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smittykins
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I personally was not surprised that the Dodgers didn't get it this year.  Coors Field makes the most sense, but it would have been nice for the Yankees to get it this year.

Same with Los Angeles, but the last I checked, the decision to move it to 2022 was made in the summer of 2020.  Otherwise, the argument could be made for why LA wasn't getting it in favor of the reigning world champions

(edited)

I’m guessing Denver was the best choice on terms of availability, space and politics. Holding it at Citi Field would’ve been funny as a unspoken tribute to Tom Seaver, seeing that the Mets would be taking something Atlanta originally had.

Seriously, though, is the ASG relevant at all? Everyone gets to play, the peak is usually the Home Run Derby, home field in the World Series is (rightfully) no longer being determined by the result, and it’s held on a Tuesday night. Are fifteen games on a Sunday really more profitable than joining the other major leagues?

Edited by Lantern7
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I think it didn't go to LA this year because the commercial partners would rather have a full blown party (with a bunch of fans) in post covid LA next year.

Today, PTI noted that Camden Yards opened 29 years ago today. Which made me feel old because I had so much fun in its predecessor, Memorial. It was a dump, but I'll never forget times like when I was with a couple of Army reservist friends (who may or may not have super drunk) who were determined to start a fight with a bunch of Navy midshipmen. (The midshipmen were disciplined and more sober, so nothing happened.)

Good times.

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10 minutes ago, xaxat said:

I think it didn't go to LA this year because the commercial partners would rather have a full blown party (with a bunch of fans) in post covid LA next year.

Today, PTI noted that Camden Yards opened 29 years ago today. Which made me feel old because I had so much fun in its predecessor, Memorial. It was a dump, but I'll never forget times like when I was with a couple of Army reservist friends (who may or may not have super drunk) who were determined to start a fight with a bunch of Navy midshipmen. (The midshipmen were disciplined and more sober, so nothing happened.)

Good times.

I was there on the first Opening Day and was shocked when I read that it was 29 years ago.  Where does the time go...  

And yeah, Memorial Stadium was a dump, but it was OUR dump, dammit!  I loved that place.  I was just reminiscing the other day about parking in the 'hood.  I don't know why that popped into my head, but it did.  It was always an adventure.

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2 hours ago, ebk57 said:

I was there on the first Opening Day and was shocked when I read that it was 29 years ago.  Where does the time go...  

I was there too! (Waves retroactively.) 

My friend (not the drunk soldiers) had season tickets at Memorial. So when Camden Yards was built he renewed. I remember walking up Eutaw Street thinking it was the best thing ever. Then we got to his new seats and we were about twenty rows back from where he used to be on the right field fence and I wasn't so sure it was an improvement.

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3 minutes ago, xaxat said:

I was there too! (Waves retroactively.) 

My friend (not the drunk soldiers) had season tickets at Memorial. So when Camden Yards was built he renewed. I remember walking up Eutaw Street thinking it was the best thing ever. Then we got to his new seats and we were about twenty rows back from where he used to be on the right field fence and I wasn't so sure it was an improvement.

Waves back!! (retroactively...)

I've had a partial plan since the first year they offered them - 1984.  My seats at Memorial were upstairs between home and first base, about halfway up.  My seats at Camden Yards are upstairs behind home plate, about halfway up.  That took some getting used to (the way I followed the ball was different), but I've come to love my seats.  Also, they're always in the shade which is very helpful in the summer.   The first few years, I wasn't crazy about the Park because it was always sold out with people who didn't really care about the game.  But that's changed since you have to care about the game to bother coming out to see this team 🙂 Anyway, I've come to love the place, although Memorial Stadium will always hold a special place in my heart. 

29 years.  Yikes. 

Re the All-Star Game, I used to love watching it back in the day. The Mid-Summer Classic was something I always looked forward to. For me, it became irrelevant when interleague play began. As a fan of a National League team (and a fan of NL play, will always hate the DH), I didn't pay much attention to the AL. The only exposure I got to AL players was during the postseason and the ASG, so it was special. Now, with interleague games - not to mention cable and satellite - players from both leagues can be seen all the time, so it's gotten to the point where I barely pay attention to the ASG. 

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The ASG nearly always lands the week my hubs and I are on vacation the week of our anniversary, so it will always be something I look forward to.  Because normally he only watches sports if he is in the room when I am watching them.

Michael Kay, I am furious with you.  TWICE before the commercial break he says that Taillon has a perfect game.  After the break? TWO home runs for the O’s!  He should feel entirely responsible for this.

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13 hours ago, Lamb18 said:

Was Memorial Stadium the one with a fire station across the street? And people sat in lawn chairs outside the stadium waiting for fly balls? I remember watching games there on TV.

I went to Camden Yards for a couple of games in 2006 when I was working in Columbia, MD a lot that summer. It was the first of the new style of stadiums, wasn't it?

No fire station across the street that I'm aware of.  There was a school across the street where they did parking - blocked-in parking, so you couldn't leave in the middle of the game.  It was...interesting.   There was another school off to the side about a block away where my mom taught before I was a gleam in anyone's eye.  In other words, in the stone age. 

Camden Yards was the first of the new "old style" ballparks in the city, not the 'burbs.  And they did a really great job with it.  Although, Janet Marie Smith, the architect from HOK, had all of the seats facing the warehouse instead of the pitchers mound.  Because the warehouse was so fabulous and who would want to actually watch the game.  So for the first couple of years, if you were sitting down the lines in the lower deck, you needed a chiropractor before the All-Star Game.  They have since fixed the angle of the seats. 

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