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"Biggest Star of the Game is the Stadium"


Guest metsguyinmichigan

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Guest Edgy DC
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Posted


So a big difference there is no façade on the back of the upper bleachers. Is it because exposed ironwork is cool or is it to make more of an open-air concourse?


  • 2 weeks later...
Guest metsguyinmichigan
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Posted


="HahnSolo"]
="soupcan"]Here's another



Easiest Where's Waldo ever.


VERY funny!


Posted


It is now a neat juxtaposition looking at Shea and Citi Field in overhead photos now and a year ago.

One stadium with field and seats waiting for the new season to begin, the other the field looks like a battlefield, and the seats are not installed.






Posted


="metirish":1zykiufq]I got to say that seeing those pictures excites me.[/quote:1zykiufq]

I have to admit they excite me too.







Edgy DC
Nov 18 2008 08:56 PM


Looking at those pictures, it's be kind of cool if they just paved over the field area and let the structure stand, letting early comers park and tailgate on the former field.







Willets Point
Nov 18 2008 09:17 PM


="Edgy DC":ez0b190s]Looking at those pictures, it's be kind of cool if they just paved over the field area and let the structure stand, letting early comers park and tailgate on the former field.[/quote:ez0b190s]

And in a thousand years it will have the derelict charm of the Roman Coliseum. Hey, it already has the feral cats.







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 19 2008 04:29 AM


I've thought the same thing. They'd just have to pop out some passageways so that traffic could flow easily.







SteveJRogers
Nov 25 2008 02:15 PM


From baseball-fever.com a view from behind home plate




(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 25 2008 02:18 PM


That porch in right field looks like a drawer that needs to be pushed shut.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







metirish
Nov 25 2008 02:26 PM


From baseball-fever




(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







G-Fafif
Nov 25 2008 02:27 PM


Orange foul poles, my heart be still.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 25 2008 02:29 PM


I can picture a slicing line drive landing in fair territory and bouncing into the stands at the lower left.

I guess it would still be a ground-rule double if that happened, even though the stands it bounces into are in foul territory.

I wonder what "Hal the Referee" would say?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Nov 25 2008 02:31 PM


="G-Fafif":17s8qtsk]Orange foul poles, my heart be still.[/quote:17s8qtsk]

Yeah. Looked like earlier versions had 'em yellow. Maybe they were just renderings.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Frayed Knot
Nov 25 2008 02:34 PM


Oh it would be a G-R double.
Stuff like that happens all the time in Philly (both the new place and the old) and both in YSII and in RF in Boston (and I'm sure others as well).

Hard to tell, but these jutting stands in LF don't look to have as extreme an angle as those in Philly but looks like we'll still get our share of goofy bounces back towards fair territory for balls that stay low enough to hit the facing of the stands and not bounce into the seats themselves.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







metirish
Nov 25 2008 02:35 PM


This link here has a better picture of the lines and the foul pole.

http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=60954&page=341

Also there are drawings of the park.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Farmer Ted
Nov 25 2008 02:46 PM


There appear to be extra tunnels in the upper deck behind home plate. Quick outs for the upper level fat cats.

What is that press-box-looking-structure behind home plate (about 15 feet up from playing level?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 04:08 PM


]Citi Field nearly ready to open its doors
Builders of Mets' new ballpark influenced by other stadiums

By Anthony DiComo / MLB.com
NEW YORK -- The left-field wall rises conspicuously high at Citi Field, making it both a point of note and, recently, a point of contention.

"Eighteen feet," Mets COO Jeff Wilpon guessed on Tuesday, before a site worker pegged the actual height at 16 feet. And Wilpon was pleased.

Citi Field, he said, may retain its predecessor's reputation as a pitcher-friendly park, but it hardly caters only to those on the mound. Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.

"Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."

Such details of the new stadium have now become focal points, because Citi Field is so close to completion. A stroll through the park on Tuesday revealed that all the seats have been installed, the press box and Diamond Club are already encased in glass, and workers have begun installing major appliances within the concession stands.

Yet of greater interest to Wright, Murphy, Evans and others in uniform, of course, is what lies deeper within the stadium. Lockers have been fully installed in the home clubhouse -- Wright has already chosen his -- and the carpet and bathroom tiles feature images of the fluorescent icons affixed to Shea Stadium's exterior walls.

Adjacent rooms lead to some typical clubhouse amenities -- the manager's office, kitchen and weight room, to name a few -- save for one in the back that houses a hot tub, a cold tub and an underwater treadmill. Unlike anything at Shea Stadium, that room, along with one for indoor batting cages and pitching mounds, will allow players to rehab injuries at Citi Field, rather than always fly to the team's Spring Training complex in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

In designing this ballpark, the Mets patched together ideas and influences from stadiums around the country. An overhang in right field, for example, protrudes above the warning track in a nod to the old Tiger Stadium. In the upper deck, a two-tiered layout reveals influence from Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park. Pieces of Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and Coors Field in Denver are present, though Wilpon noted that his greatest influence in the design of Citi Field was seven-year-old PNC Park in Pittsburgh.

"I wanted to super-size Pittsburgh," said Wilpon, who went on a nationwide ballpark tour before building his own. "I really liked Pittsburgh the best."

Yet the one influence, even more than Pittsburgh's, that Wilpon wanted to capture was that of Ebbets Field in Brooklyn -- the inspiration for Citi Field's exterior and perhaps its most prominent feature, the Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station and into a miniature baseball shrine. An escalator leads up to the seating bowl and down below, Robinson's nine values -- a staple of the Jackie Robinson Foundation's message -- are featured. Before Opening Day, workers will also erect a nine-foot No. 42 for fans to see as they enter the park.

Steps outside the rotunda lies something similarly striking, if only for its incompleteness. Shea Stadium, home of the Mets for 44 years, has been reduced to an empty dirt bowl, its seats stripped, its sod removed and nearly all of its signage disappeared. Wilpon said he hoped that Shea would be completely disassembled and converted into a parking lot by Opening Day, with small markers at the site of home plate and the pitcher's rubber.

Already, Shea Stadium's frame is nearly lost in the shadow of Citi Field, which -- despite holding only 42,500 seats, roughly a 25 percent drop from Shea -- seems built on a much greater scale. There are open areas for picnic tables and standing room, and a "GA Club" behind home plate in which ticket-holders can mingle. There is a Diamond Plaza near the rotunda where Shea Stadium's old home run apple will rest, and a large concrete basin in center field for Citi Field's new apple.

There are tiered bullpens in center field -- the Mets will have the lower one, closer to the field -- and a plaza outside the rotunda for greenery.

Wilpon was steps away from that plaza, inside the Jackie Robinson Rotunda, when he looked up and admired his handiwork.

"Powerful, right?" he said. "It's now becoming what we want it to become."







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 04:34 PM


Very pretty pictures of a very pretty ballpark-to-be. But their immediate impact is to make me sad in that it's so not Shea. I know, I know: that's the idea. A few innings inside could have me changing my tune pretty quickly, but it just looks like something else from somewhere else right now.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 04:56 PM


="Anthony DiComo":3aqa8uko]Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.[/quote:3aqa8uko]

What in particular gets your attention about this sentence?







metirish
Dec 02 2008 04:59 PM


That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 05:10 PM


I like that the tiles and carpeting include a tribute to Shea Stadium.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:14 PM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM




Richard Pryor had this observation to make during a seventies routine. People were talking about this dystopic futureshock sci-fi movie, called Logan's Run that left them unsettled. He went to it and was unsettled for a different reason.

"I noticed there were no colored folks in this movie. Somebody's not expecting us to be around."

Not that I think they're eradicating peeps of color from the roster, but while some Omar-critics may find it depressing that only five of 17 batters on the roster are caucasian, I noticed three of those five were the only ones invited to Jeff Wilpon's (who I don't think is a moron) private sleepover. Dude needs to broaden his experience. This ain't the Greenvale School.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:16 PM


And yeah, I'm not too keen on Wilpon not understanding that they should be focused on the business at hand in late September.







Nymr83
Dec 02 2008 05:18 PM


It seems obvious that Wright would be the first one invited and Murphy was being rewarded for his explosive rookie performance.
Nick Evans? really? you need Nick Evans to test out your new park? I understand not inviting Delgado who might not be back but where was Beltran? Reyes?







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM


Pat Zachry.

I mean, good sources have assured me that they speak English and everything.







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 05:48 PM


]Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station


Anthony DiComo obviously drives to games and has never seen the sign for the station (or met our own Willets Point).

With the ballpark name in at least a little limbo, one hopes the MTA hasn't invested in new station signs just yet.







metirish
Dec 02 2008 05:58 PM


="metirish"]That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.



I had not read the article when I made that comment , so Wilpon was talking about a 16 foot high wall in LF , not sure if I'm Nick Evens I think that the boss is giving me a compliment here.


]
Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 06:10 PM


I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.










soupcan
Dec 04 2008 08:23 AM


bb-f again













="Edgy DC"]I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.



Not so!

Angled seats...








metirish
Dec 04 2008 08:54 AM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 04 2008 09:44 AM




High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:25 AM


="soupcan":188c6xn0]Not so!

Angled seats...[/quote:188c6xn0]

Well, shut my mouth. Rows angled maybe ten degrees toward the infield. Seats angled ten degrees more. That's something.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 09:27 AM




I do like the improved legroom. You can even have a guy in a hardhat kneel down in front of your seat, if that's your idea of a good time.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:30 AM


You've been reading my blog.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:12 PM


Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3bdfxevb]







metirish
Dec 04 2008 01:18 PM


="soupcan":3fpddl03]Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3fpddl03][/quote:3fpddl03]

Very cool , at the 2:10 mark they show a fenced in patch of green next to the stand in what I think is left of center field , is that the bullpen?







Farmer Ted
Dec 04 2008 01:28 PM


Mets logo on the end seat of each row. Looking classy.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:29 PM


A lot of nice hi-res shots like this at metsblog.com on the front page.

This the first pic I've seen of the nice w - i - d - e concourses.








seawolf17
Dec 04 2008 01:34 PM


="metirish":cf49cmfu]High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.[/quote:cf49cmfu]
Considering what happened this year, you'd think they'd be conscious of that.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 01:40 PM


They should string circus-style safety nets below each of the escalators.

That concourse does look nice. It's easy to see how you could be standing on the hot dog line while keeping an eye on the game. That, I think, is the best thing that the new stadium will have over Shea.

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Dec 04 2008 01:43 PM


="Benjamin Grimm":3jnxf2zm]

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.[/quote:3jnxf2zm]

Yeah, though its supposed to subtly remind you of the bridge on the Mets logo, which is supposed to remind you of how the Mets reached across the city to "bridge" fans of the Giants and Dodgers, and the Eastsiders and Westsiders, and Kiddies and Wives, and the Butcher, the Baker and the People on the Street.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 01:49 PM


Thank God the Mets brought kiddies and wives together.







Willets Point
Dec 04 2008 03:19 PM


="Edgy DC":h0g9fccu]You've been reading my blog.[/quote:h0g9fccu]

I want to read this blog.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 04:02 PM


I like the use of brick on the inside of the stadium rather than just the facade.







Rockin' Doc
Dec 04 2008 05:23 PM


No one will ever pull an Endy on that left field wall. How tall is that wall in left field?







Zvon
Dec 04 2008 05:33 PM


What I like: almost everything. It looks beautiful, real low to the ground.
User friendly for the fan. On the whole a nice new home for my Metsies.

What I don't like:
I've never been a fan of the two tier bullpen. Hate em! Bullpen fights could make things exciting though.
I really like the use of chain link fence here, but that one outjutting looks like trouble to me.
Once again, the whole right field set up should make things exciting.
(I'm not against "exciting", I just do not like silly injuries)



I like an outfield wall where there's always a possibility of pulling one back into the park.
So I'm not too thrilled with the height of that left field wall.



I am assuming that these are the outfield walls (that there wont be wooden ones placed a foot or so in front of those we see, which I think I'd prefer).
I'm sure that if they go with these concrete walls that will be padded with the best material available, but I still don't like the idea of a wall with absolutely no give to it.




Don't mind me.
Im just being an idiopathic idiosyncrat.







themetfairy
Dec 04 2008 05:57 PM


Not at all Zvon - I enjoyed your illustrative input.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 06:05 PM


I like an outfield wall with a hidden door that an outfielder can suddenly disappear through.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 06:36 PM


It's almost like they're setting up for a Field of Dreams cornfield stunt.







Frayed Knot
Dec 04 2008 09:20 PM


Or a Manny signing.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 04:02 PM


Old Apple goes here?









Benjamin Grimm
Dec 07 2008 05:23 PM


My understanding (could be wrong, though) is that the old apple is going to be inside the stadium but somewhere in centerfield.







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 05:36 PM


That'll be an all-nu apple.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 05:42 PM


You saying all-nu inside or all-nu outside?







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 07:15 PM


All-nu inside.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 07:21 PM


Right - but that podium or hole or whatever is outside, so I'm thinking that's where the old one will go.

Or a statue..?







Frayed Knot
Dec 07 2008 07:23 PM


Yeah, my understanding was nu-apple inside, apple-classic on view somewhere outside.







G-Fafif
Dec 07 2008 08:08 PM


Both will be out in center, according to Metsblog, which was on the media tour last week.

]For starters, Jeff Wilpon told reporters that the old Home-Run Apple from Shea Stadium will be on display in back of the concourse in center field, which was good to hear. However, a new Apple will pop up from a concrete cannister beneath the center-field scoreboard.


That thing they're building outside, obviously, is a kiddie pool.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 02:41 PM


So the outside is an homage to Ebbets.

The green seats are supposedly a nod to the Polo Grounds.

Where's Shea? Oh there it is, on the floor of the locker room.




Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 02:44 PM


That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.








Zvon
Dec 12 2008 02:49 PM


That is one ugly rug.
So Shea gets the honor of being stepped on?







Valadius
Dec 12 2008 04:58 PM


Pepitone's rug looks like Blagojevich's.







metirish
Dec 12 2008 05:03 PM


="Edgy DC":befgt7hd]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:befgt7hd]


Very funny.







dgwphotography
Dec 12 2008 05:11 PM


="Edgy DC"]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.



I'm think Phil here would give Joe a run for his money:








themetfairy
Dec 12 2008 05:14 PM


That has to be Phil's own hair. Nobody would construct a toupee THAT ugly!







metsguyinmichigan
Dec 12 2008 05:43 PM


="metirish":3bn5ocf6]
="Edgy DC":3bn5ocf6]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:3bn5ocf6]


Very funny.[/quote:3bn5ocf6]

WOW. And the rug on the guy on the right in the tan coat is horrible, too!

And if I were Phil Spector's attorney, I'd go for the insanity defense and just point to him sitting there with that 'do and sit back and wait for the acquittal.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 07:11 PM


Pepitone's dead?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 07:59 PM


Guess not. My boo-boo. Sorry, Joe.

I just sent a white elephant Christmas gift to my sister's Yankfan boyfriend. It was a Yankee hat that my brother got Pepitone's autograph on. What did he ever think I'd want with that.

One time Pepitone, after missing a ballgame with a niggling injury while playing in Japan, was photographed at a disco later, out dancing with his wig. To this day, supposedly, American players who come to Japan and play the diva are called "Pepitones."







Willets Point
Dec 13 2008 05:52 PM


="soupcan":1k1wbb9f]
Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?[/quote:1k1wbb9f]

The carpet will be vastly improved by frequently soaking it in champagne.







Farmer Ted
Dec 13 2008 06:47 PM


I was living in NC in the mid 90s and in charge of putting on a sports-related banquet. The Yankees had a minor league team in Greensboro for a number of years and the committee board voted to have a former Yankee or a current member of the organization to be the featured speaker. I swallowed my pride and called the Bronx. The PR office hack said someone would be in touch in a few days. Phone rings 20 minutes later. Pepitone on the other end. No shit. I explain we're looking for a speaker yadda yadda yadda and he says "I'll do it (basically volunteering himself). We can work on a fee but you need to fly me down there. Great times I had in that town." Apparently he had the gig of lining up the Yankees alumni for public appearances. I went back to the committee and told them Pepitone was the best I could do (not that I tried any harder). The room busted into hysterical laughter and we found someone else from a different sport to speak.







Edgy DC
Dec 13 2008 07:03 PM


There was an episode of Mad About You where Jamie asked what ballplayer they can get for a personal appearance on a limited budget. Paul's answer was an aging swinger of a sixties Yankee firstbaseman clearly based on the Pep.







cooby
Dec 13 2008 07:56 PM


I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?







Ashie62
Dec 17 2008 07:05 AM


="cooby":3lcpnzjo]I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?[/quote:3lcpnzjo]

Did you wake up with a woody?







Rockin' Doc
Dec 17 2008 10:24 AM


I believe that would be a physical impossibility for cooby.







metsmarathon
Dec 17 2008 11:46 AM


well, this thread sure has taken some strange strange turns hasn't it?







Edgy DC
Jan 07 2009 07:49 AM


NEW YORK-- Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration will forgo luxury boxes at the new Yankees and Mets ballparks, the city said Tuesday after months of criticism about its handling of the stadium projects.

The administration has worked out a new deal with the Yankees to get extra money, instead of a luxury box. A separate and similar agreement is being worked out with the Mets for their new park, a Bloomberg spokesman said.

Senior Bloomberg aides had fought hard to get the luxury boxes, describing the perk in internal e-mails as "a big issue to the mayor" during negotiations with the teams in 2006.

That battle for the boxes only recently came to light as state and federal lawmakers launched investigations into how the teams and the administration went about making those deals.

The decision to give up the luxury boxes comes as Bloomberg seeks reelection this year and repeatedly cites the city's enormous budget shortfalls.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Jan 07 2009 07:56 AM


They gave it up at the same time they were forced to cough up reams of smoking guns on how filthy the whole thing was, including begging by the MFYs to increase their duistribution of public $$ to cover shit like their scoreboard and video board. Mets are also asking for more but about half the MFYs overall since the project was so much less expensive.







Centerfield
Jan 07 2009 03:17 PM


I think the Mets should sign Manny and ask the public to pick up the tab.



Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Looking at those pictures, it's be kind of cool if they just paved over the field area and let the structure stand, letting early comers park and tailgate on the former field.


Posted


="Edgy DC":ez0b190s]Looking at those pictures, it's be kind of cool if they just paved over the field area and let the structure stand, letting early comers park and tailgate on the former field.[/quote:ez0b190s]

And in a thousand years it will have the derelict charm of the Roman Coliseum. Hey, it already has the feral cats.







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 19 2008 04:29 AM


I've thought the same thing. They'd just have to pop out some passageways so that traffic could flow easily.







SteveJRogers
Nov 25 2008 02:15 PM


From baseball-fever.com a view from behind home plate




(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 25 2008 02:18 PM


That porch in right field looks like a drawer that needs to be pushed shut.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







metirish
Nov 25 2008 02:26 PM


From baseball-fever




(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







G-Fafif
Nov 25 2008 02:27 PM


Orange foul poles, my heart be still.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Nov 25 2008 02:29 PM


I can picture a slicing line drive landing in fair territory and bouncing into the stands at the lower left.

I guess it would still be a ground-rule double if that happened, even though the stands it bounces into are in foul territory.

I wonder what "Hal the Referee" would say?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Nov 25 2008 02:31 PM


="G-Fafif":17s8qtsk]Orange foul poles, my heart be still.[/quote:17s8qtsk]

Yeah. Looked like earlier versions had 'em yellow. Maybe they were just renderings.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Frayed Knot
Nov 25 2008 02:34 PM


Oh it would be a G-R double.
Stuff like that happens all the time in Philly (both the new place and the old) and both in YSII and in RF in Boston (and I'm sure others as well).

Hard to tell, but these jutting stands in LF don't look to have as extreme an angle as those in Philly but looks like we'll still get our share of goofy bounces back towards fair territory for balls that stay low enough to hit the facing of the stands and not bounce into the seats themselves.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







metirish
Nov 25 2008 02:35 PM


This link here has a better picture of the lines and the foul pole.

http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=60954&page=341

Also there are drawings of the park.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Farmer Ted
Nov 25 2008 02:46 PM


There appear to be extra tunnels in the upper deck behind home plate. Quick outs for the upper level fat cats.

What is that press-box-looking-structure behind home plate (about 15 feet up from playing level?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 04:08 PM


]Citi Field nearly ready to open its doors
Builders of Mets' new ballpark influenced by other stadiums

By Anthony DiComo / MLB.com
NEW YORK -- The left-field wall rises conspicuously high at Citi Field, making it both a point of note and, recently, a point of contention.

"Eighteen feet," Mets COO Jeff Wilpon guessed on Tuesday, before a site worker pegged the actual height at 16 feet. And Wilpon was pleased.

Citi Field, he said, may retain its predecessor's reputation as a pitcher-friendly park, but it hardly caters only to those on the mound. Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.

"Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."

Such details of the new stadium have now become focal points, because Citi Field is so close to completion. A stroll through the park on Tuesday revealed that all the seats have been installed, the press box and Diamond Club are already encased in glass, and workers have begun installing major appliances within the concession stands.

Yet of greater interest to Wright, Murphy, Evans and others in uniform, of course, is what lies deeper within the stadium. Lockers have been fully installed in the home clubhouse -- Wright has already chosen his -- and the carpet and bathroom tiles feature images of the fluorescent icons affixed to Shea Stadium's exterior walls.

Adjacent rooms lead to some typical clubhouse amenities -- the manager's office, kitchen and weight room, to name a few -- save for one in the back that houses a hot tub, a cold tub and an underwater treadmill. Unlike anything at Shea Stadium, that room, along with one for indoor batting cages and pitching mounds, will allow players to rehab injuries at Citi Field, rather than always fly to the team's Spring Training complex in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

In designing this ballpark, the Mets patched together ideas and influences from stadiums around the country. An overhang in right field, for example, protrudes above the warning track in a nod to the old Tiger Stadium. In the upper deck, a two-tiered layout reveals influence from Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park. Pieces of Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and Coors Field in Denver are present, though Wilpon noted that his greatest influence in the design of Citi Field was seven-year-old PNC Park in Pittsburgh.

"I wanted to super-size Pittsburgh," said Wilpon, who went on a nationwide ballpark tour before building his own. "I really liked Pittsburgh the best."

Yet the one influence, even more than Pittsburgh's, that Wilpon wanted to capture was that of Ebbets Field in Brooklyn -- the inspiration for Citi Field's exterior and perhaps its most prominent feature, the Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station and into a miniature baseball shrine. An escalator leads up to the seating bowl and down below, Robinson's nine values -- a staple of the Jackie Robinson Foundation's message -- are featured. Before Opening Day, workers will also erect a nine-foot No. 42 for fans to see as they enter the park.

Steps outside the rotunda lies something similarly striking, if only for its incompleteness. Shea Stadium, home of the Mets for 44 years, has been reduced to an empty dirt bowl, its seats stripped, its sod removed and nearly all of its signage disappeared. Wilpon said he hoped that Shea would be completely disassembled and converted into a parking lot by Opening Day, with small markers at the site of home plate and the pitcher's rubber.

Already, Shea Stadium's frame is nearly lost in the shadow of Citi Field, which -- despite holding only 42,500 seats, roughly a 25 percent drop from Shea -- seems built on a much greater scale. There are open areas for picnic tables and standing room, and a "GA Club" behind home plate in which ticket-holders can mingle. There is a Diamond Plaza near the rotunda where Shea Stadium's old home run apple will rest, and a large concrete basin in center field for Citi Field's new apple.

There are tiered bullpens in center field -- the Mets will have the lower one, closer to the field -- and a plaza outside the rotunda for greenery.

Wilpon was steps away from that plaza, inside the Jackie Robinson Rotunda, when he looked up and admired his handiwork.

"Powerful, right?" he said. "It's now becoming what we want it to become."







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 04:34 PM


Very pretty pictures of a very pretty ballpark-to-be. But their immediate impact is to make me sad in that it's so not Shea. I know, I know: that's the idea. A few innings inside could have me changing my tune pretty quickly, but it just looks like something else from somewhere else right now.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 04:56 PM


="Anthony DiComo":3aqa8uko]Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.[/quote:3aqa8uko]

What in particular gets your attention about this sentence?







metirish
Dec 02 2008 04:59 PM


That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 05:10 PM


I like that the tiles and carpeting include a tribute to Shea Stadium.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:14 PM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM




Richard Pryor had this observation to make during a seventies routine. People were talking about this dystopic futureshock sci-fi movie, called Logan's Run that left them unsettled. He went to it and was unsettled for a different reason.

"I noticed there were no colored folks in this movie. Somebody's not expecting us to be around."

Not that I think they're eradicating peeps of color from the roster, but while some Omar-critics may find it depressing that only five of 17 batters on the roster are caucasian, I noticed three of those five were the only ones invited to Jeff Wilpon's (who I don't think is a moron) private sleepover. Dude needs to broaden his experience. This ain't the Greenvale School.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:16 PM


And yeah, I'm not too keen on Wilpon not understanding that they should be focused on the business at hand in late September.







Nymr83
Dec 02 2008 05:18 PM


It seems obvious that Wright would be the first one invited and Murphy was being rewarded for his explosive rookie performance.
Nick Evans? really? you need Nick Evans to test out your new park? I understand not inviting Delgado who might not be back but where was Beltran? Reyes?







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM


Pat Zachry.

I mean, good sources have assured me that they speak English and everything.







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 05:48 PM


]Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station


Anthony DiComo obviously drives to games and has never seen the sign for the station (or met our own Willets Point).

With the ballpark name in at least a little limbo, one hopes the MTA hasn't invested in new station signs just yet.







metirish
Dec 02 2008 05:58 PM


="metirish"]That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.



I had not read the article when I made that comment , so Wilpon was talking about a 16 foot high wall in LF , not sure if I'm Nick Evens I think that the boss is giving me a compliment here.


]
Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 06:10 PM


I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.










soupcan
Dec 04 2008 08:23 AM


bb-f again













="Edgy DC"]I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.



Not so!

Angled seats...








metirish
Dec 04 2008 08:54 AM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 04 2008 09:44 AM




High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:25 AM


="soupcan":188c6xn0]Not so!

Angled seats...[/quote:188c6xn0]

Well, shut my mouth. Rows angled maybe ten degrees toward the infield. Seats angled ten degrees more. That's something.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 09:27 AM




I do like the improved legroom. You can even have a guy in a hardhat kneel down in front of your seat, if that's your idea of a good time.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:30 AM


You've been reading my blog.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:12 PM


Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3bdfxevb]







metirish
Dec 04 2008 01:18 PM


="soupcan":3fpddl03]Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3fpddl03][/quote:3fpddl03]

Very cool , at the 2:10 mark they show a fenced in patch of green next to the stand in what I think is left of center field , is that the bullpen?







Farmer Ted
Dec 04 2008 01:28 PM


Mets logo on the end seat of each row. Looking classy.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:29 PM


A lot of nice hi-res shots like this at metsblog.com on the front page.

This the first pic I've seen of the nice w - i - d - e concourses.








seawolf17
Dec 04 2008 01:34 PM


="metirish":cf49cmfu]High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.[/quote:cf49cmfu]
Considering what happened this year, you'd think they'd be conscious of that.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 01:40 PM


They should string circus-style safety nets below each of the escalators.

That concourse does look nice. It's easy to see how you could be standing on the hot dog line while keeping an eye on the game. That, I think, is the best thing that the new stadium will have over Shea.

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Dec 04 2008 01:43 PM


="Benjamin Grimm":3jnxf2zm]

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.[/quote:3jnxf2zm]

Yeah, though its supposed to subtly remind you of the bridge on the Mets logo, which is supposed to remind you of how the Mets reached across the city to "bridge" fans of the Giants and Dodgers, and the Eastsiders and Westsiders, and Kiddies and Wives, and the Butcher, the Baker and the People on the Street.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 01:49 PM


Thank God the Mets brought kiddies and wives together.







Willets Point
Dec 04 2008 03:19 PM


="Edgy DC":h0g9fccu]You've been reading my blog.[/quote:h0g9fccu]

I want to read this blog.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 04:02 PM


I like the use of brick on the inside of the stadium rather than just the facade.







Rockin' Doc
Dec 04 2008 05:23 PM


No one will ever pull an Endy on that left field wall. How tall is that wall in left field?







Zvon
Dec 04 2008 05:33 PM


What I like: almost everything. It looks beautiful, real low to the ground.
User friendly for the fan. On the whole a nice new home for my Metsies.

What I don't like:
I've never been a fan of the two tier bullpen. Hate em! Bullpen fights could make things exciting though.
I really like the use of chain link fence here, but that one outjutting looks like trouble to me.
Once again, the whole right field set up should make things exciting.
(I'm not against "exciting", I just do not like silly injuries)



I like an outfield wall where there's always a possibility of pulling one back into the park.
So I'm not too thrilled with the height of that left field wall.



I am assuming that these are the outfield walls (that there wont be wooden ones placed a foot or so in front of those we see, which I think I'd prefer).
I'm sure that if they go with these concrete walls that will be padded with the best material available, but I still don't like the idea of a wall with absolutely no give to it.




Don't mind me.
Im just being an idiopathic idiosyncrat.







themetfairy
Dec 04 2008 05:57 PM


Not at all Zvon - I enjoyed your illustrative input.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 06:05 PM


I like an outfield wall with a hidden door that an outfielder can suddenly disappear through.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 06:36 PM


It's almost like they're setting up for a Field of Dreams cornfield stunt.







Frayed Knot
Dec 04 2008 09:20 PM


Or a Manny signing.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 04:02 PM


Old Apple goes here?









Benjamin Grimm
Dec 07 2008 05:23 PM


My understanding (could be wrong, though) is that the old apple is going to be inside the stadium but somewhere in centerfield.







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 05:36 PM


That'll be an all-nu apple.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 05:42 PM


You saying all-nu inside or all-nu outside?







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 07:15 PM


All-nu inside.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 07:21 PM


Right - but that podium or hole or whatever is outside, so I'm thinking that's where the old one will go.

Or a statue..?







Frayed Knot
Dec 07 2008 07:23 PM


Yeah, my understanding was nu-apple inside, apple-classic on view somewhere outside.







G-Fafif
Dec 07 2008 08:08 PM


Both will be out in center, according to Metsblog, which was on the media tour last week.

]For starters, Jeff Wilpon told reporters that the old Home-Run Apple from Shea Stadium will be on display in back of the concourse in center field, which was good to hear. However, a new Apple will pop up from a concrete cannister beneath the center-field scoreboard.


That thing they're building outside, obviously, is a kiddie pool.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 02:41 PM


So the outside is an homage to Ebbets.

The green seats are supposedly a nod to the Polo Grounds.

Where's Shea? Oh there it is, on the floor of the locker room.




Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 02:44 PM


That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.








Zvon
Dec 12 2008 02:49 PM


That is one ugly rug.
So Shea gets the honor of being stepped on?







Valadius
Dec 12 2008 04:58 PM


Pepitone's rug looks like Blagojevich's.







metirish
Dec 12 2008 05:03 PM


="Edgy DC":befgt7hd]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:befgt7hd]


Very funny.







dgwphotography
Dec 12 2008 05:11 PM


="Edgy DC"]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.



I'm think Phil here would give Joe a run for his money:








themetfairy
Dec 12 2008 05:14 PM


That has to be Phil's own hair. Nobody would construct a toupee THAT ugly!







metsguyinmichigan
Dec 12 2008 05:43 PM


="metirish":3bn5ocf6]
="Edgy DC":3bn5ocf6]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:3bn5ocf6]


Very funny.[/quote:3bn5ocf6]

WOW. And the rug on the guy on the right in the tan coat is horrible, too!

And if I were Phil Spector's attorney, I'd go for the insanity defense and just point to him sitting there with that 'do and sit back and wait for the acquittal.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 07:11 PM


Pepitone's dead?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 07:59 PM


Guess not. My boo-boo. Sorry, Joe.

I just sent a white elephant Christmas gift to my sister's Yankfan boyfriend. It was a Yankee hat that my brother got Pepitone's autograph on. What did he ever think I'd want with that.

One time Pepitone, after missing a ballgame with a niggling injury while playing in Japan, was photographed at a disco later, out dancing with his wig. To this day, supposedly, American players who come to Japan and play the diva are called "Pepitones."







Willets Point
Dec 13 2008 05:52 PM


="soupcan":1k1wbb9f]
Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?[/quote:1k1wbb9f]

The carpet will be vastly improved by frequently soaking it in champagne.







Farmer Ted
Dec 13 2008 06:47 PM


I was living in NC in the mid 90s and in charge of putting on a sports-related banquet. The Yankees had a minor league team in Greensboro for a number of years and the committee board voted to have a former Yankee or a current member of the organization to be the featured speaker. I swallowed my pride and called the Bronx. The PR office hack said someone would be in touch in a few days. Phone rings 20 minutes later. Pepitone on the other end. No shit. I explain we're looking for a speaker yadda yadda yadda and he says "I'll do it (basically volunteering himself). We can work on a fee but you need to fly me down there. Great times I had in that town." Apparently he had the gig of lining up the Yankees alumni for public appearances. I went back to the committee and told them Pepitone was the best I could do (not that I tried any harder). The room busted into hysterical laughter and we found someone else from a different sport to speak.







Edgy DC
Dec 13 2008 07:03 PM


There was an episode of Mad About You where Jamie asked what ballplayer they can get for a personal appearance on a limited budget. Paul's answer was an aging swinger of a sixties Yankee firstbaseman clearly based on the Pep.







cooby
Dec 13 2008 07:56 PM


I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?







Ashie62
Dec 17 2008 07:05 AM


="cooby":3lcpnzjo]I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?[/quote:3lcpnzjo]

Did you wake up with a woody?







Rockin' Doc
Dec 17 2008 10:24 AM


I believe that would be a physical impossibility for cooby.







metsmarathon
Dec 17 2008 11:46 AM


well, this thread sure has taken some strange strange turns hasn't it?







Edgy DC
Jan 07 2009 07:49 AM


NEW YORK-- Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration will forgo luxury boxes at the new Yankees and Mets ballparks, the city said Tuesday after months of criticism about its handling of the stadium projects.

The administration has worked out a new deal with the Yankees to get extra money, instead of a luxury box. A separate and similar agreement is being worked out with the Mets for their new park, a Bloomberg spokesman said.

Senior Bloomberg aides had fought hard to get the luxury boxes, describing the perk in internal e-mails as "a big issue to the mayor" during negotiations with the teams in 2006.

That battle for the boxes only recently came to light as state and federal lawmakers launched investigations into how the teams and the administration went about making those deals.

The decision to give up the luxury boxes comes as Bloomberg seeks reelection this year and repeatedly cites the city's enormous budget shortfalls.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Jan 07 2009 07:56 AM


They gave it up at the same time they were forced to cough up reams of smoking guns on how filthy the whole thing was, including begging by the MFYs to increase their duistribution of public $$ to cover shit like their scoreboard and video board. Mets are also asking for more but about half the MFYs overall since the project was so much less expensive.







Centerfield
Jan 07 2009 03:17 PM


I think the Mets should sign Manny and ask the public to pick up the tab.



Posted


Orange foul poles, my heart be still.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)


Posted


I can picture a slicing line drive landing in fair territory and bouncing into the stands at the lower left.

I guess it would still be a ground-rule double if that happened, even though the stands it bounces into are in foul territory.

I wonder what "Hal the Referee" would say?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


="G-Fafif":17s8qtsk]Orange foul poles, my heart be still.[/quote:17s8qtsk]

Yeah. Looked like earlier versions had 'em yellow. Maybe they were just renderings.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Frayed Knot
Nov 25 2008 02:34 PM


Oh it would be a G-R double.
Stuff like that happens all the time in Philly (both the new place and the old) and both in YSII and in RF in Boston (and I'm sure others as well).

Hard to tell, but these jutting stands in LF don't look to have as extreme an angle as those in Philly but looks like we'll still get our share of goofy bounces back towards fair territory for balls that stay low enough to hit the facing of the stands and not bounce into the seats themselves.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







metirish
Nov 25 2008 02:35 PM


This link here has a better picture of the lines and the foul pole.

http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=60954&page=341

Also there are drawings of the park.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Farmer Ted
Nov 25 2008 02:46 PM


There appear to be extra tunnels in the upper deck behind home plate. Quick outs for the upper level fat cats.

What is that press-box-looking-structure behind home plate (about 15 feet up from playing level?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 04:08 PM


]Citi Field nearly ready to open its doors
Builders of Mets' new ballpark influenced by other stadiums

By Anthony DiComo / MLB.com
NEW YORK -- The left-field wall rises conspicuously high at Citi Field, making it both a point of note and, recently, a point of contention.

"Eighteen feet," Mets COO Jeff Wilpon guessed on Tuesday, before a site worker pegged the actual height at 16 feet. And Wilpon was pleased.

Citi Field, he said, may retain its predecessor's reputation as a pitcher-friendly park, but it hardly caters only to those on the mound. Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.

"Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."

Such details of the new stadium have now become focal points, because Citi Field is so close to completion. A stroll through the park on Tuesday revealed that all the seats have been installed, the press box and Diamond Club are already encased in glass, and workers have begun installing major appliances within the concession stands.

Yet of greater interest to Wright, Murphy, Evans and others in uniform, of course, is what lies deeper within the stadium. Lockers have been fully installed in the home clubhouse -- Wright has already chosen his -- and the carpet and bathroom tiles feature images of the fluorescent icons affixed to Shea Stadium's exterior walls.

Adjacent rooms lead to some typical clubhouse amenities -- the manager's office, kitchen and weight room, to name a few -- save for one in the back that houses a hot tub, a cold tub and an underwater treadmill. Unlike anything at Shea Stadium, that room, along with one for indoor batting cages and pitching mounds, will allow players to rehab injuries at Citi Field, rather than always fly to the team's Spring Training complex in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

In designing this ballpark, the Mets patched together ideas and influences from stadiums around the country. An overhang in right field, for example, protrudes above the warning track in a nod to the old Tiger Stadium. In the upper deck, a two-tiered layout reveals influence from Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park. Pieces of Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and Coors Field in Denver are present, though Wilpon noted that his greatest influence in the design of Citi Field was seven-year-old PNC Park in Pittsburgh.

"I wanted to super-size Pittsburgh," said Wilpon, who went on a nationwide ballpark tour before building his own. "I really liked Pittsburgh the best."

Yet the one influence, even more than Pittsburgh's, that Wilpon wanted to capture was that of Ebbets Field in Brooklyn -- the inspiration for Citi Field's exterior and perhaps its most prominent feature, the Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station and into a miniature baseball shrine. An escalator leads up to the seating bowl and down below, Robinson's nine values -- a staple of the Jackie Robinson Foundation's message -- are featured. Before Opening Day, workers will also erect a nine-foot No. 42 for fans to see as they enter the park.

Steps outside the rotunda lies something similarly striking, if only for its incompleteness. Shea Stadium, home of the Mets for 44 years, has been reduced to an empty dirt bowl, its seats stripped, its sod removed and nearly all of its signage disappeared. Wilpon said he hoped that Shea would be completely disassembled and converted into a parking lot by Opening Day, with small markers at the site of home plate and the pitcher's rubber.

Already, Shea Stadium's frame is nearly lost in the shadow of Citi Field, which -- despite holding only 42,500 seats, roughly a 25 percent drop from Shea -- seems built on a much greater scale. There are open areas for picnic tables and standing room, and a "GA Club" behind home plate in which ticket-holders can mingle. There is a Diamond Plaza near the rotunda where Shea Stadium's old home run apple will rest, and a large concrete basin in center field for Citi Field's new apple.

There are tiered bullpens in center field -- the Mets will have the lower one, closer to the field -- and a plaza outside the rotunda for greenery.

Wilpon was steps away from that plaza, inside the Jackie Robinson Rotunda, when he looked up and admired his handiwork.

"Powerful, right?" he said. "It's now becoming what we want it to become."







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 04:34 PM


Very pretty pictures of a very pretty ballpark-to-be. But their immediate impact is to make me sad in that it's so not Shea. I know, I know: that's the idea. A few innings inside could have me changing my tune pretty quickly, but it just looks like something else from somewhere else right now.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 04:56 PM


="Anthony DiComo":3aqa8uko]Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.[/quote:3aqa8uko]

What in particular gets your attention about this sentence?







metirish
Dec 02 2008 04:59 PM


That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 05:10 PM


I like that the tiles and carpeting include a tribute to Shea Stadium.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:14 PM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM




Richard Pryor had this observation to make during a seventies routine. People were talking about this dystopic futureshock sci-fi movie, called Logan's Run that left them unsettled. He went to it and was unsettled for a different reason.

"I noticed there were no colored folks in this movie. Somebody's not expecting us to be around."

Not that I think they're eradicating peeps of color from the roster, but while some Omar-critics may find it depressing that only five of 17 batters on the roster are caucasian, I noticed three of those five were the only ones invited to Jeff Wilpon's (who I don't think is a moron) private sleepover. Dude needs to broaden his experience. This ain't the Greenvale School.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:16 PM


And yeah, I'm not too keen on Wilpon not understanding that they should be focused on the business at hand in late September.







Nymr83
Dec 02 2008 05:18 PM


It seems obvious that Wright would be the first one invited and Murphy was being rewarded for his explosive rookie performance.
Nick Evans? really? you need Nick Evans to test out your new park? I understand not inviting Delgado who might not be back but where was Beltran? Reyes?







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM


Pat Zachry.

I mean, good sources have assured me that they speak English and everything.







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 05:48 PM


]Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station


Anthony DiComo obviously drives to games and has never seen the sign for the station (or met our own Willets Point).

With the ballpark name in at least a little limbo, one hopes the MTA hasn't invested in new station signs just yet.







metirish
Dec 02 2008 05:58 PM


="metirish"]That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.



I had not read the article when I made that comment , so Wilpon was talking about a 16 foot high wall in LF , not sure if I'm Nick Evens I think that the boss is giving me a compliment here.


]
Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 06:10 PM


I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.










soupcan
Dec 04 2008 08:23 AM


bb-f again













="Edgy DC"]I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.



Not so!

Angled seats...








metirish
Dec 04 2008 08:54 AM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 04 2008 09:44 AM




High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:25 AM


="soupcan":188c6xn0]Not so!

Angled seats...[/quote:188c6xn0]

Well, shut my mouth. Rows angled maybe ten degrees toward the infield. Seats angled ten degrees more. That's something.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 09:27 AM




I do like the improved legroom. You can even have a guy in a hardhat kneel down in front of your seat, if that's your idea of a good time.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:30 AM


You've been reading my blog.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:12 PM


Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3bdfxevb]







metirish
Dec 04 2008 01:18 PM


="soupcan":3fpddl03]Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3fpddl03][/quote:3fpddl03]

Very cool , at the 2:10 mark they show a fenced in patch of green next to the stand in what I think is left of center field , is that the bullpen?







Farmer Ted
Dec 04 2008 01:28 PM


Mets logo on the end seat of each row. Looking classy.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:29 PM


A lot of nice hi-res shots like this at metsblog.com on the front page.

This the first pic I've seen of the nice w - i - d - e concourses.








seawolf17
Dec 04 2008 01:34 PM


="metirish":cf49cmfu]High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.[/quote:cf49cmfu]
Considering what happened this year, you'd think they'd be conscious of that.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 01:40 PM


They should string circus-style safety nets below each of the escalators.

That concourse does look nice. It's easy to see how you could be standing on the hot dog line while keeping an eye on the game. That, I think, is the best thing that the new stadium will have over Shea.

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Dec 04 2008 01:43 PM


="Benjamin Grimm":3jnxf2zm]

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.[/quote:3jnxf2zm]

Yeah, though its supposed to subtly remind you of the bridge on the Mets logo, which is supposed to remind you of how the Mets reached across the city to "bridge" fans of the Giants and Dodgers, and the Eastsiders and Westsiders, and Kiddies and Wives, and the Butcher, the Baker and the People on the Street.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 01:49 PM


Thank God the Mets brought kiddies and wives together.







Willets Point
Dec 04 2008 03:19 PM


="Edgy DC":h0g9fccu]You've been reading my blog.[/quote:h0g9fccu]

I want to read this blog.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 04:02 PM


I like the use of brick on the inside of the stadium rather than just the facade.







Rockin' Doc
Dec 04 2008 05:23 PM


No one will ever pull an Endy on that left field wall. How tall is that wall in left field?







Zvon
Dec 04 2008 05:33 PM


What I like: almost everything. It looks beautiful, real low to the ground.
User friendly for the fan. On the whole a nice new home for my Metsies.

What I don't like:
I've never been a fan of the two tier bullpen. Hate em! Bullpen fights could make things exciting though.
I really like the use of chain link fence here, but that one outjutting looks like trouble to me.
Once again, the whole right field set up should make things exciting.
(I'm not against "exciting", I just do not like silly injuries)



I like an outfield wall where there's always a possibility of pulling one back into the park.
So I'm not too thrilled with the height of that left field wall.



I am assuming that these are the outfield walls (that there wont be wooden ones placed a foot or so in front of those we see, which I think I'd prefer).
I'm sure that if they go with these concrete walls that will be padded with the best material available, but I still don't like the idea of a wall with absolutely no give to it.




Don't mind me.
Im just being an idiopathic idiosyncrat.







themetfairy
Dec 04 2008 05:57 PM


Not at all Zvon - I enjoyed your illustrative input.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 06:05 PM


I like an outfield wall with a hidden door that an outfielder can suddenly disappear through.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 06:36 PM


It's almost like they're setting up for a Field of Dreams cornfield stunt.







Frayed Knot
Dec 04 2008 09:20 PM


Or a Manny signing.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 04:02 PM


Old Apple goes here?









Benjamin Grimm
Dec 07 2008 05:23 PM


My understanding (could be wrong, though) is that the old apple is going to be inside the stadium but somewhere in centerfield.







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 05:36 PM


That'll be an all-nu apple.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 05:42 PM


You saying all-nu inside or all-nu outside?







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 07:15 PM


All-nu inside.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 07:21 PM


Right - but that podium or hole or whatever is outside, so I'm thinking that's where the old one will go.

Or a statue..?







Frayed Knot
Dec 07 2008 07:23 PM


Yeah, my understanding was nu-apple inside, apple-classic on view somewhere outside.







G-Fafif
Dec 07 2008 08:08 PM


Both will be out in center, according to Metsblog, which was on the media tour last week.

]For starters, Jeff Wilpon told reporters that the old Home-Run Apple from Shea Stadium will be on display in back of the concourse in center field, which was good to hear. However, a new Apple will pop up from a concrete cannister beneath the center-field scoreboard.


That thing they're building outside, obviously, is a kiddie pool.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 02:41 PM


So the outside is an homage to Ebbets.

The green seats are supposedly a nod to the Polo Grounds.

Where's Shea? Oh there it is, on the floor of the locker room.




Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 02:44 PM


That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.








Zvon
Dec 12 2008 02:49 PM


That is one ugly rug.
So Shea gets the honor of being stepped on?







Valadius
Dec 12 2008 04:58 PM


Pepitone's rug looks like Blagojevich's.







metirish
Dec 12 2008 05:03 PM


="Edgy DC":befgt7hd]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:befgt7hd]


Very funny.







dgwphotography
Dec 12 2008 05:11 PM


="Edgy DC"]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.



I'm think Phil here would give Joe a run for his money:








themetfairy
Dec 12 2008 05:14 PM


That has to be Phil's own hair. Nobody would construct a toupee THAT ugly!







metsguyinmichigan
Dec 12 2008 05:43 PM


="metirish":3bn5ocf6]
="Edgy DC":3bn5ocf6]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:3bn5ocf6]


Very funny.[/quote:3bn5ocf6]

WOW. And the rug on the guy on the right in the tan coat is horrible, too!

And if I were Phil Spector's attorney, I'd go for the insanity defense and just point to him sitting there with that 'do and sit back and wait for the acquittal.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 07:11 PM


Pepitone's dead?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 07:59 PM


Guess not. My boo-boo. Sorry, Joe.

I just sent a white elephant Christmas gift to my sister's Yankfan boyfriend. It was a Yankee hat that my brother got Pepitone's autograph on. What did he ever think I'd want with that.

One time Pepitone, after missing a ballgame with a niggling injury while playing in Japan, was photographed at a disco later, out dancing with his wig. To this day, supposedly, American players who come to Japan and play the diva are called "Pepitones."







Willets Point
Dec 13 2008 05:52 PM


="soupcan":1k1wbb9f]
Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?[/quote:1k1wbb9f]

The carpet will be vastly improved by frequently soaking it in champagne.







Farmer Ted
Dec 13 2008 06:47 PM


I was living in NC in the mid 90s and in charge of putting on a sports-related banquet. The Yankees had a minor league team in Greensboro for a number of years and the committee board voted to have a former Yankee or a current member of the organization to be the featured speaker. I swallowed my pride and called the Bronx. The PR office hack said someone would be in touch in a few days. Phone rings 20 minutes later. Pepitone on the other end. No shit. I explain we're looking for a speaker yadda yadda yadda and he says "I'll do it (basically volunteering himself). We can work on a fee but you need to fly me down there. Great times I had in that town." Apparently he had the gig of lining up the Yankees alumni for public appearances. I went back to the committee and told them Pepitone was the best I could do (not that I tried any harder). The room busted into hysterical laughter and we found someone else from a different sport to speak.







Edgy DC
Dec 13 2008 07:03 PM


There was an episode of Mad About You where Jamie asked what ballplayer they can get for a personal appearance on a limited budget. Paul's answer was an aging swinger of a sixties Yankee firstbaseman clearly based on the Pep.







cooby
Dec 13 2008 07:56 PM


I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?







Ashie62
Dec 17 2008 07:05 AM


="cooby":3lcpnzjo]I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?[/quote:3lcpnzjo]

Did you wake up with a woody?







Rockin' Doc
Dec 17 2008 10:24 AM


I believe that would be a physical impossibility for cooby.







metsmarathon
Dec 17 2008 11:46 AM


well, this thread sure has taken some strange strange turns hasn't it?







Edgy DC
Jan 07 2009 07:49 AM


NEW YORK-- Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration will forgo luxury boxes at the new Yankees and Mets ballparks, the city said Tuesday after months of criticism about its handling of the stadium projects.

The administration has worked out a new deal with the Yankees to get extra money, instead of a luxury box. A separate and similar agreement is being worked out with the Mets for their new park, a Bloomberg spokesman said.

Senior Bloomberg aides had fought hard to get the luxury boxes, describing the perk in internal e-mails as "a big issue to the mayor" during negotiations with the teams in 2006.

That battle for the boxes only recently came to light as state and federal lawmakers launched investigations into how the teams and the administration went about making those deals.

The decision to give up the luxury boxes comes as Bloomberg seeks reelection this year and repeatedly cites the city's enormous budget shortfalls.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Jan 07 2009 07:56 AM


They gave it up at the same time they were forced to cough up reams of smoking guns on how filthy the whole thing was, including begging by the MFYs to increase their duistribution of public $$ to cover shit like their scoreboard and video board. Mets are also asking for more but about half the MFYs overall since the project was so much less expensive.







Centerfield
Jan 07 2009 03:17 PM


I think the Mets should sign Manny and ask the public to pick up the tab.



Posted


Oh it would be a G-R double.
Stuff like that happens all the time in Philly (both the new place and the old) and both in YSII and in RF in Boston (and I'm sure others as well).

Hard to tell, but these jutting stands in LF don't look to have as extreme an angle as those in Philly but looks like we'll still get our share of goofy bounces back towards fair territory for balls that stay low enough to hit the facing of the stands and not bounce into the seats themselves.


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)


Posted


There appear to be extra tunnels in the upper deck behind home plate. Quick outs for the upper level fat cats.

What is that press-box-looking-structure behind home plate (about 15 feet up from playing level?


(Merged from More Citi Field photos, 11/25/2008)


Posted


]Citi Field nearly ready to open its doors
Builders of Mets' new ballpark influenced by other stadiums

By Anthony DiComo / MLB.com
NEW YORK -- The left-field wall rises conspicuously high at Citi Field, making it both a point of note and, recently, a point of contention.

"Eighteen feet," Mets COO Jeff Wilpon guessed on Tuesday, before a site worker pegged the actual height at 16 feet. And Wilpon was pleased.

Citi Field, he said, may retain its predecessor's reputation as a pitcher-friendly park, but it hardly caters only to those on the mound. Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.

"Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."

Such details of the new stadium have now become focal points, because Citi Field is so close to completion. A stroll through the park on Tuesday revealed that all the seats have been installed, the press box and Diamond Club are already encased in glass, and workers have begun installing major appliances within the concession stands.

Yet of greater interest to Wright, Murphy, Evans and others in uniform, of course, is what lies deeper within the stadium. Lockers have been fully installed in the home clubhouse -- Wright has already chosen his -- and the carpet and bathroom tiles feature images of the fluorescent icons affixed to Shea Stadium's exterior walls.

Adjacent rooms lead to some typical clubhouse amenities -- the manager's office, kitchen and weight room, to name a few -- save for one in the back that houses a hot tub, a cold tub and an underwater treadmill. Unlike anything at Shea Stadium, that room, along with one for indoor batting cages and pitching mounds, will allow players to rehab injuries at Citi Field, rather than always fly to the team's Spring Training complex in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

In designing this ballpark, the Mets patched together ideas and influences from stadiums around the country. An overhang in right field, for example, protrudes above the warning track in a nod to the old Tiger Stadium. In the upper deck, a two-tiered layout reveals influence from Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park. Pieces of Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and Coors Field in Denver are present, though Wilpon noted that his greatest influence in the design of Citi Field was seven-year-old PNC Park in Pittsburgh.

"I wanted to super-size Pittsburgh," said Wilpon, who went on a nationwide ballpark tour before building his own. "I really liked Pittsburgh the best."

Yet the one influence, even more than Pittsburgh's, that Wilpon wanted to capture was that of Ebbets Field in Brooklyn -- the inspiration for Citi Field's exterior and perhaps its most prominent feature, the Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station and into a miniature baseball shrine. An escalator leads up to the seating bowl and down below, Robinson's nine values -- a staple of the Jackie Robinson Foundation's message -- are featured. Before Opening Day, workers will also erect a nine-foot No. 42 for fans to see as they enter the park.

Steps outside the rotunda lies something similarly striking, if only for its incompleteness. Shea Stadium, home of the Mets for 44 years, has been reduced to an empty dirt bowl, its seats stripped, its sod removed and nearly all of its signage disappeared. Wilpon said he hoped that Shea would be completely disassembled and converted into a parking lot by Opening Day, with small markers at the site of home plate and the pitcher's rubber.

Already, Shea Stadium's frame is nearly lost in the shadow of Citi Field, which -- despite holding only 42,500 seats, roughly a 25 percent drop from Shea -- seems built on a much greater scale. There are open areas for picnic tables and standing room, and a "GA Club" behind home plate in which ticket-holders can mingle. There is a Diamond Plaza near the rotunda where Shea Stadium's old home run apple will rest, and a large concrete basin in center field for Citi Field's new apple.

There are tiered bullpens in center field -- the Mets will have the lower one, closer to the field -- and a plaza outside the rotunda for greenery.

Wilpon was steps away from that plaza, inside the Jackie Robinson Rotunda, when he looked up and admired his handiwork.

"Powerful, right?" he said. "It's now becoming what we want it to become."


Posted


Very pretty pictures of a very pretty ballpark-to-be. But their immediate impact is to make me sad in that it's so not Shea. I know, I know: that's the idea. A few innings inside could have me changing my tune pretty quickly, but it just looks like something else from somewhere else right now.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


="Anthony DiComo":3aqa8uko]Toward the end of September, in fact, Wilpon invited players David Wright, Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans out for a private batting practice session at the new park, and all three of them managed to yank a pitch over the wall.[/quote:3aqa8uko]

What in particular gets your attention about this sentence?







metirish
Dec 02 2008 04:59 PM


That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 02 2008 05:10 PM


I like that the tiles and carpeting include a tribute to Shea Stadium.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:14 PM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM




Richard Pryor had this observation to make during a seventies routine. People were talking about this dystopic futureshock sci-fi movie, called Logan's Run that left them unsettled. He went to it and was unsettled for a different reason.

"I noticed there were no colored folks in this movie. Somebody's not expecting us to be around."

Not that I think they're eradicating peeps of color from the roster, but while some Omar-critics may find it depressing that only five of 17 batters on the roster are caucasian, I noticed three of those five were the only ones invited to Jeff Wilpon's (who I don't think is a moron) private sleepover. Dude needs to broaden his experience. This ain't the Greenvale School.







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:16 PM


And yeah, I'm not too keen on Wilpon not understanding that they should be focused on the business at hand in late September.







Nymr83
Dec 02 2008 05:18 PM


It seems obvious that Wright would be the first one invited and Murphy was being rewarded for his explosive rookie performance.
Nick Evans? really? you need Nick Evans to test out your new park? I understand not inviting Delgado who might not be back but where was Beltran? Reyes?







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 05:23 PM


Pat Zachry.

I mean, good sources have assured me that they speak English and everything.







G-Fafif
Dec 02 2008 05:48 PM


]Still incomplete, the rotunda will become Citi Field's main entranceway, allowing fans to spill out of the Willits Point subway station


Anthony DiComo obviously drives to games and has never seen the sign for the station (or met our own Willets Point).

With the ballpark name in at least a little limbo, one hopes the MTA hasn't invested in new station signs just yet.







metirish
Dec 02 2008 05:58 PM


="metirish"]That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.



I had not read the article when I made that comment , so Wilpon was talking about a 16 foot high wall in LF , not sure if I'm Nick Evens I think that the boss is giving me a compliment here.


]
Evans put it halfway up the left-field deck," Wilpon said. "It's totally reachable."







Edgy DC
Dec 02 2008 06:10 PM


I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.










soupcan
Dec 04 2008 08:23 AM


bb-f again













="Edgy DC"]I want it noted, suckers, that one of the primary indictments of Shea --- that the outfield field-level seats largely face directly toward the outfield, rather than the infield where most of the action occurs, does not appear to be improved upon at all at Citi.



Not so!

Angled seats...








metirish
Dec 04 2008 08:54 AM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 04 2008 09:44 AM




High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:25 AM


="soupcan":188c6xn0]Not so!

Angled seats...[/quote:188c6xn0]

Well, shut my mouth. Rows angled maybe ten degrees toward the infield. Seats angled ten degrees more. That's something.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 09:27 AM




I do like the improved legroom. You can even have a guy in a hardhat kneel down in front of your seat, if that's your idea of a good time.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 09:30 AM


You've been reading my blog.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:12 PM


Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3bdfxevb]







metirish
Dec 04 2008 01:18 PM


="soupcan":3fpddl03]Cool little video tour of Citi[/url:3fpddl03][/quote:3fpddl03]

Very cool , at the 2:10 mark they show a fenced in patch of green next to the stand in what I think is left of center field , is that the bullpen?







Farmer Ted
Dec 04 2008 01:28 PM


Mets logo on the end seat of each row. Looking classy.







soupcan
Dec 04 2008 01:29 PM


A lot of nice hi-res shots like this at metsblog.com on the front page.

This the first pic I've seen of the nice w - i - d - e concourses.








seawolf17
Dec 04 2008 01:34 PM


="metirish":cf49cmfu]High staircase and escalator obviously , people falling and going splat on the Robinson rotunda is to be expected I would think.[/quote:cf49cmfu]
Considering what happened this year, you'd think they'd be conscious of that.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 04 2008 01:40 PM


They should string circus-style safety nets below each of the escalators.

That concourse does look nice. It's easy to see how you could be standing on the hot dog line while keeping an eye on the game. That, I think, is the best thing that the new stadium will have over Shea.

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Dec 04 2008 01:43 PM


="Benjamin Grimm":3jnxf2zm]

I also like the visible steel infrastructure, although that's hardly an innovation.[/quote:3jnxf2zm]

Yeah, though its supposed to subtly remind you of the bridge on the Mets logo, which is supposed to remind you of how the Mets reached across the city to "bridge" fans of the Giants and Dodgers, and the Eastsiders and Westsiders, and Kiddies and Wives, and the Butcher, the Baker and the People on the Street.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 01:49 PM


Thank God the Mets brought kiddies and wives together.







Willets Point
Dec 04 2008 03:19 PM


="Edgy DC":h0g9fccu]You've been reading my blog.[/quote:h0g9fccu]

I want to read this blog.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 04:02 PM


I like the use of brick on the inside of the stadium rather than just the facade.







Rockin' Doc
Dec 04 2008 05:23 PM


No one will ever pull an Endy on that left field wall. How tall is that wall in left field?







Zvon
Dec 04 2008 05:33 PM


What I like: almost everything. It looks beautiful, real low to the ground.
User friendly for the fan. On the whole a nice new home for my Metsies.

What I don't like:
I've never been a fan of the two tier bullpen. Hate em! Bullpen fights could make things exciting though.
I really like the use of chain link fence here, but that one outjutting looks like trouble to me.
Once again, the whole right field set up should make things exciting.
(I'm not against "exciting", I just do not like silly injuries)



I like an outfield wall where there's always a possibility of pulling one back into the park.
So I'm not too thrilled with the height of that left field wall.



I am assuming that these are the outfield walls (that there wont be wooden ones placed a foot or so in front of those we see, which I think I'd prefer).
I'm sure that if they go with these concrete walls that will be padded with the best material available, but I still don't like the idea of a wall with absolutely no give to it.




Don't mind me.
Im just being an idiopathic idiosyncrat.







themetfairy
Dec 04 2008 05:57 PM


Not at all Zvon - I enjoyed your illustrative input.







Edgy DC
Dec 04 2008 06:05 PM


I like an outfield wall with a hidden door that an outfielder can suddenly disappear through.







Valadius
Dec 04 2008 06:36 PM


It's almost like they're setting up for a Field of Dreams cornfield stunt.







Frayed Knot
Dec 04 2008 09:20 PM


Or a Manny signing.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 04:02 PM


Old Apple goes here?









Benjamin Grimm
Dec 07 2008 05:23 PM


My understanding (could be wrong, though) is that the old apple is going to be inside the stadium but somewhere in centerfield.







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 05:36 PM


That'll be an all-nu apple.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 05:42 PM


You saying all-nu inside or all-nu outside?







Edgy DC
Dec 07 2008 07:15 PM


All-nu inside.







soupcan
Dec 07 2008 07:21 PM


Right - but that podium or hole or whatever is outside, so I'm thinking that's where the old one will go.

Or a statue..?







Frayed Knot
Dec 07 2008 07:23 PM


Yeah, my understanding was nu-apple inside, apple-classic on view somewhere outside.







G-Fafif
Dec 07 2008 08:08 PM


Both will be out in center, according to Metsblog, which was on the media tour last week.

]For starters, Jeff Wilpon told reporters that the old Home-Run Apple from Shea Stadium will be on display in back of the concourse in center field, which was good to hear. However, a new Apple will pop up from a concrete cannister beneath the center-field scoreboard.


That thing they're building outside, obviously, is a kiddie pool.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 02:41 PM


So the outside is an homage to Ebbets.

The green seats are supposedly a nod to the Polo Grounds.

Where's Shea? Oh there it is, on the floor of the locker room.




Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 02:44 PM


That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.








Zvon
Dec 12 2008 02:49 PM


That is one ugly rug.
So Shea gets the honor of being stepped on?







Valadius
Dec 12 2008 04:58 PM


Pepitone's rug looks like Blagojevich's.







metirish
Dec 12 2008 05:03 PM


="Edgy DC":befgt7hd]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:befgt7hd]


Very funny.







dgwphotography
Dec 12 2008 05:11 PM


="Edgy DC"]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.



I'm think Phil here would give Joe a run for his money:








themetfairy
Dec 12 2008 05:14 PM


That has to be Phil's own hair. Nobody would construct a toupee THAT ugly!







metsguyinmichigan
Dec 12 2008 05:43 PM


="metirish":3bn5ocf6]
="Edgy DC":3bn5ocf6]That honor still belongs to the late Joe Pepitone.

[/quote:3bn5ocf6]


Very funny.[/quote:3bn5ocf6]

WOW. And the rug on the guy on the right in the tan coat is horrible, too!

And if I were Phil Spector's attorney, I'd go for the insanity defense and just point to him sitting there with that 'do and sit back and wait for the acquittal.







soupcan
Dec 12 2008 07:11 PM


Pepitone's dead?







Edgy DC
Dec 12 2008 07:59 PM


Guess not. My boo-boo. Sorry, Joe.

I just sent a white elephant Christmas gift to my sister's Yankfan boyfriend. It was a Yankee hat that my brother got Pepitone's autograph on. What did he ever think I'd want with that.

One time Pepitone, after missing a ballgame with a niggling injury while playing in Japan, was photographed at a disco later, out dancing with his wig. To this day, supposedly, American players who come to Japan and play the diva are called "Pepitones."







Willets Point
Dec 13 2008 05:52 PM


="soupcan":1k1wbb9f]
Is that the ugliest damn rug you've ever seen or what?[/quote:1k1wbb9f]

The carpet will be vastly improved by frequently soaking it in champagne.







Farmer Ted
Dec 13 2008 06:47 PM


I was living in NC in the mid 90s and in charge of putting on a sports-related banquet. The Yankees had a minor league team in Greensboro for a number of years and the committee board voted to have a former Yankee or a current member of the organization to be the featured speaker. I swallowed my pride and called the Bronx. The PR office hack said someone would be in touch in a few days. Phone rings 20 minutes later. Pepitone on the other end. No shit. I explain we're looking for a speaker yadda yadda yadda and he says "I'll do it (basically volunteering himself). We can work on a fee but you need to fly me down there. Great times I had in that town." Apparently he had the gig of lining up the Yankees alumni for public appearances. I went back to the committee and told them Pepitone was the best I could do (not that I tried any harder). The room busted into hysterical laughter and we found someone else from a different sport to speak.







Edgy DC
Dec 13 2008 07:03 PM


There was an episode of Mad About You where Jamie asked what ballplayer they can get for a personal appearance on a limited budget. Paul's answer was an aging swinger of a sixties Yankee firstbaseman clearly based on the Pep.







cooby
Dec 13 2008 07:56 PM


I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?







Ashie62
Dec 17 2008 07:05 AM


="cooby":3lcpnzjo]I swear I was thinking about Joe Pepitone this morning. And why?[/quote:3lcpnzjo]

Did you wake up with a woody?







Rockin' Doc
Dec 17 2008 10:24 AM


I believe that would be a physical impossibility for cooby.







metsmarathon
Dec 17 2008 11:46 AM


well, this thread sure has taken some strange strange turns hasn't it?







Edgy DC
Jan 07 2009 07:49 AM


NEW YORK-- Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration will forgo luxury boxes at the new Yankees and Mets ballparks, the city said Tuesday after months of criticism about its handling of the stadium projects.

The administration has worked out a new deal with the Yankees to get extra money, instead of a luxury box. A separate and similar agreement is being worked out with the Mets for their new park, a Bloomberg spokesman said.

Senior Bloomberg aides had fought hard to get the luxury boxes, describing the perk in internal e-mails as "a big issue to the mayor" during negotiations with the teams in 2006.

That battle for the boxes only recently came to light as state and federal lawmakers launched investigations into how the teams and the administration went about making those deals.

The decision to give up the luxury boxes comes as Bloomberg seeks reelection this year and repeatedly cites the city's enormous budget shortfalls.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Jan 07 2009 07:56 AM


They gave it up at the same time they were forced to cough up reams of smoking guns on how filthy the whole thing was, including begging by the MFYs to increase their duistribution of public $$ to cover shit like their scoreboard and video board. Mets are also asking for more but about half the MFYs overall since the project was so much less expensive.







Centerfield
Jan 07 2009 03:17 PM


I think the Mets should sign Manny and ask the public to pick up the tab.



Posted


That Nick Evens hit one out , that it was towards the end of September ,that " yank a pitch over the wall" doesn't sound that far.


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