The Times West Virginian

Take Five

May 13, 2009

Worth the search

It takes a hunt, but baseball bargains still there

BALTIMORE — The crowd at Oriole Park at Camden Yards was so sparse on a recent weeknight, its murmur so low, that you could hear clear across the field when a fan let out a disappointed wail at first pitch: “Where IS everybody?”

Yet Section 334, high above home plate, was humming — large groups of college-age kids, elderly couples, families with small children in Nick Markakis jerseys. And most of them had paid an almost quaint price for their seats: $8.

This is what baseball promotions look like during an economic meltdown: The one in Baltimore was called the Birdland Stimulus Package.

Despite all the talk about the platinum-card seats at Yankee Stadium, the prix-fixe menus, microbrews, martinis and dry-aged beef, the classic ballpark experience is still available for less cash than it takes to see a movie.

You just have to hunt for it.

“They say it costs, what, a hundred bucks, 150, to take your family to the game?” said David Adden, a self-employed graphic designer who snapped up Baltimore’s $8 Tuesday night seats for himself and his 7-year-old son.

“But that’s with the cotton candy and the jersey for your kid, all that. This is really all you need, this view.”

There was plenty of howling about ticket prices in April when the Yankees opened their $1.5 billion palace, featuring top seats priced at $2,625. “We’re done talking about seats,” Yankees president Randy Levine said — before the televised disaster of empty seats forced the club to cut front-row prices.

Baseball is desperate to keep fans coming out during the longest recession since World War II. So bargains are out there, especially if you’re not choosy about which night of the week you head for the park and don’t have your heart set on an infield box.

Seats in the Rockpile section at Coors Field in Denver and the Blue Heaven section at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles are $4. Pile four or more people in your car for Monday night Florida Marlins games and get a $25 ticket voucher in a go-green promotion. The Atlanta Braves put up 186 nosebleed seats three hours before game time for $1 a pop.

The Minnesota Twins, adding a twist of dark humor, have tied a Monday ticket price to the first digit of the Dow — the lower it goes, the less you pay.

And there are even ways to go for free. Baltimore is rewarding fans who stuff the ballot box by voting 25 times online for the All-Star team and designating the Orioles their favorite club with a coupon for a free seat to a game in the second half of the season.

Major League Baseball says more than half its 30 clubs are regularly offering seats for $5.50 or less. Still, the average price of a big-league ticket is $26.74, a 5 percent increase from last year, according to the Team Marketing Report. Add in parking, programs, food and sodas for a family of four, plus beer for the parents, and the tab comes to $191.92.

In these times, that’s luxury territory. So when the Orioles played the Los Angeles Angels at Camden Yards on a recent Tuesday, Section 334 was full of people who had brought their own snacks. The Ross family of suburban Catonsville, had stuffed Ziploc bags full of peanuts.

“Beats spending five or six bucks here,” said the father, Chris Ross. Another man peered at the action through binoculars and worked his way through an orange brought from home.

To be sure, even outside the rarefied Legends Suite section at the gilded new Yankee Stadium, there are plenty of opportunities for a night at the ballpark to swallow your wallet whole.

Take Camden Yards. On just the five-minute walk from the park’s Eutaw Street entrance to the seats up behind home, you can stop to buy any of the following: An Orioles giant orange foam finger ($9), a hand-drawn caricature of yourself ($10 to $25), a Markakis bobblehead doll ($25) or a foot-high, Orioles cap-wearing garden gnome ($35, plus the untold psychological damage to your children).

All of which cost more than an actual upper-deck ticket on Stimulus Package night. And all of which have little, if anything, to do with the one thing that hasn’t changed as player salaries have swelled and the economy has soured — the simple pleasure of watching the game itself.

Like the staccato Orioles rally in the third, four singles and an infield error strung together for a quick three runs. Or a right-lunging, knees-to-the-dirt stop by the O’s’ Melvin Mora to save an Angels run in the second.

That, said Adden, who was perched near the top of the stadium, was what he had brought his 7-year-old son to the park to see.

Then he gestured out over the field, the giant scoreboard and the skyline beyond the left-field wall. It was a dry, 80-degree night in Baltimore, one of the first ideal nights of the season.

“That’s not bad for eight bucks, right?” Adden said.

A late Orioles rally sputtered, and Baltimore lost 7-5 to the Angels. Adden roused his 7-year-old, who had fallen asleep, tucked his scorecard under his arm — not from a $5 stadium program but part of a shopworn spiral notebook, the kind Little League coaches buy and use for years — and left the park.

Text Only
Take Five
  • Mary Whyte A fine ‘mess’

    It’s good to dig in the dirt.
    “It eases your mind,” said Mary Whyte.
    “It doesn’t do anything for my fingernails! But they’ll outgrow it,” she added, laughing.
    In her little garden right off the back porch of her 100-year-old home, she grows just enough for a dinner or two at a time.

    April 25, 2012 2 Photos

  • ‘Everybody is at risk’ ‘Everybody is at risk’ The Mexican drug cartels battling viciously to expand and survive have a powerful financial incentive: Across the border to the north is a market for illegal drugs unsurpassed for its wealth, diversity and voraciousness.

    May 27, 2009 1 Photo

  • Fleet of the future Fleet of the future Some soccer moms will have to give up hulking SUVs. Carpenters will still haul materials around in pickup trucks, but they will cost more. Nearly everybody else will drive smaller cars, and more of them will run on electricity.

    May 20, 2009 1 Photo

  • Worth the search Worth the search The crowd at Oriole Park at Camden Yards was so sparse on a recent weeknight, its murmur so low, that you could hear clear across the field when a fan let out a disappointed wail at first pitch: “Where IS everybody?”

    Yet Section 334, high above home plate, was humming — large groups of college-age kids, elderly couples, families with small children in Nick Markakis jerseys. And most of them had paid an almost quaint price for their seats: $8.

    May 13, 2009 1 Photo

  • White House seeks input on education law White House seeks input on education law Embarking on a “listening tour,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan asked teachers, parents and students Tuesday how they would improve No Child Left Behind, the controversial education law championed by former President George W. Bush.

    Duncan visited West Virginia, the first stop on a 15-state tour as the Obama administration prepares to try to overhaul the program.

    May 5, 2009 1 Photo

  • Got a bad back? Got a bad back? Don Rose knows how to properly lift a box. It was the turning that got him in trouble.

    “I lifted the right way, but I turned the wrong way,” said the Core resident, who hurt his back at his job as a coal miner lifting a 40-pound bag of rock dust. “When I turned to set it down, I didn’t move my feet. I just twisted my back.”

    April 29, 2009 1 Photo

  • Charlie Morrison Earth Day every day Karen McKee has been recycling for nearly two decades and also has helped her three daughters with environmental projects as a troop leader of Girl Scouts.

    April 22, 2009 1 Photo

  • A closet fix A closet fix When it comes to closets, Julie Mills has a simple reason why people have trouble finding a particular outfit or pair of shoes.

    “Basically, we have too many clothes,” Mills said. “We only wear about 20 percent of what we have in the closet. We have a favorite sweater and a favorite pair of jeans, but a lot of times, we buy things because there is a good sale but we didn’t necessarily need it.”

    April 15, 2009 1 Photo

  • The big search The big search When Lindsay Marsh of Bridgeport was searching for her wedding gown, she had narrowed the choice down to two. One was at a Pittsburgh-area store and the other was at Coni & Franc in Morgantown.

    She wanted a strapless dress, but the one she liked at Coni & Franc had a halter top. Not to worry.

    April 8, 2009 1 Photo

  • Happy feet Your poor little tootsies have been hibernating since October, hidden from the world in their own snug little world of thick socks and heavy boots.

    And for a while, that was good.

    April 1, 2009

Featured Ads
House Ads