Even At NYU Graduation, Stay The %$^ Out Of Lonn Trost’s "Suites"

Mr. Sunshine the Yankees fan sent this over.

NYU’s graduation, and notice which seats are empty.

From Subway Chatter:

On a day that meant nothing to the Yankees (well, other than several hundred-thousand in concession sales) and everything to these young men and women, you would think the Yanks could’ve found it in their hearts to let graduates have a bird’s-eye view of the ceremony that was being held in their very honor, right? Ha! Instead, many were forced back into sections 131 and 109, with nothing but the back of a white tent to view as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton delivered the Commencement address.

More pics and the full article here.

Hey was anyone at Citi Field yesterday – they are claiming near sellout, but on TV my crew remarked several times about “look how empty it is.”  What’s the real story?

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New York Yankees Examiner: Yankees want even more of your money

Nice piece from a colleague about the greed…

New York Yankees Examiner: Yankees want even more of your money

Andrew Mees, Mets Examiner, admitted, “When dealing with Shea, you’re dealing with a stadium that held a special spot in the hearts of Mets fans…and basically no one else in the world.  Yankee Stadium is America’s Roman Coliseum – I’m sure nobody came from the far corners of the world to check out old Shea.”
A bit more regretfully, Shannon Shark, NY Sports Examiner weighed in saying, “The Yanks have their new house decorated.  The Mets sold everything and then realized there’s nothing for a museum.  Boy it would be nice to have Seaver’s locker but they sold it.”

2009: The Year The New York Yankees Handed The City To The New York Mets For Good

All empires crumble.

You just have to wait long enough.  Eventually the empire grows so large that it cannot sustain itself.

In 2009, the Yankees handed New York City over to the Mets for good.

Twice before New York has been Mets town.

In the late 60s and early 70s the Mets would well outdraw the Yanks.  New Yorkers liked the home grown team and the friendly Shea Stadium atmosphere more than they liked the crumbling Yankee Stadium and the aging team that no longer won.

In the late 1980’s this was Mets town again.  There were a lot of front runners who liked to pretend they were life long Mets fans (I remember in 1989 hearing one guy brag about how he’d had season tickets “sincd 87!”) but the team was more liked than the thousand managers Jack Clark, Dave Winfield, Rent A Pitcher Yankees  .
Only Vince Coleman could screw things up and hand the fans back to Stump Merrill.

Here in 2009 we are at the passing of the torch,

What the Yankees always had was the legacy.  Even in Yankee Stadium II you could lie to yourself and pretend that it was the same center field that DiMaggio patrolled, the same right field where Ruth stood.

Now the new place will be the stadium where Jeter played for four years when he was old and not as good.

All the memories are in the other building and the team is already 6.5 back.

You pick up a copy of Metro this morning and the headline is “Damn Yankees.”  No it’s not about a loss, it’s a bout greed.   The story with the Yankees these days is always money.

I work with two Yankees fans.  Mr. Negative is done.  He went to the new stadium once and didn’t like it.  He’s been spotted at Citi Field a few times.   Mr. Sunshine is having what I call “Atari Pac-Man” syndrome.  he tries to convince me (and himself) every day that the stadium will grow on him, and that he’ll come to like it.  His new seats “aren’t bad.”

Why do kids root for teams.  10% of them pick the team that’s close to them, like I did with the horrible 1977 Mets that were 10 minutes from my house.  Most pick the winners, as evidenced by all the 40 year old and 20 year old Yankees fans, and all the 40 year old and 20 year old Cowboys fans.

Well this is going to be the 9th straight year without a World Series ring in the Bronx, so it’s a fair fight with the kids.

You see a kid with a Yankee shirt its always Jeter.  Jeter will be gone soon.

Mets kids?  Lots of Wright and lots of Reyes.  Those two players have a lot of future left.   Soon you’ll see Murphy shirts….and it’s very early but I think Santos might become a starter and a fan favorite.

You want to go to a game?  Clearly Citi Field is the better option.   Fan friendlier, especially if you read Mets Police and know which seats to avoid, or you can go to the Bronx and eat lame hot dogs in the windy upper deck that looks unfinished.   (If you can afford seats downstairs I doubt you read my dopey blog).

Citi is easier to get to, and you don’t have to leave in the 7th inning to avoid the insane “scan your ticket on the way out” system.   $19 to park in the Bronx is pre-planned to be $29 next year.

So stay home and watch the games on TV.  SNY is the best in the business.  YES is good, but they spend the entire home game showing you weird angles as they try to not-show the empty seats and to not show the game through a net.

The Mets are on their way to winning the division.   Yeah the starting pitching is shaky, but the Phillies pitching is worse.  The Yankees are on their way to another season of articles about payroll and greed and A-Rod and I bet a manager change before the leaves turn orange.

The kids will be Mets fans.   The rich will be Yankees fans until they realize that the Yankees don’t win (see 1990s Knicks vs modern Knicks crowds to learn how that works).

The Mets will sell the ballpark, an advantage they haven’t had since 1975.   The Yankees will sell memories which will contrast unfavorably with the cinderblock palace on the wrong side of the street.

Welcome to Mets Town.  I hope you Yankees fans enjoyed your run.

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I Hereby Declare The Girardi New York Yankees Watch Open

Sorry Joe. If we did it to Willie we’re doing it to you.
You can’t miss the playoffs two years in a row with a $200 million
dollar payroll.

6.5 games back is the kind of defecit that takes a month to make up.

The fans are not happy at all with the team and the stadium. It’s
going to be very easy to not buy tickets in 2009 and definitely 2010.

The mystique is shockingly gone, left on the south side of 161st The
ghost of Joe Torre haunts from Los Angeles.

The first place Mets head to the west coast which means they turn
media-invisible. All eyes on the under .500 Yankees.

Joe, you better win some games fast or we’ll see Bobby Valentine back
in New York before you know it.

Consider yourself warned. The watch is on.

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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