When it’s not about baseball

I made it out to the Royals game last night, as they took on the Indians in the first game of the series.  It was also T-shirt Tuesday, and in hopes of snagging one of the “Forever Royal” T-shirts, I made it out to Kauffman Stadium about an hour before the gates opened, which is by far the earliest I have ever arrived at any event.  The stadium concourse seemed like a ghost town.

concourse

I was early enough to have the opportunity to watch the Indians have batting practice, but apparently not early enough to watch the Royals.  I suppose this was okay, as there is rarely anything too exciting about batting practice.  I picked up a beer and a copy of Royals Baseball Insider, and sat back to enjoy myself.  Kauffman Stadium is one of my favorite place to relax, and the time leading up to the game is the best time to do this, as the stands are still relatively empty.

Kstands

Unfortunately, my sense of relaxation was not to last.  The game started, and the seats to my right were still empty.  The occupiers of those seats finally did show up in the bottom of the first inning.  It was a family, and while they seemed more concerned with talking to each other than they did about the game, it was still a minor enough situation that I could easily ignore them.

About the fourth inning, however, the family in the row in front of us left, and when it became evident that they would not return, the lady next to me invited other people–apparently more family–to take those seats.  This was when the feelings of annoyance began to set in.  Instantly, I had a full-blown family fun time session going on right next to me, and little of rambunctiousness had anything to do with what was going on out on the field.  Around the seventh inning, when the couple to my left got up and never returned, I moved down a seat to put some distance between myself and this family.  My sense of peace and concentration was short-lived, however, as the same lady invited even more family over, and they settled into the remaining empty seats to my left.

I was now surrounded.

The rest of the game, I had a very difficult time focusing on the field, as I had to put up not only with the unrelated noise pollution, but also items and kids being passed back and forth in front of me.  I had to bite my tongue against the urge to point out that this was a baseball game, and if that was not why these folks had come to the K, they needed to take their family reunion elsewhere.  As much as I enjoy the Royals winning, this is easily my least favorite part of it all — the influx of new “fans” who go to games because it’s suddenly “cool,” not because of baseball.

Unfortunately, the Royals’ performance did little to raise my spirits.  While it was refreshing to see Jeremy Guthrie have a good outing for a change, Wade Davis’s performance was quite a downer, and the Royals left far too many men stranded on base.  The whole experience felt like one of those “and all I got was this T-shirt” moments.

There will be many more Royals games to come.  Hopefully, this will be the worst of them.

Royals


13 thoughts on “When it’s not about baseball

  1. Sorry about the bad experience. And for the second outing in a row, the Royals squandered decent starting pitching. I’m losing that warm fuzzy feeling. 🙁

  2. I’m so sorry to hear of this. The event goers are a real nuisance at the yard. MLB seems to celebrate them and entice them with all sorts of noisy and shiny distractions. Meanwhile, the pitcher keeps throwing, the runners set their leadoffs and batters read the signs. It’s not always clear what the leagues want us out there to watch.

    1. Very true. That thought occurred to me too, that the MLB really doesn’t care how engaged the fans are in the game so long as they are buying tickets and concessions (and these folks bought quite a few concessions!). I don’t want the Royals to start losing, but unfortunately, once they started winning, games started drawing more than just those who actually cared about what happens on the field.

      1. We saw it happen here with the Giants in 2010. Two more WS wins haven’t helped. Add to this a very wealthy and spendthrift SF socioeconomic contingent and it’s a whole new scene out at the yard.

    1. I seriously considered moving, but the stadium was full enough that the only place to move to was going up. And I think a naive part of me was hoping they’d realize that they didn’t care so much about the game and would leave early (sadly, they didn’t). Next time, I think I will move, even if it does mean relocating further away from the field.

  3. I ran into this the last game I went to. In no way do I want KC to start losing again, but when that was going on you knew the majority of the people at the game were there to watch baseball. Like you said, now it is more about something to do that night. It becomes harder for those of us who are there to pay attention to the action on the field.

    1. I’m glad I’m not the only one. Ideally, we would pack the stadium full of people who DO care about the game and genuinely care about the team enough to pay attention. The challenge is in finding enough people to pull that off.

  4. If ti’s any consolation, that’a a veritable picnic compared to going to games in the 80’s, when ballclubs didn’t give a tinker’s damn what went on in the seats, as long as you paid your cash. You couldn’t move ten yards without running into some loud, stupid drunk.

  5. I hope you go back with maybe headphones tuned to the AM broadcast? I guess that’s reality when you’re team reaches the World Series. There’s always Tampa Bay.

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