Yankees and Red Sox Flipped Fates (Times)

I enjoy this kind of article, because I agree.  

Although I liked the New New Yankee Stadium more on Saturday than I did on my first visit, I still find it unnecessary.

…(The Yankees should have) thought twice about changing homes in the first place. How better to explain the Yankees’ sputtering start this season, or the astral winds wafting home-run balls out to right-center field with unnatural frequency? And not that baseball superstition can entirely explain the economic collapse, but the new stadium does seem to be suffering from an attendance jinx. There have been so many no-shows that management recently slashed the price of some of the most expensive seats, especially the embarrassingly visible ones behind home plate, and is offering freebies to many season-ticket holders.


The Red Sox home, Fenway Park, meanwhile, unfailingly sells out, as it has for years. Not the least of the many smart moves made by John Henry, who bought the Sox in 2002, was that he resisted the experts who said the only way the franchise could survive was by abandoning Fenway, which was built in 1912 and held only 33,000 or so, and building a new ballpark with more seats, better parking, executive suites and all the other profit-making amenities thought to be essential. What these visionaries had in mind, only they didn’t know it, was something very similar to the new Yankee Stadium.


Instead, Mr. Henry decided to refurbish the old place, squeezing in additional seats wherever he could, even on top of the left field wall, Fenway’s fabled Green Monster, and adding luxury boxes and an expanded glassed-in area behind home plate where high-rollers could be hermetically sealed off not just from the elements but from the sound of the game. The resulting ballpark, where many seats are not a whole lot cheaper than those at the new Yankees park, is no longer the “little lyrical bandbox” that John Updikeonce celebrated, comparing it to the inside of an Easter egg. It’s more nearly like a summer cottage that some industrious homeowner has winterized and added onto so many times that it now amounts to a McMansion.

But from the street, at least, Fenway still looks like itself.

Good stuff, and the rest is here.

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Want Cheap(er) New York Yankees Tickets? Prices Have Crashed On Stubhub

Interesting stuff in the Canadian Press

Legends Suite seats for Friday night’s game against the Los Angeles Angels that originally sold for US$500 could be had for $144 shortly before 5 p.m. ET on StubHub.com. Legends seats in section 16, row 9, behind the first-base dugout were available for $199, down from their $850 original price.

For Saturday’s game, seats that originally sold for $500 were available for $150 Friday on StubHub and $850 seats could be had for $225. Field level seats the Yankees sold for $325 behind the plate were listed at $60.

There were similar prices for Sunday’s game.

“The market has flipped,” Janes said. “Supply has totally exceeded demand. That’s why you see this downward pressure on ticket prices.

I’ve lived long enough that the cheapest way to get tickets is on stubhub.  Amazing.

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Nice Fenway Piece (Times)

Too nice out, so I’m being a blog slacker.

Cool Fenway Piece in the Times.

Published: April 26, 2009
The decision to embrace and enhance Fenway Park, instead of trading it in for a new stadium as the Yankees have done, is popular with fans and players alike.


“There are those who want to build the Eighth Wonder of the World,” Larry Lucchino, the Red Sox’ president and chief executive, told me Friday. “We just wanted to preserve a nice little old ballpark.”


I still think the Yankees would be smart moving back across the street.  Let the A’s or someone play on the north side of 161st.

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