Monday, September 25, 2023

Rays Announce Tentative New Ballpark Deal


(rendering courtesy of Gensler and Tampa Bay Times)

After 3 years of almost nothing but hearsay on the MLB ballpark front, all of a sudden it's been a really exciting time to be a ballpark chaser.  The A's are supposedly still moving to Vegas and a vote is expected to take place in November by the MLB Owners group, the Royals are expected to announce a site for their new ballpark by the end of the year in order to get a financing referendum on the spring ballot, and the Brewers are still working through the details of a generational investment in American Family Field.  The Blue Jays are midway through a huge renovation of Rogers Centre, and the Angels at some point soon will need to decide on their ballpark future.  Among all of this chatter - particularly with the A's move - people kind of forgot about the Rays situation, just because it's been quiet for so long.  But as of last week, they have suddenly emerged as perhaps the top contender to be the next team to land a new stadium.  The Rays announced last week their plans to construct a new $1.3B stadium next door to Tropicana Field.  You can read about all of the financial details here, but the intent is for a combination of team ownership and private investors to pony up about half of that cost, and for the other half to be funded through some sort of hotel/resort tax from Pinellas County and the City of St. Petersburg.  The ballpark would be a primarily a one-deck ballpark, likely with a fixed roof, and would continue the trend of smaller ballparks within a larger year-round development.  Pending government approvals (which are far from a guarantee), the goal would be to open the ballpark in time for the 2028 season, which is a significant date as it is tied to the team's current lease at The Trop expiring after 2027.  This deal might represent the last hopes of Tampa Bay getting a new park built without some sort of lease extension or temporary home - or worst case, selling or moving the team.

All of the questions we always have about almost every new ballpark built in this century still apply to the proposed new Rays ballpark.  Why does a millionaire need a handout?  How is a 30,000 seat stadium economically viable for a public investment?  How does a professional sports team positively or negatively affect the average taxpayer?  What is the true amount of the total public money behind all of the smoke and mirrors - hidden infrastructure costs, who pays for cost overruns, sale cost of the publicly owned land to the team vs actual appraised value, etc?  I'm conflicted on these questions at best and won't rehash the topic of subsidizing sports venues.  It's a problem that is never going away as there is always going to be some city somewhere willing to shell out cash for a value that may be real or perceived.  The Rays also have the added layer of their ballpark location.  For the longest time, the team was pursuing a site in downtown Tampa as that is where the majority of the team's fans are concentrated, and studies have shown the huge obstacle of getting people to games over the bay as a reason for poor attendance.  But the team is going all-in on the battle-tested theory that "if you build it, they will come."  And in this case, I don't mean that the stadium is "it," but rather the development surrounding the ballpark.  It came down to the fact that the Rays have access to a seemingly infinite amount of land at the Tropicana site, and just wouldn't be afforded that luxury at the Tampa site, despite the perk of being closer to the population base.  The Braves forever changed the game when they constructed The Battery around their new ballpark 6 years ago, and we will be seeing every city in America moving this direction if they haven't already.  It just makes sense to capture as much revenue as you can from 81+ events per year, particularly for teams in a smaller media market like the Rays.

Am I excited that we have another case of a wealthy owner essentially blackmailing a city for a new ballpark?  Of course not.  Am I excited that I will have to go back to God's Waiting Room in Florida, probably in the peak of summer heat?  Hell no.  But will fancy renderings of a beautiful new ballpark blind me to all of that?  Absolutely.  The Rays deserve a new ballpark more than possibly any other MLB team because of how good they've been the last 15 years despite playing in a dump with no fans and a bare-bones payroll, so I'm excited for them and I hope this new stadium is, for once, more than hearsay.

STANDINGS AND UPCOMING SERIES AS OF 9/25/23
Brewers 88-65, +6.0, clinched playoff spot, division magic number 1; 3 v. Cardinals, 3 v. Cubs
Twins 83-73, +9.5, clinched AL Central; 3 v. Athletics, 3 @ Rockies

2023 GAMES ATTENDED:
Erik - 4
Peter - 21

Monday, September 11, 2023

First Twins Games as a Minnesota Resident


I will always be a Brewers fan first and foremost, but I was excited to root for the Twins for the first time as a Minnesota resident this past weekend.  I went to the Saturday and Sunday games vs. the Mets with some friends visiting from out of town, and even though I've probably been to Target Field 20+ times in my life, these games held a little bit more special meaning for me.  I was a little bit more proud and felt more welcome at the park just from the sheer fact that I now live in Minnesota, and that might not seem like it should make a difference but it really does.  I love visiting new ballparks and I always will, but fandom is a special thing when it is your own team.  I still look back fondly at my 3 years in Cincinnati and how psyched I was to follow the Reds, how grateful I was to be a part of their history, and how quickly I got into following the team, and that lasted for many years after I graduated - until the Brewers and Reds both got good and I could no longer in good faith cheer for a Brewers rival.  Erik has been a Twins fan since the day he moved to Minneapolis for graduate school and he still is (granted he also worked for the team on two separate occasions so his situation was a little different), so I'm also excited to have one more commonality to share with my best friend.

The thing I enjoy most about the Twins and their fans is the sense of belonging from not just the Twin Cities, but all across the state of Minnesota and beyond.  They call Target Field "Twins Territory," and I'm not sure if they still do this post-COVID, but they used to do a bus tour all the way around the state in the winter and spring getting people hyped up for the season, sort of like a traveling fan fest.  They host themed fan nights for North Dakota, South Dakota, and Iowa residents/school alumni throughout the year and are always proud to highlight how far their "territory" stretches, which includes some western parts of Wisconsin.  The Brewers do have this to a certain degree as well as you could consider the Brewers Wisconsin's team, but I have not seen it to the devotion of Twins fans coming to watch games from all over the state.  Minnesota also has a functional government and does not push off "city problems" on the Twins like Wisconsin does with Milwaukee and the Brewers, but that's another story for another time.

I witnessed the Twins take two out of three from the lowly Mets, and the one game they lost was a dominating 8-inning, 14-strikeout performance by Pablo Lopez that the bullpen once again coughed up.  I'm now at a point where I have to debate which city I want to watch playoff baseball in - which is a good problem to have - but I have my brand-new Twins cap and Royce Lewis jersey ready just in case I end up choosing the Twins.

STANDINGS AND UPCOMING SERIES AS OF 9/11/23
Brewers 79-63, +3.0, playoffs magic number 14; 4 v. Marlins, 3 v. Nationals, 4 @ Cardinals, 3 @ Marlins
Twins 75-68, +7.5, playoffs magic number 12; 3 v. Rays, 4 @ White Sox, 3 @ Reds, 3 v. Angels

2023 GAMES ATTENDED:
Erik - 3
Peter - 20

Monday, September 4, 2023

Northwoods League Launches Women's Softball League

(image courtesy of northwoodsleague.com)

The Northwoods League has never been a league that rests on its laurels, and has set its sights on becoming North America's premier summer collegiate league since its inception.  It has now spread its footprint to 24 teams across 7 states and 2 countries and a 72-game schedule, and it has shown no signs of slowing down its expansion.  Having just wrapped its 30th season, not even the baseball world is enough and now is attempting to conquer the softball world as well.  The league announced this summer that it will be starting a women's softball component in 2024.  It would be the same type of summer collegiate structure as the baseball league in which female college athletes with at least one year of athletic eligibility remaining will be able to play.  Teams have yet to be announced, but it is expected that the inaugural year will feature a 40-game schedule with host cities within the existing NWL Baseball footprint.  I think it's a pretty safe bet that Rosemont, IL will feature a team as they have one of the premier softball complexes in the Midwest next door to the Chicago Dogs stadium on I-294, which is no longer in use since the National Pro Fastpitch league folded in 2021, and I would guess that every current Northwoods League city that has a major university with a softball program will likely be in consideration for a team - Madison, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, St. Cloud, Green Bay, etc.  I would also guess it's going to be 6 teams max to start.  These are all just speculations, but regardless, I am very excited for this and I would totally go watch a game.  I had been wanting to get to a Chicago Bandits game ever since I went to see the Dogs play in 2018, but then the pandemic started and the league folded, so it obviously never happened.  I would be excited to watch a live softball game for the first time, as I am perhaps even more amazed by watching somebody throw a giant ball 75mph underhand as I am watching somebody throw a ball 100mph overhand.

As an aside, Green Bay defeated St. Cloud to win the first ever championship for the Green Bay franchise.  I could not help but find myself rooting for the Rox as I watched the game since I cannot wait to become a season ticket holder next season following our move to the area.

STANDINGS AND UPCOMING SERIES AS OF 9/4/23
Brewers 76-61, +2.5; 3 @ Pirates, 3 @ Yankees
Twins 72-66, +6.0; 3 @ Guardians, 3 v. Mets

2023 GAMES ATTENDED:
Erik - 3
Peter - 18