “loss” would be some pre-game footage.  Who cares?

Fortunately as of 8:30 this fan video is still working…

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Miracle Ball (New York Baseball Giants)

Good morning, a guest post this morning  Brian Biegel has written Miracle Ball and here at the Mets Police we like when people remember the New York Baseball Giants.


Miracle Ball
By Brian Biegel
Isn’t it time baseball had a positive story to lift the dark clouds of steroids and scandals hovering above the national pastime? Especially in New York, where TV, talk-radio, and newspapers have polluted us with reports about cheaters such as A-rod, Petite, and Clemens? No Mets yet…fingers crossed.

Well, the story illustrated in the new book Miracle Ball (available everywhere May 12) is the perfect antidote to a baseball world beleaguered with bad press. For it not only combines the elements of Major League Baseball, its fans and the history of the game, but it also features the uplifting – some would even say miraculous – account of a father and son – both Mets fans – whose lifelong bond is strengthened by an iconic moment in baseball lore that occurred nearly sixty years ago.

We’re talking, of course, about “The Shot Heard ‘Round the World” – more specifically, the actual iconic home run ball that’s been missing since 1951. There’ve been some precious baseball artifacts that have gone missing over the years, but the NY Giants converted third baseman Bobby Thomson’s baseball is tops on any list – no disrespect to Kirk Gibson (and Vince Scully), or Bill Mazeroski.

Most baseball fans are familiar with the scene, likely told to them by their dad. If not, here’s an excerpt from Miracle Ball to set it up for you:



“The sun hung over the first-base side of the Polo Grounds, reflecting off the apartment buildings that lined Harlem River Drive and onto the open end of the stadium behind the left field stands. It was October 3, 1951. The clock in center field read 3:58.

The details of the play itself are familiar to most baseball fans. Branca had Thomson down in the count 0-1, the result of a called strike right down the middle. It was the bottom of the ninth. Two men on base. The Giants trailed the Dodgers by two runs in the last game of a three-game playoff series. The winner would advance to the World Series against the New York Yankees. Out of the windup, Branca threw a fastball, high and tight. But this time Thomson, the lanky outfielder-turned-third-baseman, was ready. He pulled the pitch to left field—a sinking line drive.
The fans in the lower portion of section 35 followed the flight of the ball. A photo captured the moment perfectly. There was an overweight, middle-aged man in a white t-shirt and a black jacket in the first row. Next to him was a buzz cut teenager with thick-rimmed eyeglasses. A row above them stood a man with a handlebar mustache and a fedora. In the fourth row, a bushy haired man stood with his arms stretched above his head and his mouth wide open.
The crowd’s loyalties were evenly divided: The Dodgers fans prayed that the ball would somehow find its way into left fielder Andy Pafko’s mitt; the Giants fans prayed that it wouldn’t. The teams’ rivalry—the oldest in professional sports—dated back all the way to the 19th century, but it had never seen a moment like this.

The prayers of the home team’s fans were answered: Thomson had hit a home run; the Giants won the pennant. Thomson’s blast became known as “The Shot Heard ‘Round the World.”

As for the ball itself, that’s been a mystery ever since—one that every baseball historian in the country thought would never be solved. Just after the ball cleared the wall, it bounced out of a fan’s glove and ricocheted seven feet to the left—straight into the hands of a person who would ensure that its fate would not be discovered for more than 50 years.”

The subjects in this book are colorful and compelling. What’s more, the story itself is utterly unique and unprecedented. Soon every sports page and baseball website in America will be sharing the news of the person who walked out of the Polo Grounds that day with the most storied baseball in the history of the sport.

While Miracle Ball will likely encapsulate any baseball fan, it also has the kind of touching narrative that makes even the non-sports-fan become engrossed in the book. It’s a story about family, baseball history, and an utterly unique quest for a famous baseball. There’s also a component of a person overcoming debilitating mental illness – all through the prism of baseball and parenting.

Present in the background through the entire book is the memorable event, which catapulted the NY Giants into baseball lore and crushed the hearts of Brooklyn Dodgers fans from Flatbush Avenue to Ocean Parkway.

This from JEREMY SCHAAP, New York Times bestselling author of Cinderella Man and Triumph:

“The adventure documented in Miracle Ball is ample evidence that Biegel is the Magellan of literary searchers. But Miracle Ball isn’t just about the Journey. What Biegel also captures are the dynamics of the relationships between fathers and sons, between Americans and their national pastime, between history and mythology. Miracle Ball is a poignant, funny, and important addition to the baseball canon.”

Miracle Ball: My Hunt for the Shot Heard ‘Round the World
AVAILABLE IN BOOK STORES AND ONLINE MAY 12
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