New Yankee Stadium a home run nightmare (ESPN)

ESPN has two pieces about New Yankee Stadium:

New Yankee Stadium a home run nightmare

“With the way the wind has been the last couple of days, right field is a joke,” one official said. “I would say at least three or four home runs in this series would be routine outs in nearly every park.”

(at this pace)….there would be about 400 homers hit in the park this year — or an increase of about 250 percent. In the last year of old Yankee Stadium, in 2008, there were a total of 160 homers.

Buster Olney writes in a separate column

Sure, there are a handful of problems that need to be sorted out in Citi Field, the Mets’ new ballpark. The visiting relievers can’t really see the games from their bullpen in right-center field, and their video screen operates with a delay of about 15 seconds (by the count of the Brewers’ relievers). There is little hot water and no music in the visiting clubhouse, and they need to squeegee out the whirlpool because of a drainage issue.

But those are minor details that can be ironed out eventually. The Yankees, on the other hand, might have a whopper of a problem on their hands that could have long-term, big-picture ramifications for them. Their new ballpark is playing like Coors Field East. 

The Yankees totaled five homers Friday, and the Indians launched six Saturday. If you include the two exhibition games played against the Cubs the weekend before the season started, there have been 25 homers in five games, and already word has gotten around baseball about the acute hitting conditions at the new park in the Bronx. A number of rival executives wrote e-mails late Saturday indicating that they’d heard from their own scouts and other sources that new Yankee Stadium plays very, very differently than old Yankee Stadium.

54,000 Saw Mets Santana A year Ago. 36,000 Yesterday (Newsday)

Wallace Matthews brings it in today’s Newsday.

Sunday, the Yankees hosted the Indians and the Mets hosted the Brewers. Neither place came within 5,000 seats of being sold out. Most teams would be overjoyed playing to 85-percent capacity in April, but these are not most teams and this is not any other city.

But when Opening Day at the new Yankee Stadium draws only 48,000 paid admissions, and the Mets, after nearly filling the 42,000 seats in their opener but then can’t draw much above 36,000, you know that the geniuses in the business offices who decided to Mel Brooks the baseball fans of this town made a serious error in judgment.

Yes, there is always a drop-off after the opener and before the kids get out of school, but last year on this very weekend, 54,000-plus saw Johan Santana pitch against the Brewers. On Saturday, with the same pitcher, same opponent and a 75-degree day, only 36,312 showed up.

As I speak on behalf of all Mets fans, Citi is such a step-up from Shea that we’re willing to eat bad sight-lines, or not being able to see all nine position players from left field.   Yankee fans, I think you would take your old park back if you could.   Either way, maybe one of the teams will get it right when they move into their new parks around 2085.

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If The Yankees Are Rained Out Monday…

New Stadium Insider has a good breakdown of scenarios should today’s Yankees game be rained out.  Since I believe in honor among bloggers (there’s excerpts and then there’s link-stealing) rather than steal their answer, I’ll invite you to go read here where you’ll find a well reasoned answer.

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Home Runs and Empty Seats (Times)

The “mainstream  media” is on empty seats and home runs at New Yankee today.  Cool by me!

From the Times…

Another first impression of the new Yankee Stadium is that it has plenty in common with Arthur Ashe Stadium at the United States Open tennis tournament in Queens, where two tiers of luxury boxes constitute a no-person’s land of empty seats and yawning silence, except when Agassi plays Sampras, which isn’t likely to happen again.

Yankees management claimed an attendance of 43,068 on Sunday, but you could not prove that by the gaping sections of expensive seats from dugout to dugout. Either the Yankees have not actually sold those seats, or the bankers and brokers with the corporate seats are taking weekend jobs to make ends meet in this rotten economy they helped create. Either way, it is quiet at the new Stadium.

“You guys call yourselves Yankee fans? Make some noise!” one loud bloke was shouting in the stands just before Posada elevated his home run. 

Mets fans have to decide how they feel about the wretched sightlines thousands of them have purchased. Yankees fans seem to be opting for the $5 seats alongside the restaurant, named for a gambling den, that juts out in the middle of the center-field bleachers, killing the peripheral vision for hundreds of fans

Enjoy the article.

Published: April 20, 2009
One thing is already clear about the two new ballparks in New York: the Yankees’ new stadium is much more conducive to hitting home runs.

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Obstructed View From Mets Citi Field Section 525 Row 4

The Mets Police encourage all to support the Mets, and to buy tickets at what is really a wonderful ballpark.

However, if you have a choice there are spots you may want to avoid.

We’ve invited fans to send us photos of “obstructed views” at [email protected] and as far as obstructions go, this one is on the low end.

David Howard the Mets VP is on record as saying there are no obstructed views so this is just another in our series of random photos from the promenade.  These are from  Section 525 Row 4.     I assume there’s a left fielder somewhere down there.

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