Sunday, May 18, 2008

Turner Field

My oldest sister called me out of the blue a week ago to ask me how far Atlanta was from Nashville. It turns out that she was going to be in Atlanta for business, and asked if I would be willing to drive out to meet her. Thursday afternoon we were finalizing plans for me to go meet her when she asked if I wanted to go to a baseball game as the A's and Braves were playing a night interleague game.

As you all know by now, I love sports. I am a little too crazy about sports for my own good and I love going to new sports sites that I have not been to as much as going to sporting events. I have attended quite a few baseball games, although I have been limited to the D'Backs, Pirates, and Nationals park as well as the Durham Bulls park (AAA ball) and the Diablos Rojos the Mexico old park (Mexican league). I had not been to Turner Field and had had a generally negative view of Braves fans as an apathetic crowd after years of winning divisional pennants but only winning one World Series in 1995. Boy was I wrong and I should have known better (this link is a great review of most of today's MLB parks).

For starters, transportation to the stadium was fantastic. We were staying at a downtown hotel and took the Atlanta metro (MARTA) one stop where we were easily pointed to a shuttle going to the park by Braves employees at the metro stop. The metro, shuttle ride, as well as picking up our tickets from the friendliest Will-Call employee ever took 30 minutes. The park itself, which served as Olympic stadium for the 1996 games, and was redesigned a bit for baseball, is still very modern with good sight-lines, a great video board, decent concession stands with expensive, but not ridiculously expensive food including a good veggie burger (for those vegeterian readers) and a good jumbo dog. The park also has one thing that the Nationals park lacks a lot of, character. Coca-cola is ubiquitous in the stadium, and rightly so as they are headquartered there and Coke was born in Atlanta, and there are lots of history sprinkled around the stadium (divisional and WS pennants, tributes to Hank Aron, and so on). You actually feel like you are in THE Atlanta Braves park not a park that was built for just any team.

As for the fans themselves, they were completely the opposite of what I expected. Most people in the stadium were wearing Braves gear and seemed fairly knowledgeable about the game and the team, with Chipper Jones and Jeff Francoeur (Atlanta born) being fan faves. More so, fans were into the game, cheering, jeerings, doing the Tomahawk chop at several points in the game, and generally excited about the game. I am sure it helped the game itself was a good one and that the Braves pulled off a win after trailing 2-0 after 5 and half innings. Still, this was a regular season game against a team that there isn't a huge rivalry. I mean, forget they aren't in the same division, they are 3 time zones away! Despite all of that, and a fairly chilly spring night, the park was hopping with the intensity of a late September game.

As we were leaving the park to fireworks going off, I couldn't help but think that these Braves fans must be proud. They have a solid franchise that is serious about winning, with a solid park, and built around a very good fan base. Kudos Braves fans.

8 comments:

Nate M. said...

Very cool. I think I would've had the same expectations that you took with you to the game. Steph's dad went to Turner years ago and had good things to say about it, but I have to admit that I sort of clung to my preconceived notions and assumed that he's just a nice guy, like to be impressed by a the newness of the park. I'm happy to stand corrected.

Nate M. said...

Speaking of baseball, the Heels look pretty impressive again this year. Unfortunately, only 1 or 2 of their games have been televised this year, so I've not seen much of them. And with them playing home games in Cary this year, it's not easy to catch a game in person.

mainou said...

They sure look good. I have not heard about how well attended the Cary games have been.

Nate M. said...

I heard that the FSU series was packed, as was the State series, but I think that attendance has only been okay otherwise. I get the impression that they expected UNC alums living in Cary and Raleigh to show up in force for these games, but really, it's just been the same folks who would've gone to the Bosh.

mainou said...

It'll be interesting to see how we fare in the ACC tourney, especially with us not going in as a top seed. I sure hope they can catch on fire and make another strong run at Omaha.

mainou said...

Oh, and I am bummed about losing Stephenson. I hope his dad is doing well and I hope the NCAA does not require him to sit out for a year.

Nate M. said...

The way that the ACC tournament is structured is funny. There's really no difference between being the 2 versus the 3 seed, and I think you can make a case that the 1 seed gets a tougher road than either the 2 or the 3. You play a round robin with 1,4,5, and 8 in one bracket, and 2,3,6, and 7 in the other bracket. Where being the 3-seed does hurt is on the tie-breaker. If there's a 3-way tie with 3 teams all 2-1 in the bracket, the top seeded team advances.

As for basketball team, man... it seems like mostly bad news since the Louisville game. Get blown out in the final four, three underclassmen declare, and now the best post defender transfers. But you're right, this team has no shortage of post depth... so if you had to lose somebody, a second string post guy wasn't a bad choice.

mainou said...

I'm saddened by Stephenson leaving, but realistically his leaving shouldn't affect the team negatively that much. If anything, this will help give the young guys more minutes.

I still think of the three NBA guys, only Lawson will be gone. We shall see.