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My comprehensive ranked list of baseball parks I've been to or at least can remember having gone to. 1. County Stadium. I dunno if it was because I was a kid or what but I just loved this place. It was like the distilled essence of baseball stadium. Also the brats remain my single favorite ballpark food experience -- I'm curious what I'd think of them today. 2. Camden Yards. I got to go shortly after it opened and it was like stepping into a time machine after all those dumbass multi use astroturf abortions. 3. Kauffman. If you haven't been you should go. It is cheap and beautiful and baseball is technically played there. Minus points for the forgettable food options but you used to be able to bring in your own which was great but no more because COVID. 4. Petco. I'm admittedly very partial to SD in general but this is a beautiful park in a beautiful spot. The exterior is particularly great. Minus points for being obnoxiously expensive despite the Dads being bad at the time. 5. Coors. It is beautiful but there's too much going on for it to be really perfect. I think it also probably has the best ballpark food I've come across. Big bonus points for their customer service: we took my 98 year old grandpa to his last baseball game there, and they treated him like royalty, to include getting whatever food he wanted and putting him on the jumbotron. 6. Oracle. The park itself is actually kind of forgettable but I loved the crowd and the weather can't be beat. Also really good food. 7. Dodger Stadium. It is gorgeous and spacious but was a living nightmare to get in and out of and the lower bowl is surprisingly hot. 8. New Busch. The fans were irritating and it too is miserably hot but it is a beautiful facility. 9. Target. I also love Minneapolis and am grudgingly partial to the Twins and their fans; I thought this park was great but the atmosphere was kind of dead, which may be because it was a bad team playing at the time. I'd love to take in a playoff game there, I bet it'd be amazing. 10. Cleveland Stadium. I was there when a kid also, but I still think that main stand is the biggest tallest thing I've ever seen. We sat in the bleachers once and I couldn't see anything. 11. Comerica. The backdrop is way prettier than you'd think Detroit would be, but I didn't care as much for the layout and the food options were terrible. 12. Wrigley. I went before recent renovations but it was kind of a dump. I did really love Day Game at Wrigley atmosphere, it was like watching WGN but in real life. 13. Metrodome. It was not meant for baseball but the fans tried hard anyway. 14. Old Yankee Stadium. I dunno, it was very full of itself. I was super excited to go but felt let down. 15. Astrodome. Also not meant for baseball. 16. Arlington. At some point some scientist will discover that the hottest place in the known universe was the bleacher seats in Arlington stadium in mid July. 17. Old Busch. It was almost as hot as Arlington, as insufferable as Yankee stadium, in a dump of a downtown, every seat seemed like it was a mile away from anything, and someone keyed my car while I was at the game. bewbies fucked around with this message at 17:51 on Apr 28, 2021 |
# ? Apr 28, 2021 17:46 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:16 |
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bewbies posted:16. Arlington. At some point some scientist will discover that the hottest place in the known universe was the bleacher seats in Arlington stadium in mid July.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 17:50 |
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George Springer is going to lead the Blue Jays to the promised land (of a record above .500).
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 17:55 |
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I hope the man in white is bangin some trash cans tonight
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:00 |
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RFK was terrible as a baseball stadium, I'm glad the new Nats Park is pretty awesome. I also like Great American in Cincy quite a bit. I remember basically nothing about Comerica because it was a front office road trip and we had an open bar.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:14 |
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bewbies posted:My comprehensive ranked list of baseball parks I've been to or at least can remember having gone to. gently caress that’s a good snipe only other content is that Target Field is great and should be way higher
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:19 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:Someone never visited the Marlins' old stadium I see. Going to any games at Pro Player/Joe Robbie/etc in the summer was just asking to die of heatstroke I ain't saying I was at this game but christ on a cracker what a miserable experience this must have been for absolutely everyone involved. edit: Time of Game: 1:49 lol bewbies fucked around with this message at 18:35 on Apr 28, 2021 |
# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:31 |
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It was either Old Busch, Riverfront or both where the field temperature could get up to 120 degrees. Those old carpet turfs everybody used to use were horrible.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:42 |
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MiLB but DBAP is a glorious park and they kept the "Hit Bull Win Steak (hit grass win salad)" sign from the old park Bull Durham was shot in. https://twitter.com/shrecknet/status/1129157123034820613?s=19
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:48 |
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RC and Moon Pie posted:It was either Old Busch, Riverfront or both where the field temperature could get up to 120 degrees. Those old carpet turfs everybody used to use were horrible. Yeah it was hot af in the bowl when I went to Old Busch and it had to be even worse on the field. It just reflected all the heat inward.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:51 |
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RC and Moon Pie posted:It was either Old Busch, Riverfront or both where the field temperature could get up to 120 degrees. Those old carpet turfs everybody used to use were horrible. There was a Braves game at Riverfront where the turf got so hot that players’ cleats were starting to melt and almost everyone got subbed out so they wouldn’t get heat stroke, I think Glavine got called in on his day off pitching to play outfield
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:54 |
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I love going to minor league games My childhood memory about games in Shea stadium was that I couldn't see the field unless I stood up, and if everyone was standing I couldn't see the field. Still loved it though
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:56 |
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Kauffman/Royals stadium was notorious for being comically hot before they swapped out the skin-removing carpet also. In STL and KC both they'd ALWAYS show a field level thermometer and it'd regularly be north of 140 degrees.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 18:58 |
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Please be kind to my former leadoff son, but don’t be surprised if he swings out of his shoes in his first AB and/or nearly kills himself on a tough fly.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:00 |
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bewbies posted:Kauffman/Royals stadium was notorious for being comically hot before they swapped out the skin-removing carpet also. In STL and KC both they'd ALWAYS show a field level thermometer and it'd regularly be north of 140 degrees. My experience in Kauffman was great, my dad and I wandered in while the team was on a road trip and asked a security guard if we could look around. He just shrugged so we wandered the stadium alone lol I'd love to go back for an actual game, it was GORGEOUS
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:14 |
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bewbies posted:wrigley That "WGN but real" feel is legit. I was amazed how it sounded.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:15 |
Wrigley Field has changed a lot since the renovations and mostly for the better. It still has that great open feel/layout to it but the facilities are much improved, the concourse surrounding it is nice as well. The rest of the changes in surrounding Wrigleyville are far more contentious.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:20 |
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Popete posted:Wrigley Field has changed a lot since the renovations and mostly for the better. It still has that great open feel/layout to it but the facilities are much improved, the concourse surrounding it is nice as well. The rest of the changes in surrounding Wrigleyville are far more contentious. Yeah other than the giant video screen and better bathrooms I'd be hard-pressed tell you what changed.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:25 |
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Popete posted:Wrigley Field has changed a lot since the renovations and mostly for the better. It still has that great open feel/layout to it but the facilities are much improved, the concourse surrounding it is nice as well. The rest of the changes in surrounding Wrigleyville are far more contentious. The stuff that we launched in...2019? is the best of it too. The upper deck concourses that run around the outside of the ballpark are really awesome and have helped congestion up there so much, plus you can still see the giant plaza TV while you're on the third base side of it. And the plaza itself is way better for game viewing than I expected since the massive TV has no delay on its feed. Also this year we got even newer machines for the metal detection and they're smooth as poo poo so getting into the park is MUCH faster than the few seasons pre-pandemic with the garbage magnetometers (and not just cuz we're at 25% capacity).
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:25 |
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Slimy Hog posted:Yeah other than the giant video screen and better bathrooms I'd be hard-pressed tell you what changed. The bleachers are completely redone and much easier to, you know, get concessions or use the bathroom. The concourses in general are better, and although I still don't have a feel for how the new section numbers work, it beats the old "aisle" system where two seats next to each other would be in different sections (because your section was based on the aisle that was closest to your seat, not the block of seats itself)
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:28 |
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they're opening Truist to 100% capacity Friday after next
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:33 |
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Hmm, I haven't been to nearly as many stadiums as I ought to have been. And I haven't seen many of the new stadiums either. Still. 1. Fenway (Any seats other that the RF or LF grandstands) - It's a cliche, but it's a great stadium. One of my favorite memories is my brother taking me to a game for my birthday. By the last inning a lot of the crowd had filtered out, so I was able to get close enough to heckle Fernando Rodney as he came into the game in the bottom of the ninth. I am still convinced to this day he heard me telling him he was going to blow it, and that's why he gave up a walk-off to Jarrod Saltalamacchia. Afterwards we were in time to walk across the street and watch Rajon Rondo cook the 76ers in game 7 of the eastern conference semis. 2. T-Mobile - I got to see one game here, but it was still such a pretty stadium. Also got to see peak Pedro, and remember the Mariners fans next to us saying "welp, we're not winning this" when the Sox scored 4 in the top of the first. They were right. 3. Citifield - It is indeed amusing that Fred Wilpon built a massive shrine to Ebbet's Field despite, y'know, owning an entirely different team. And there's nothing that special about Citifield in comparison to the other new style ballparks. But it's still a very good place to watch a game. Don't bother with the Shake Shack, it's not worth the multi-inning wait. 4. Shea - Ranked this high purely on nostalgia. I might now have attended more games at Fenway now, but I didn't start going to Fenway until I was in my teens. Apparently I was in one of those groups of little kids who got to run the bases before/after a game. I cannot understand how my memory failed to make sure it remembered that moment no matter what. 5. Target Field - Only got to go twice, once for the third game ever played there, the other for a wedding held at the stadium. 6. The Metrodome - I have a lot of fond memories of the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome from when I lived in Minneapolis. Especially moving from the northeast where both ticket and beer prices were much higher. It was a surprisingly decent place to see a game. 7. Guaranteed Rate - A perfectly decent park where I got to watch the White Sox get shitkicked by the Yankees in surprisingly cold weather for May 16. 8. Stade Olympique Not a very good stadium, but you could get walkup tickets to the good seats, and cheap, any time you wanted when my folks took us there on vacation in 1999. Which was great, since the Padres had just come to town and Tony Gwynn was sitting on 2999 career hits. He didn't make us wait for number 3000. I had forgotten that game was such a barnburner, though. 9. Old Yankees Stadium - It wasn't any great shakes, and it had that loving stupid "26 time world champions" sign with the "26" as a separate panel so they could update it without needing a new sign, but at least it had history. 10. Candlestick - Was there as a kid in the middle of the summer and almost froze to death. 11. New Yankees Stadium - A mausoleum, without any history. 12. Fenway (RF Grandstand seats) - Hope you have a good massage therapist to fix your neck after turning it 90 degrees for the entire game just to see the infield. That's assuming you don't have a big honking beam obstructing your view. Also, I feel certain I saw a game at Camden Yards, but I think it's a false memory because I can't remember when that would have been. I've been inside the restaurant at Miller Park while visiting a friend during the offseason, but never seen a game there. I'll get to see GAB in Cincinnati this July, and I've heard a lot of extremely good things. habeasdorkus fucked around with this message at 19:43 on Apr 28, 2021 |
# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:36 |
If you want the true Miller Park experience just get drunk in the parking lot until you black out in your lawn chair somewhere around the 3rd inning and wake up after the game is over.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:40 |
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Booyah- posted:I love going to minor league games This seat cost me $18 to watch A ball San Jose Giants. Minor leagues rock.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:45 |
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Slimy Hog posted:Yeah other than the giant video screen and better bathrooms I'd be hard-pressed tell you what changed. If I can't get the feeling of the warmth from the piss of the drunk guy across from me at the trough on my leg, no thanks.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:55 |
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We officially need to remove all human decisions. https://twitter.com/mlberrors/status/1387470595990949888?s=20
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 19:55 |
soggybagel posted:We officially need to remove all human decisions. What on Earth? Did they say the pitcher was blocking the runner? That's maybe the worst call I've ever seen.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:01 |
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soggybagel posted:We officially need to remove all human decisions. He's not even in the loving basepath
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:02 |
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soggybagel posted:We officially need to remove all human decisions. I have no idea what the ump is doing here? Pitcher in the basepath?
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:04 |
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All umps are cops
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:05 |
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The pitcher was in the grass the ENTIRE time. What an insane call, the ump should literally be fired on the spot for incompetence.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:05 |
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Counsell should have punched the ump
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:06 |
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Anyone who doesn't think the job of umpires or referees in any of the major leagues is in part to influence the outcome of the game is ignoring their own eyes. An NHL ref got caught on a hot mic saying that he made a call to do exactly that and the NFL has relied on subjective calls for years. Pittsburgh Fentanyl Cloud fucked around with this message at 20:10 on Apr 28, 2021 |
# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:08 |
Since that's an error they can reverse the call at any point right?
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:09 |
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Pittsburgh Fentanyl Cloud posted:Anyone who doesn't think the job of umpires or referees in any of the major leagues is in part to influence the outcome of the game is ignoring their own eyes. You're honestly over complicating things. Its mostly just really lovely stupid decision making. I've worked with enough current and former football officials to know sometimes they just miss poo poo but it mostly boils down to incompetence...not secret influence to tilt the games.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:13 |
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That call was so bad, how does no other ump go over there to discuss that and correct it? As far as ballparks, I have seen 26 teams in their home stadium, but like 10 of those were when I was a kid, so some of those stadiums have since been torn down, and I don't really remember the experience anyway. A lot of the new stadiums from the last 20 years all have a similar feel to me. They have good concessions, generally good flow, maybe one interesting thing, and that's about it. If I had to throw out my top 5 places to see a game though, I guess this would be it. 1. Wrigley for purely homerific reasons. The upgrades from the last 6-7 years have improved some stuff like the upper deck bathrooms and concessions. Beforehand, the upper deck was a great place to see the game, but a terrible one for all the other parts of being in the stadium. 2. AT&T or Oracle Park now - Had a seat in the upperdeck over looking the bay. Best view I've had at a game. 3. Coors - Another upper deck game and seeing the mountains. Game I went to was cold and rainy in August and got delayed like two hours. So maybe this would be higher. 4. Miller Park - The tailgaiting is half the fun, and the park has a good atmosphere. 5. Progressive Park - This one is probably high up because I went there a lot when I lived in Cleveland. Tickets were cheap, and pretty much every seat was good. It's weird because they have a lot of upper deck seats blocked off. Easy to get around and it's right near downtown. I always appreciate parks that are in the heart of the city. I really hate parks that require driving, or are surrounded by giant parking lots.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:17 |
Bird in a Blender posted:4. Miller Park - The tailgaiting is half the fun, and the park has a good atmosphere.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:21 |
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It's my one exception because they put those lots to good use. E: It also fits the theme of drinking in driving that comes with being in Wisconsin.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:22 |
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I've been thinking for a while that I want to do a cool post-covid (well, hopefully) baseball roadtrip sometime next year so please keep the recommendations coming also any minor-league parks that particularly stand out, I really love the idea of just deciding to go to a game and rocking up and paying like <$20 for field-level seats
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:22 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:16 |
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Miller "American Family" Park has great food and the tailgating rules but IMO it is a miserable experience inside when the roof is closed. And then it's a field designed by dumbasses when the roof is open with regard to how light hits the field, but that's a problem for players and not me. Definitely much more fun there when the roof is open in spite of it.
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# ? Apr 28, 2021 20:27 |