So I guess it should come as no surprise that the eventual demolition of Shea and Yankee Stadiums will create a wealth of souveniers. Technically the city owns both ballparks and everything in them – but both teams want to buy the salvage rights from the city. When you factor in all the seats, signs, even phones, each park could gross upwards of $20 million. Guess the inflated ticket prices and all those new suites in Corporate Field aren’t enough for the Wilpon family.
The Next Mets Manager
Jerry Manuel is already in the dugout but…eh.
>The Mets Are Better Than Sex: Willie Doesn't Like To Fight If He Thinks He's Gonna Lose
>Always fun for an anti-Willie (Yankee Cylon) post.
The Mets Are Better Than Sex: Willie Doesn’t Like To Fight If He Thinks He’s Gonna Lose
The Mets Are Better Than Sex: Willie Doesn’t Like To Fight If He Thinks He’s Gonna Lose
Always fun for an anti-Willie (Yankee Cylon) post.
The Mets Are Better Than Sex: Willie Doesn’t Like To Fight If He Thinks He’s Gonna Lose
>Shea Ranks 28th in SI Rankings – That High???
> Sports Illustrated today released the results of a study where fans were questioned on different aspects of all 30 MLB stadiums. What a shocker that Shea finished 28th, beating out RFK Stadium (which isn’t even used anymore) and Dolphin Stadium (for baseball it is bad).
- Affordability – 28th (no shock here)
- Food – 30th (one fan commented – “You’re kidding, right? This is Shea you’re asking about.”)
- History & Tradition – 19th (the Royals (1969), Brewers (1969), and Mariners (1977) all finished ahead – I know when I think baseball tradition I think of this
- Fan Hospitality – 29th (most of the comments here focus on incidents during the Mets-Yankees games)
- Promotions – 28th
- Neighborhood – 28th (and guess what, this ain’t gonna change with Corporate Field in 2009)