Mets In August At Citi Field
Posted: September 25th, 2009 | Filed under: QueensThree Mets games at Citi Field . . . and we discover how to park for free near the stadium!
The first game was the Mets vs. Diamondbacks on August 3, 2009. We located the sad old Shea Stadium Home Run Apple:
An excellent sunset over Manhattan:
I complained before about the obstructed views from the upper rows of Section 538, but the dirty secret about Citi Field seems to be that there are obstructed views nearly everywhere, including Section 524:
And it’s not just in the 500 level. A friend said he came across tickets seven rows behind the Mets dugout and couldn’t see the right field corner (his regular seats, part of a season ticket, are above the Spongetech sign in the outfield where he can’t see most of the left field corner):
We sat a little lower in Section 426 for the game against the Phillies on August 21, 2009 and still couldn’t see the left field corner:
And there is a lot of interference when looking at the field from that part of the stadium:
I know part of the knock against Shea Stadium was that it was so cavernous, but at least you could see the entire field from most (if not all) the seats. How you can spend $800 million and have obstructed views of any sort seems strange. And charging people what the Mets are charging seems outrageous. The face value of our Section 426 seats was $42. For that you had to listen to the crowd to discern whether Gary Sheffield gave enough of a shit to catch the ball. Weird.
Then there’s the out-of-town scoreboard that doesn’t feature “2s,” so you didn’t know that the Yankees were actually beating the Red Sox 20 to 7, instead of 10 to 7:
Before the game we took a walk from Hinton Park in Corona to Citi Field. This is also known as a way to avoid spending $18 to park, a tip I learned from the Mets Police blog. In only eight minutes, you can get from here, at 34th Avenue and 114th Street:
To here, the Left Field Gate at Citi Field:
Along the way you get to walk along the Whitestone Expressway:
The Monday day game against the Phillies on August 24 was a perfect day:
These seats, in Section 518, actually had a full view of the field. You know things are bad with the sightlines when StubHub sellers boast that a particular seat has a “full view of the field.”
That weekend the Mets were celebrating the 1969 World Series-winning team with specially mowed grass and painted “1969s”:
It was the day after Phillies utility man Eric “Beardo” Bruntlett made a super-rare game-ending unassisted triple play, only the 15th in the history of major league baseball:
An aside — I happened to be at Yankee Stadium to witness the 11th unassisted triple play in a major league game in 2000 — on the scorecard, see Shane Spencer’s sixth-inning at-bat, with the “4U TP”:
You can change the stadium but you can’t change the flightpath — I actually love watching the planes fly into LaGuardia, even if they’re a little loud (and the city somehow believes they can develop Willets Point when planes fly through there until late into the evening every night . . . hmmm):
The late-afternoon shadows fall over the field and Mets fans endure yet another loss: