Mets Police Stadiums Week Day 3: More Petco and Philly


As Stadiums Week continues, thanks to Sherri for sending these to [email protected]

First from my 2006 trip to Petco Park in SD…I hadn’t seen these pics in a while and when I went to grab one I was STUNNED by how closely it resembled Citifield!




Also attached are a couple from Citizens Bank Park from my 2004 trip.  Again, in the wide shot you can see the resemblance btw there and Citi…but what I also noticed was that there are no obnoxious railings blocking any views in the upper deck!  (BTW, I credit your site for forewarning me never to sit in the Upper Promenade at Citi!)





The last pic is of the “Phillies Wall of Fame”, which runs in a wall along the outfield.  This is exactly the sort of thing the Mets need to put up.

Got stadium pics?  Send them over to [email protected]

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New York Mets Should Adopt Yankees Style Ticket Exchange

As I was researching Yankee Stadium’s new liberal bag policy, I stumbled across the Yankees Ticket Exchange Program below.

Now, I’m no lawyer but here’s what I’m getting from reading the policy.   Say I had a 15 game pack and I couldn’t make a game.  Perhaps because the game from my Saturday plan was played on something called “Monday.”

If I am reading the below correctly, I would be able to exchange my ticket.  

Wait, I wouldn’t have to “eat” my ticket or sell it for three bucks on stubhub?  I could go to a different game?  Amazing.

Of course I know of no such technology in Flushing, only in the Bronx.  Here, from the Yankees A-Z Guide:

TICKET EXCHANGE PROGRAM
(Subject to availability. Not available for Premium Ticket Licensees.)
Future Game Exchange Program: The Yankees will permit Ticket Licensees to exchange Tickets for future Games that the Ticket Licensee cannot attend for Tickets for any Game scheduled to be played on Monday through Friday, excluding all Premium Games, subject to availability.
For the 2009 Regular Season, “Premium Games” is defined as the Opening Day game, the Old-Timers’ Day game, and all games played against the Cleveland Indians, Los Angeles Angels, Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets.
The Yankees will not exchange Tickets for Games that have already been played (except as outlined below). Tickets that a Ticket Licensee wishes to exchange must be exchanged no less than fourteen (14) days prior to the Game date of the Tickets that are being exchanged (e.g., a Ticket Licensee that is trying to exchange a Ticket for the game scheduled for July 25, 2009 must present that Ticket for exchange on or before July 11, 2009).
Commencing in early March, Tickets may be exchanged at the Yankee Stadium Ticket Office, located adjacent to Gate 4, Monday through Saturday, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM, and Sunday, 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM. Eastern Time. On Game days, Ticket holders can exchange Tickets at Ticket Windows inside the Stadium across from the Home Plate Team Store in the Great Hall until two hours after the scheduled start time for the Game. Complimentary Tickets (COMP) or equivalent tickets bear no cash value and are not exchangeable/redeemable for any benefits that may be offered to holders of tickets with a dollar value. For additional information, please visit the Yankees’ website at www.yankees.com or call the Yankees Ticket Office at (718) 293-6000, Monday – Friday, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM Eastern Time.
All Ticket exchanges are subject to availability. Please note that exchanging a Ticket does not include an exchange of any club memberships or parking passes for the newly selected Game date. Exchanges or such club memberships and/or parking passes shall not be permitted. Mail order Ticket exchanges will not be accepted.

I see nothing similar on the Mets guide, nor do I know of any such program.   All I see on the website is this friendly paragraph:

TICKET EXCHANGE AND REFUND POLICY

Tickets are not refundable, and may only be exchangeable in such cases where the ticket becomes a valid rain check, and then subject to the conditions cited on the ticket.

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Fan Calls For Boycott Of Final New York Mets Home Game

So as Mets Police has developed, I’ve found that this blog’s position in the universe seems to be the focal point of the cranky fan.  It’s a position that I’m honored to take on, tempered by my desire not to harm the team in any way, and definitely not to become a Mets Enemy.   I want nothing more than for them to run off 10 straight rings, in packed stadiums, while wearing blue hats and pinstripes.


From time to time I am asked to support a cause, and although sometimes it is one that I may not personally agree with, the blog has established itself as the place where such things are discussed.   I find it an odd spot to be in when fans look to me for help, but I may not be able to be the leader they had sought.  I’m still finding my way about how to handle such instances, so I’ve decided to put the info out there, with my personal honest feelings attached.  


Below you will find a passionate editorial from a fan who would like you to boycott the final Mets home game.  At a personal level, I don’t think a fan boycott will work at all.  Many people will use their tickets regardless.   Even if the Mets play in front of 3,000 fans – on an NFL Sunday with the Yankees heading to the playoffs there will be no window for the mainstream media/columnists/ESPN to talk about the small attendance.  When January rolls around those warm April weekends seem like a nice dream and the wallets open up. Right now, I plan on buying zero 2010 tickets – how much you want to bet I wind up renewing my Saturday plan when the time comes.


Despite my personal feelings about boycotts, I think it is a worthy discussion.  Again, I encourage you to support the Mets both financially and fanatically as much as you can.    


Below is Matt’s letter.  I have removed one paragraph which contained some allegations that I don’t feel can’t be proven, but do not affect the overall message Matt wants to get out.  Let me know what you think…






Greetings Mets fans,

    With the 2009 Mets crawling, battered and bruised to the finish line, the only positive I could find in an otherwise shameful season is that they have not presented us with the opportunity for a fourth consecutive year of heartbreak. I thought before the season, as did many of us, that this would be the year we would get over the hump and battle onwards towards a World Series championship. It would have been nice to at least have some substance behind our ‘Phillies suck!’ chants, right?. Alas, once again, this was not the year. Many people like to blame Omar, as Im sure I have done numerous times, for failing to see that our bullpen wasn’t our only problem. Likewise, others like to blame Jerry, as his seeming disdain for statistics in the face of overwhelming situational evidence has surely cost us a few games (but at least he gives us good interviews, right?!? ugh.). Still, others like to play the injury card…’If we were healthy, we’d be in the hunt at the very least!’…sure, and if a frog had wings it wouldnt bump its a** when it hopped. It is my opinion, and not mine alone (and has been for years), that the reason why the Mets have been a punchline for so long, (except all of 2006 up until frekking Adam Wainwright) is because of Fred and Jeff Wilpon, a more destructive and stingier version of the Dolans.


The only papers the Wilpons REALLY care about are the green ones, not the black and white ones we read in the morning on the subway to work, not the letters you may write to the organization, but the ones that come walking blindly through that gate every day. Too many people are telling the Wilpons, ‘Its ok to run your team like a bunch of a******s, we’ll keep paying you through the nose for the privledge of watching the AA Mets find new and exciting ways to lose’. We refuse to switch our alliegences, our original fanbase is composed of fans who, like my grandmother, refused to root for other teams when the Giants and Dodgers jumped ship. The only way to make the Wilpons stand up and take notice is a boycott. I understand a lot of people have already bought tickets. I understand they weren’t cheap. I have lost money on seats too, trust me, I know its not fun Flushing your money down the toilet. But at least it wont be wasted…I know that if someone came up to me and asked me if I could do something to make the Mets a better organization, I would probably do it. If we all rise up and take a stand, together, Gary, Keith, Ron, ESPN, everyone, will be talking about it, and, for once, the shame will be ownerships alone, NOT ours.  We can regain our pride, we can get up, sit up, go to your windows, open them and stick your head out and yell “We’re mad as hell, and we’re not going to take it anymore” instead of yelling “Lets go Mets” for once. I urge you fellow Mets fans, the only way to make this team better, difficult as it may be to swallow, is to take the dollars out of their pockets. Please join me in getting this message out to as many fans as possible to boycott the final home game of the season for the Mets. 

Thank you for your time,
Matt H

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Bags Allowed In Yankee Stadium!

Oh my….head on over to the New Stadium Insider for some shocking Yankees news!

You can now bring a small bag into Yankee Stadium!!!

Yeah, I know right?   The Yankees have finally realized that maybe some fans come straight from work to a Yankees game.   Some fans even have something called “children” with them.

Of course the Yankees have still banned briefcases (a device potentially used by James Bond villains), and large backpacks…so forget about bringing your laptop…but this is a major departure.

First the Yankees allow suntan lotion and now bags.  What’s next, bazooka guns?

I keep waiting for someone in the Bronx to hear about the shoebomber.  We should all have to take our shoes off and walk through metal detectors to enter Fake Yankee Stadium to ensure our safety at Yankees games.

I don’t know if I can attend any more Yankee games if they are going to let people bring bags in.  I hope they don’t rescind their “take off your hat” policy (really, they make you lift your baseball cap) – people might start sneaking bombs in under their Yankee caps.  

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