Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 72
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted


I didn't personally audit their methodology but have no reason to doubt the data. Given that you have to put in a billing address for tickets, they know full well if the tickets are being bought in the UK or overseas.


Posted


Johnny Lunchbucket wrote:

Of course. If it was only about drawing tourists to London it wouldn't make any sense.



MLB needs to find fans to replace us or it'll die once we do. They see English speaking places like UK and places where baseball is played (Latin America, Japan, Korea) as the most obvious locations.



NFL & NBA & NHL see the same thing. NHL took 4 teams to Sweden and held an exhibition in Melbourne this year. NFL will play in Brazil and France in addition to London this year, most-ever international games.


I don't really know much about the NHL. I Would strongly suspect though that the NFL and NBA both don't have the demographic problem that MLB does (fans being older) - both sports are VERY popular and the NFL in particular would still be an immensely profitable enterprise if nobody outside the United States ever watched.


Posted


Maybe MLB should add more playoff teams. Then more fans would be interested and attendance would rise and the money would roll in. MLB could maximize this idea by letting every team qualify for the playoffs. Think how much money they'd make then. If that's not enough money, MLB could rename the regular season as the playoffs. Then they'd make so much money that they wouldn't have a place to store it all and so they'd have to give some of the money back to the fans. They could schedule giveaway money days where they shoot hundred dollar bills into the stands from those old t-shirt guns. Fans would pay higher ticket prices to attend those games. But that would mean even more money that MLB would in turn, have to shoot right back at the crazy fans who spent hundreds of dollars for field level seats for those games The league would make so much money in this vicious circle that in the end, MLB would have to reduce the number of playoff teams in order to make a proper amount of money that it could rightly store.


Posted


Inside the experience of MLB's London Series, which mattered much more than the Mets vs. Phillies scores

The Phillies and Mets split two games at London Stadium, but the weekend was not about the results




Excerpt:


LONDON -- I planned my honeymoon around the Mets, which in hindsight (and at the time of booking, if I'm being honest) was a terrible idea.



Jet-lagged, dehydrated and somehow slightly sunburned, I headed into London Stadium, prepared to watch the National League-leading Phillies stomp the Mets in front of crowds of 55,000 people. It felt like I was being punished for some mortal sin I didn't know I'd committed.



The London Series, it turns out, was perfect.



The baseball wasn't particularly good, unless you consider ninth-inning chaos good (which I do, to be clear, but your mileage may vary). But The Baseball, that joyous, life-ruining, addictive part of our soul that we can't seem to rid ourselves us, was good.



The Brits may not understand baseball but they know how to put on a show. The concourse around London Stadium, built for the 2012 Olympics and now home to the West Ham United of the Premier League, was packed with the English idea of American food: disgustingly overloaded two-foot hot dogs and pizza that looked like cardboard and Philly cheesesteaks topped with a sauce I'm pretty sure glowed in the dark. There were jugglers and dancers and a marching band that didn't march and batting cages and a DJ and beer bats taller than me (I'd unfortunately learn on the tube ride home that selling people that much beer AND a makeshift weapon is a terrible idea).



It felt more like a Phillies home game inside, which would have been fine and a credit to the fandom had that not resulted in raucous booing of Quad-A relievers they'd probably never even heard of and definitely had no reason to boo other than the shirt they wore. But the main takeaway is that everyone was happy to be there, even as Sean Manaea gave up a three-run home run to Whit Merrifield and Jose Alvarado imploded to a level that should be considered treasonous. None of that particularly mattered. The boxscores say Mets and Phillies split the series. Great. Good for them.


Read it all at https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/inside-the-experience-of-mlbs-london-series-which-mattered-much-more-than-the-mets-vs-phillies-scores/https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/inside-the-experience-of-mlbs-london-series-which-mattered-much-more-than-the-mets-vs-phillies-scores/


Old-Timey Member
Posted


Anyone who plans their honeymoon around baseball is our kind of person.

Later


Posted


What was funny was that when you got down to the bottom of the bat it was really hard to drink and a lot of beer was spilled onto faces and shirts. That pic is from Saturday's game, where the weather was really sunny and it got downright hot in the leftfield seats, like being in the bleachers at Wrigley. Someone even tried to get a cup snake going with moderate success.


Posted


Beer was.....eh. I had a few Heinekens. Not very crafty. There probably was more variety somewhere, but I never found it.



At the other end, the mens rooms were well run and cleaner than you might expect.


  • 1 month later...
Posted


I just realized that I left out my love for Clapham, where the girl came from that Squeeze never thought it would happen with, but it did.


Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...