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Posted


Mets announced start times for 2025 home games:



Notable:

Home opener is Friday, April 4 with a 3:10 start

Sunday May 25 vs Dodgers is a 7:10 ESPN game.

Memorial Day, May 26, is a 4:10 start vs. White Sox.

Friday, July 4 is a 3:10 PM start vs Yankees.

Sunday, August 17 is a “home game” in Williamsport, PA against the Mariners. 7:10 start.



All Saturday games start at 4:10 except:

-Saturday April 5 vs. Toronto. 7:10 start (because home opener is a Friday)

-Saturday May 10 vs Cubs. 7:15 start.

-Saturday May 24 vs Dodgers. 7:15 start.



Everything else is the standard 7:10 weeknight/1:40 Sunday/1:10 mid-week getaway day schedule.



Of course, another game or two on Sunday could be changed to a night game per usual practice.


Posted


Presale individual tickets went on sale this morning. Use Mets.com/presale and Mets25 discount code.



Got a whole season of Tuesday Night games (12 games excluding the April 8 game which will be freezing) in the second row of 514 (directly behind home plate) for $683 or $341.50 per ass. Highest price for any game was $26 to see the Phillies.



That sounds like a bargain does it not?


Posted


That's well done. Mets have really leaned into ticket scaling for weekend games but weeknights remain a good value.



As an example: the same seat for the Tuesday June 10 game against Washington is 55% more expensive for the Saturday June 14 game against Tampa.


Posted


Johnny Lunchbucket wrote:

Presale individual tickets went on sale this morning. Use Mets.com/presale and Mets25 discount code.



Got a whole season of Tuesday Night games (12 games excluding the April 8 game which will be freezing) in the second row of 514 (directly behind home plate) for $683 or $341.50 per ass. Highest price for any game was $26 to see the Phillies.



That sounds like a bargain does it not?


I think so. If I lived within mass transit distance of the ballpark I'd likely do something like this as well.


  • 1 month later...
Posted


Yeah, nothing until May, but then two in a row and three weeks out of six



May 18 @ Yanx

May 25 hosting LAD

June 22 @ Phils

-----

Then 'hosting' the Mariners in Williamsburg PA on August 17







Second half of the year has not yet been set, but there are sure to be some and even more (and with less advanced notice) if the team is doing well.


Posted


=DocTee post_id=183040 time=1737032069 user_id=85]
I went to one (two?) noon starts this year and really really liked it. Wish they had some of those in 25.

Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
Second half of the year has not yet been set, but there are sure to be some and even more (and with less advanced notice) if the team is doing well.


There is annual limit of 5 appearances per team in the Sunday night slot.


  • 2 weeks later...
Posted


Some stuff on game times in general: basically that MLB games are starting earlier, ending earlier, and are shorter in duration.



- so where the 7PM was long the norm, 2024 saw 41.7% of weekday games start prior to 7PM. In 2025 that'll be up to 62.8%



- time of games: 2021 = 3:10; 2022 = 3:04; 2023 (first year of new rules) = 2:40; 2024 = 2:36



- 2021 weekday games ending prior to 10PM = 44.7%; 2024 weekday games ending prior to 10PM = 87.8%



- 2021 ending prior to 9:30PM = 24%; 2024 games ending prior to 9:30PM = 59.1%





And in what may or may not be a related statistic, MLB attendance in 2024 was the highest in seven years


Posted


There's not much evidence to suggest any long-term attendance trends are linked to start times. Game length? Maybe, although attendance was fairly steady through the 2000s and 2010s as the average game length went up.



Overall, attendance since 1998 hasn't changed all too much (70.6 M in 1998; 71.3M in 2024). Attendance did drop off from 72.6M in 2017 to 68.5 in 2019, and 2023 it was back to 70.7



This is not to say the pitch clock and faster games aren't good (they are) but it's much harder to say the start times matter much.



Separately, and since I was curious, teams that use 7:05/7:10/7:15 start times on weekdays:



Teams with year-round 7:05/7:07/7:10/7:15 (local) weekday start times:

Atlanta, Los Angeles, Houston, New York (both), Sacramento, Tampa, Texas, Toronto



A bunch of teams (Baltimore, Detroit, Miami, Milwaukee, Kansas City, San Francisco, Seattle) have post-7 start times on Fridays, and earlier Mon-Thu.



Boston, Cincinnati, and the Cubs do post-7 start times in the summer and earlier in April/May/September.


Posted


=Gwreck post_id=184009 time=1738120852 user_id=56]
There's not much evidence to suggest any long-term attendance trends are linked to start times. Game length? Maybe, although attendance was fairly steady through the 2000s and 2010s as the average game length went up.

Posted


Yup! 11th of 15 in the NL last year.

The 0-5 start and the disaster that was the month of May certainly didn't get things off to a good start.

But you'd think a 49-32 2nd half with all the nail biters down the stretch would have helped make up more ground.


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:

Yup! 11th of 15 in the NL last year.

The 0-5 start and the disaster that was the month of May certainly didn't get things off to a good start.

But you'd think a 49-32 2nd half with all the nail biters down the stretch would have helped make up more ground.


It's stupid expensive there. Twenty five dollars to park your car and $18 beers. A good team doesn't make a family experience there any cheaper.


Posted


Attendance is typically correlated to the prior year's performance and less to the current year. Mets drew better in 2006 than 2007; better in 2016 than 2015; better in 2023 than 2022.


Posted


I used to enjoy seeing attendance figures in the Sporting News way back



Mets attendance of late



2024 2,329,299

2023. 2,573,555

2022 2,564,739

Covid

2019 2,442,532



Shea



2008. 4,042 xxx

2007. 3,853

2006. 3,379



I wonder if people are less likely to go out to a game with a similar mindset of getting Doordash rather than going out to a restaurant



What is the cost of going to Citi by as a family of four by car getting game day tickets with parking and some food?



I've lost track but is it that prohibitive?



I did see something about a Citifield average of $197 to over $500 for a family of four


Posted


=ashie62 post_id=184138 time=1738273586 user_id=90]What is the cost of going to Citi by as a family of four by car getting game day tickets with parking and some food?



I've lost track but is it that prohibitive?

Posted


Putting aside whether or not that's affordable, because YMMV and everybody's financial situation is unique to them, $100.00 to sit in the uppermost level and have one hot dog and a drink ( and not one of the fancier hot dogs, but the most basic one that they have) is not a heckuva lot of bang for your buck. When I was a kid, you could have gotten all of that at Shea for about three or four bucks.


Posted


=Gwreck post_id=184164 time=1738290121 user_id=56]
=ashie62 post_id=184138 time=1738273586 user_id=90]What is the cost of going to Citi by as a family of four by car getting game day tickets with parking and some food?



I've lost track but is it that prohibitive?

Posted


=ashie62 post_id=184239 time=1738365492 user_id=90]I used to bring in a full meal for four at Shea and I'm sure that can no longer be done

Posted


I literally attend one game per year. It's not just the parking, and concessions, but also the trip to the souvenir shop for tee shirts and hats, and the gas, and the time spent getting in and out of Flushing.



It's all a big ol dick punch and if I lived closer, or thought I could figure out a way to make it cheaper, I'd likely go more often. But the reality is that I have to either a) pay for a hotel, to extend the trip over two days, or B) spend 11 hours in my vehicle, there and back, to attend a game.



The biggest thing I've figured out to help myself, over the last few years, is which ticket reseller will get me the best price on admission. Because for the games I attend, I can sleep on the actual ticket purchase until 24-48 hours before the game, and then go to TickPick and find good deal on seats.



Last year I bought five seats (we brought my mother in law along) for an upper deck, infield seat block, at a weekday matinee, and including fees I think I spent $70 for our seats, which I found very reasonable.


Posted


I live very close to Citi (and even closer to UBS Arena, where tix for this Tuesday night's game are going for $7 on SeatGeek). So I will uber back and forth, thus saving the $40 parking fee (RT is about $25).



I use third party resellers platform to get tix and can usually get decent ones on the day of game for about $40-$60 each. What kills me is concessions, especially beers ($18). But if you can bring food (and I thought that was verbotten) and switch to non-alcoholic beverages, you can do a day at the park with your kids (2) for about $250-300.


Posted


I go to a Mets game or three a year when there's not a Covid pandemic going on. I used to go to more games than I do now. I used to have field level full season tickets for many years when they played at Shea. I can afford the prices so I'm very thankful and fortunate for that. And I'm local so I don't have to pay for a hotel and I have the option of taking the train to the game also, to save on gas and parking.



But to be honest about it, going to a baseball game is a ripoff. An outrageous ripoff. And anybody who doesn't think so is in total denial. Ten and fifteen dollar hot dogs. Forty dollar t-shirts. Forty bucks for a fancy sandwich, a side and a beverage.


  • 4 months later...
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