Mailbag: Bad Yankee Stadium Review

Robert…on Yankee Stadium reviews.

There are but a handful of people speaking about this atrocity. Hats off to you guys. What happened at Queens could only be an upgrade. The bad news for the Yankees is that they MOVED SHEA to THE BRONX! 1.5 Billion dollar frieze (and someone tell me how to pronounce this word). Everyone is too far from the action (unless you forked over 2500 for the seat) and the outfield/beachers is symmetric poured concrete. How could they screw this up? They only had since the 80s to think about it….

What they should have done was raze the old stadium, move the Yanks to Shea for two years, and then build around the field of Ruth, Gehrig,DiMaggio, and Fred (the chicken) Stanley. 


The stadium looks nice on TV (well except for the netting) but when you’re there it’s just not great.   As I’ve been observing, it’s Yankee fans saying it!

Sad Yankee Fan has left a new comment on your post “New Yankee Stadium: Just Seems Wrong“:

Met Fans, You have the better stadium. Those green seats make it more real and baseball like. It’s more New York City. It’s a true baseball park feel. Your place will rock in the playoffs! We sacrificed one of the great places you could ever be at for sports in our country. We now have a bogus theme park that could have been built on the Las Vegas Strip. Mr Wilpon really gave thought to old time baseball from his childhood in Brooklyn. The Yankees only cared about maximum earnings potential! 


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Obstructed Views At Yankee Stadium

As I have been saying, this obstructed views story is just starting.  As more and more people visit the new parks, there will be more and more outrage.

(Ha, as I am writing this, the guys are SNY are talking about how the visiting pitchers at Citi Field are complaining that THEY can’t see the field.)

The excerpts below are from this article on NJ.com and are about Yankee Stadium, which has problems of its own.

“You can only see four and half innings of the game from here!” cracked one fan standing behind Bell, who paid 14 bucks for get an up-close view of half the diamond.
Moments after Bell and a couple friends learned their fate, the native of Newburgh, New York, immediately took a photo from his cell phone and emailed a buddy. The title of the email: “Worst Seats Ever???”
“What the heck is this?” said another passer-by. “I wouldn’t want these seats if you gave them to me. Somebody screwed up.”
In section 239 in right center field, 11-year season ticket holder Jerry Baratta was ticked off. Baratta and Tom Andria, buddies from Long Island, were displaced from their right field bleacher seats at the old ball park. For the time being, they prayed that there weren’t too many right-handed pull hitters in the lineups.

Read the rest here.

I also found it interesting that the post-game discussion on Michael Kay radio show was about how the crowd didn’t seem as involved as they did at the old stadium.   If even Kay is engaging that discussion….wow.

If you have pictures of obstructed views of either park (or any out of town new park, we know about poles at Fenway) please email [email protected] and we’ll post them!

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Daily News Figures Out Yankee Stadium Not Great

And so it begins…

Filip Bondy in the News

There’s a lot wrong with the new Yankee Stadium and with Section 203 – starting with the fact that it’s not Section 39 across the street. Here are a few of the many complaints collected after the two exhibitions leading up to today’s opener:

It’s too gray out there.

It’s too cold out there.

There are no painted lines separating the seats on the benches.

The sightlines from Section 203 are closer to being what they were from Section 41 at the old stadium, than from Section 39. 

“The potted plants have got to go, the bathroom and beer lines seem as long as ever,” Sheriff Tom comments. “I defended a new stadium all along, but to me they bungled it.”

Perhaps most worrisome are those crowded entryways, which serve far too many fans from several sections milling about or moving from the concessions to their seats. This is the one problem that goes well beyond conventional whining and demands immediate club intervention.

“If there’s a fire, you’d need a chainsaw to get out of there,” Donahue says.  

Remember folks.  The complaining is after two exhibition games, and today will be all fat-cats.  Wait until the “real fans” start attending games.

Read the rest here.

More reviews and obstructed seats here.

And always keep an eye on New Stadium Insider.

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Details For Yankee Stadium Opening Day

From a New York Yankees Press Release.  To nobody’s surprise, they “get it” unlike the DodgMets.

The New York Yankees will inaugurate Yankee Stadium with its first-ever regular season game on Thursday, April 16 at 1:05 p.m. ET vs. the Cleveland Indians.

Gates will open to fans with valid tickets beginning at 10:00 a.m. The Yankees are asking fans to be situated in their seats by 12:00 p.m. in advance of pregame ceremonies. Please budget ample time when planning your trip and be sure to consider using public transportation.

Ceremonies will begin at 12:10 p.m. with the West Point Marching Band performing John Philip Sousa’s “Washington Post March” and “Stars and Stripes Forever” in a tribute to the original Yankee Stadium’s opener on April 18, 1923, when Sousa performed on field with the Seventh Regiment Band prior to the game. The West Point Band will also play the “Armed Forces Medley.”

More than 40 distinguished Yankees alumni, such as Whitey Ford, Rich “Goose” Gossage, Reggie Jackson and Willie Randolph, will be introduced on-field, followed by baseline introductions for both teams. (A complete list of attending alumni may be found at the end of this release). Yankees Hall-of-Famer Yogi Berra will throw out the ceremonial first pitch.

Colors will be presented by a joint FDNY and NYPD color guard. After a 75-foot-by-150-foot American flag is unfurled in the outfield by West Point Cadets, Kelly Clarkson, winner of the first season of American Idol and two Grammy Awards, will sing the national anthem. At the conclusion of the anthem, the 174th Fighter Wing, an Air Force unit based in Syracuse, N.Y., will fly over the Stadium in F-16C Flying Falcons. The unit executing the flyover returned to the United States last August after supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom at Balad Air Force Base in Iraq.

The home plate and pitching rubber to be used in Thursday’s game is the same set that was used in the final game at the original Yankee Stadium. It was brought to the current Stadium on November 8, 2008, in a ceremony that included Yankees executives, former players, and two local Bronx high school youth groups, Youth Force 2020, led by Turner Construction, and the ACE Mentoring Program, led by Tishman Speyer. Following the game, the items will be dug up and placed in the Yankees Museum, located in Yankee Stadium near Gate 6.

All fans in attendance will receive an inaugural season commemorative pin.

For information on parking, please visit www.baseball-parking.com or call (866) 330-7275.

Located directly across the street from the site of the original, the new Yankee Stadium is a living museum with architecture that celebrates the spirit and tradition of the franchise. While firmly rooted in the past, the Stadium has a vision toward the future, incorporating the best in technology and state-of-the-art guest services. All of the Stadium’s modern amenities exist within the framework of classic elements of the original, most notably the instantly recognizable frieze that again circles the grandstand. Among the countless fan-friendly elements, massive video boards give Yankees fans more information than ever before, and concessions have been placed on open concourses, allowing for continuous viewing of the field.


Alumni Attending Opening Day Ceremonies
• Luis Arroyo
• Jesse Barfield
• Yogi Berra
• Ron Blomberg
• Bobby Brown
• Horace Clarke
• Jerry Coleman
• David Cone
• Chili Davis
• Bucky Dent
• Al Downing
• Dave Eiland
• Ed Figueroa
• John Flaherty
• Whitey Ford
• Joe Girardi
• Rich “Goose” Gossage
• Ken Griffey, Sr.
• Ron Guidry
• Charlie Hayes
• Rickey Henderson
• Reggie Jackson
• Tommy John
• Jim Kaat
• Don Larsen
• Hector Lopez
• Tino Martinez
• Lee Mazzilli 
• Gene Michael
• Jeff Nelson
• Graig Nettles
• Paul O’Neill
• Joe Pepitone
• Willie Randolph
• Bobby Richardson
• Mickey Rivers
• Buck Showalter
• Bill “Moose” Skowron
• Luis Sojo
• Mel Stottlemyre
• Ralph Terry
• Bob Turley
• David Wells
• Roy White
• Bernie Williams
• Dave Winfield

The below from LoHud Yankees blog.

10 a.m.: Gates open
12:10 p.m.: West Point Band performs in center field
12:30 p.m.: Introduction of Yankees alumni, introduction of home plate and mound from old Stadium
12:42 p.m.–12:53 p.m.: Baseline introductions
12:53 p.m.: Introduction of giant American flag, unfurled by West Point cadets.
12:53:30 p.m.: Flyover introduction, 174th Fighter Wing
12:54 p.m.: Presentation of colors by NYPD/FDNY Color Guard
12:54:30 p.m.: National anthem by Kelly Clarkson
12:56 p.m.: National Anthem, F-16C flyover
1:01 p.m.: Ceremonial first pitch: Yogi Berra
1:04 p.m.: Umpires and managers to home plate
1:06 p.m.: Yankees take the field
1:08 p.m.: First pitch

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