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New Stadium Nearing Completion Pictures


metirish

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Posted


]

the Hank Aaron and Warren Spahn statues


they both have BRAVES on their jerseys (and statues) - just thought I'd point that out.


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Posted


="apmorris"]


="Farmer Ted"]Yup, always one douchebag that opens an umbrella the size of Rhode Island inside the stadium. That effing thing hangs over three rows.


I believe that there are some stadia that do not allow people to bring umbrellas inside.

Now that's a good rule.


Posted


See , I would be embarrassed to open one that size , or if the person I was with opened one like that.Is that even an umbrella , looks like something that one would use on the beach for shade.


Posted


I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?


Posted


Shit like that always amazes me.

You're in a stadium watching a game with people behind and next to you. You know you'll be blocking people's views. Why do some people feel so entitled to doing stuff like that?

Do they just not think? Are they stupid? Selfish? All of the above? I just don't understand that kind of behavior.

Pack a fucking poncho.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Douchebag neighbors. Story of Soupy's life.


Posted


="Benjamin Grimm":1v08570j]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?[/quote:1v08570j]

Good call , the sign was one of the first things that jumped out at me when they were showing highlights on the News.I am trying to remember what other stadium has a similar sign , Fenway?







soupcan
Mar 30 2009 08:01 AM


Comerica in Detroit...








SteveJRogers
Mar 30 2009 08:32 AM


="Benjamin Grimm":2n7rxdgz]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?[/quote:2n7rxdgz]

An exact replica actually. Well except the recent Pepsi "dot" replaces the vintage Pepsi bottle from that iconic signage.







soupcan
Mar 30 2009 08:44 AM


="SteveJRogers"]
="Benjamin Grimm"]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?


An exact replica actually. Well except the recent Pepsi "dot" replaces the vintage Pepsi bottle from that iconic signage.



Close but not 'exact'.










G-Fafif
Mar 30 2009 11:01 AM


Company-issued release:

]Pepsi gains branding rights to the name-entitled "Pepsi Porch," the 1,284-seat area in right field that extends over the playing field. This interactive brand showcase at the Pepsi Porch will immerse fans in a Mets and Pepsi experience with special entertainment programming broadcast to those in attendance and watching Mets games on SNY, the television home of the Mets. A 37-foot by 89-foot Pepsi sign, evocative of the iconic Pepsi-Cola sign facing Manhattan from Long Island City, will sit atop the Pepsi Porch. The sign will face into the ballpark and be visible from downtown Flushing and nearby highways and mass transit lines.







Benjamin Grimm
Mar 30 2009 11:12 AM


I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.







LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Mar 30 2009 11:13 AM


Like the signage... mildly-- very mildly-- put off by the modern-Pepsi-dot-with-vintage-Pepsi-lettering juxtaposition of ad styles.

From the woulda-coulda-shoulda department: making the outfield "bridges" a little more evocative of the Triboro/Queensboro/Whitestone trifecta (not sure I buy the supposed Hell-Gate connection) would have made for a nice little architectural curlicue.







OlerudOwned
Mar 30 2009 11:35 AM


Wouldn't have minded immersing my eyes in Pepsi at the ends of the last two seasons.







metirish
Mar 30 2009 11:41 AM


The language of such releases are all the same , jeez sounds like I'll have the expreince of my life if only I was sitting in the Pepsi porch.

I do like Pepsi though







Farmer Ted
Mar 30 2009 01:13 PM


The Pepsi sign is a big FUCK YOU to Atlanta and Ted Turner's phallic Coke Bottle.







metirish
Apr 02 2009 01:24 PM



Head groundskeeper Pete Flynn marks the baselines and grooms home plate at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)

Pinball machines in the Mets' new clubhouse at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)




Pepsi porch






I like the detail in the carpet.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Apr 02 2009 01:31 PM


Those pinball machines are too close to the wall, and one another, to be playable.

However, I think can whip Jose Reyes' butt on either table.







themetfairy
Apr 02 2009 01:39 PM


I love the pool table!







DocTee
Apr 02 2009 01:41 PM


The pool table is coin operated?

You can buy any of these items in 35 years when the Mets move to a new stadium. I call dibs on the leather recliners.







soupcan
Apr 02 2009 01:59 PM


This carpet is god-awful.








Benjamin Grimm
Apr 02 2009 02:23 PM


I agree. It's garish. It's nice that they're honoring Shea with the neon players, but those big grey baseballs are hideous.

The first thing I'd do is replace that carpet with something with a blue-and-orange 1960's Shea Stadium shingle pattern.







Edgy DC
Apr 02 2009 02:27 PM


I'd do a pattern based on an acne-covered back.







soupcan
Apr 03 2009 10:44 AM


Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?








Edgy DC
Apr 03 2009 10:51 AM


How does the warning track soil/clay stay packed like that?







Fman99
Apr 03 2009 10:53 AM


="Benjamin Grimm":29ka38qg]I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.[/quote:29ka38qg]

Little known fact, the Jimi Hendrix Experience was originally known as the Mets and Pepsi Experience.







metirish
Apr 03 2009 01:04 PM


="soupcan"]Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?




Beautiful picture , one for the mantle I should think.

This story went with that picture in the NY Times

]

Mets Get a Late-Night Sneak Preview of Citi Field


By BEN SHPIGEL
Published: April 3, 2009

Out from the buses they spilled, marching through a gate, down a corridor and around a corner until, finally, there it was. Home. The Mets� shiny, new clubhouse awaited. And as Carlos Delgado poked his head inside at about 10:55 p.m. Thursday, he surveyed the sheer size of it all and said, �Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the big leagues.�

His teammates, arriving at Citi Field fresh off a flight from Florida that landed two and a half hours late, followed suit, each more mesmerized than the next. After locating his locker, Jos� Reyes opened a cabinet and wondered aloud how much clothes he could fit inside. Pedro Feliciano plopped into his ergonomic chair. Shaking his head, Razor Shines could manage only a �Wow.� Then he said it again.

�I�m overwhelmed,� Bobby Parnell said. �The other guys, they�re used to this.�

Their curiosity piqued, players wheeled their hand luggage to their lockers and started to explore. John Maine and Mike Pelfrey bounded down the steps, past the sprint track. �Mainer, you want to race?� Pelfrey said.

Ascending another set of stairs, they funneled into the dugout, joining Delgado and Carlos Beltr�n. Everyone looked up, almost instinctively, and then out, to the fences, scoping out the dimensions.

Ryan Church, pointing toward the 415-foot marker in right-center field, told Delgado, �I don�t think they made it deep enough.�

For the occasion, the lights had been turned on � �I should have brought sunscreen,� Darren O�Day said � and the grass glistened. But with rain in the forecast for Friday, when the Mets are scheduled to play Boston in an exhibition game, a tarp lay over the infield, preventing Johan Santana and friends from climbing the mound. Undeterred, many of the pitchers walked in the grass toward right-center, toward the bullpen, as quickly as their suits and dress shoes would allow them. Every few feet, J. J. Putz stopped, pointed the camera on his cellphone and snapped. The Mets occupy the bottom level of the two-tiered bullpen � just as the Phillies do in their ballpark � and the bullpen catcher Dave Racaniello wandered in. Assessing where the plate will be, he got into a crouch for a few seconds.


As �In My Life� by the Beatles played, the lights suddenly went out. All part of the plan, explained Jeff Wilpon, the team�s chief operating officer, as a montage of highlights, player introductions and construction footage played on the video screen. Luis Alicea, the first-base coach, spotted Wilpon and thanked him. �Beautiful,� Alicea told him. �Absolutely beautiful.�

When it ended, Wilpon escorted everyone into a tunnel behind the plate that led to the Jackie Robinson Rotunda. As workers took a break from polishing the terrazzo floors, Jerry Manuel and Sandy Alomar Sr. walked slowly, taking time to read each of Robinson�s nine values, which are inscribed in the floor. Behind them, Putz slipped his feet into Robinson�s footprints. They matched.

�Size 14,� Putz said.

On the way back inside, Howard Johnson took a detour to show two of his apt pupils, Nick Evans and Daniel Murphy, the video room and the batting cage. Murphy gazed through the window. The door was locked.

�Tomorrow,� Murphy said.








soupcan
Apr 03 2009 02:28 PM


Stole this from baseball-fever.com...









metirish
Apr 03 2009 02:30 PM


That needs a lot of dents in it.....too shiny.







Edgy DC
Apr 03 2009 02:38 PM


Needs a top hat is what it needs.

Strikes me that a cool reverence to the polo grounds could have been done by putting a recess in the wall out there.



Posted


="Benjamin Grimm":2n7rxdgz]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?[/quote:2n7rxdgz]

An exact replica actually. Well except the recent Pepsi "dot" replaces the vintage Pepsi bottle from that iconic signage.







soupcan
Mar 30 2009 08:44 AM


="SteveJRogers"]
="Benjamin Grimm"]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?


An exact replica actually. Well except the recent Pepsi "dot" replaces the vintage Pepsi bottle from that iconic signage.



Close but not 'exact'.










G-Fafif
Mar 30 2009 11:01 AM


Company-issued release:

]Pepsi gains branding rights to the name-entitled "Pepsi Porch," the 1,284-seat area in right field that extends over the playing field. This interactive brand showcase at the Pepsi Porch will immerse fans in a Mets and Pepsi experience with special entertainment programming broadcast to those in attendance and watching Mets games on SNY, the television home of the Mets. A 37-foot by 89-foot Pepsi sign, evocative of the iconic Pepsi-Cola sign facing Manhattan from Long Island City, will sit atop the Pepsi Porch. The sign will face into the ballpark and be visible from downtown Flushing and nearby highways and mass transit lines.







Benjamin Grimm
Mar 30 2009 11:12 AM


I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.







LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Mar 30 2009 11:13 AM


Like the signage... mildly-- very mildly-- put off by the modern-Pepsi-dot-with-vintage-Pepsi-lettering juxtaposition of ad styles.

From the woulda-coulda-shoulda department: making the outfield "bridges" a little more evocative of the Triboro/Queensboro/Whitestone trifecta (not sure I buy the supposed Hell-Gate connection) would have made for a nice little architectural curlicue.







OlerudOwned
Mar 30 2009 11:35 AM


Wouldn't have minded immersing my eyes in Pepsi at the ends of the last two seasons.







metirish
Mar 30 2009 11:41 AM


The language of such releases are all the same , jeez sounds like I'll have the expreince of my life if only I was sitting in the Pepsi porch.

I do like Pepsi though







Farmer Ted
Mar 30 2009 01:13 PM


The Pepsi sign is a big FUCK YOU to Atlanta and Ted Turner's phallic Coke Bottle.







metirish
Apr 02 2009 01:24 PM



Head groundskeeper Pete Flynn marks the baselines and grooms home plate at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)

Pinball machines in the Mets' new clubhouse at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)




Pepsi porch






I like the detail in the carpet.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Apr 02 2009 01:31 PM


Those pinball machines are too close to the wall, and one another, to be playable.

However, I think can whip Jose Reyes' butt on either table.







themetfairy
Apr 02 2009 01:39 PM


I love the pool table!







DocTee
Apr 02 2009 01:41 PM


The pool table is coin operated?

You can buy any of these items in 35 years when the Mets move to a new stadium. I call dibs on the leather recliners.







soupcan
Apr 02 2009 01:59 PM


This carpet is god-awful.








Benjamin Grimm
Apr 02 2009 02:23 PM


I agree. It's garish. It's nice that they're honoring Shea with the neon players, but those big grey baseballs are hideous.

The first thing I'd do is replace that carpet with something with a blue-and-orange 1960's Shea Stadium shingle pattern.







Edgy DC
Apr 02 2009 02:27 PM


I'd do a pattern based on an acne-covered back.







soupcan
Apr 03 2009 10:44 AM


Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?








Edgy DC
Apr 03 2009 10:51 AM


How does the warning track soil/clay stay packed like that?







Fman99
Apr 03 2009 10:53 AM


="Benjamin Grimm":29ka38qg]I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.[/quote:29ka38qg]

Little known fact, the Jimi Hendrix Experience was originally known as the Mets and Pepsi Experience.







metirish
Apr 03 2009 01:04 PM


="soupcan"]Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?




Beautiful picture , one for the mantle I should think.

This story went with that picture in the NY Times

]

Mets Get a Late-Night Sneak Preview of Citi Field


By BEN SHPIGEL
Published: April 3, 2009

Out from the buses they spilled, marching through a gate, down a corridor and around a corner until, finally, there it was. Home. The Mets� shiny, new clubhouse awaited. And as Carlos Delgado poked his head inside at about 10:55 p.m. Thursday, he surveyed the sheer size of it all and said, �Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the big leagues.�

His teammates, arriving at Citi Field fresh off a flight from Florida that landed two and a half hours late, followed suit, each more mesmerized than the next. After locating his locker, Jos� Reyes opened a cabinet and wondered aloud how much clothes he could fit inside. Pedro Feliciano plopped into his ergonomic chair. Shaking his head, Razor Shines could manage only a �Wow.� Then he said it again.

�I�m overwhelmed,� Bobby Parnell said. �The other guys, they�re used to this.�

Their curiosity piqued, players wheeled their hand luggage to their lockers and started to explore. John Maine and Mike Pelfrey bounded down the steps, past the sprint track. �Mainer, you want to race?� Pelfrey said.

Ascending another set of stairs, they funneled into the dugout, joining Delgado and Carlos Beltr�n. Everyone looked up, almost instinctively, and then out, to the fences, scoping out the dimensions.

Ryan Church, pointing toward the 415-foot marker in right-center field, told Delgado, �I don�t think they made it deep enough.�

For the occasion, the lights had been turned on � �I should have brought sunscreen,� Darren O�Day said � and the grass glistened. But with rain in the forecast for Friday, when the Mets are scheduled to play Boston in an exhibition game, a tarp lay over the infield, preventing Johan Santana and friends from climbing the mound. Undeterred, many of the pitchers walked in the grass toward right-center, toward the bullpen, as quickly as their suits and dress shoes would allow them. Every few feet, J. J. Putz stopped, pointed the camera on his cellphone and snapped. The Mets occupy the bottom level of the two-tiered bullpen � just as the Phillies do in their ballpark � and the bullpen catcher Dave Racaniello wandered in. Assessing where the plate will be, he got into a crouch for a few seconds.


As �In My Life� by the Beatles played, the lights suddenly went out. All part of the plan, explained Jeff Wilpon, the team�s chief operating officer, as a montage of highlights, player introductions and construction footage played on the video screen. Luis Alicea, the first-base coach, spotted Wilpon and thanked him. �Beautiful,� Alicea told him. �Absolutely beautiful.�

When it ended, Wilpon escorted everyone into a tunnel behind the plate that led to the Jackie Robinson Rotunda. As workers took a break from polishing the terrazzo floors, Jerry Manuel and Sandy Alomar Sr. walked slowly, taking time to read each of Robinson�s nine values, which are inscribed in the floor. Behind them, Putz slipped his feet into Robinson�s footprints. They matched.

�Size 14,� Putz said.

On the way back inside, Howard Johnson took a detour to show two of his apt pupils, Nick Evans and Daniel Murphy, the video room and the batting cage. Murphy gazed through the window. The door was locked.

�Tomorrow,� Murphy said.








soupcan
Apr 03 2009 02:28 PM


Stole this from baseball-fever.com...









metirish
Apr 03 2009 02:30 PM


That needs a lot of dents in it.....too shiny.







Edgy DC
Apr 03 2009 02:38 PM


Needs a top hat is what it needs.

Strikes me that a cool reverence to the polo grounds could have been done by putting a recess in the wall out there.



Posted


="SteveJRogers"]
="Benjamin Grimm"]I'm no fan of ads, but I kinda like that big Pepsi Cola sign. It's as much "advertising art" as it is advertising. Isn't it very similar to the vintage sign in Queens that can be seen from across the East River in Manhattan?


An exact replica actually. Well except the recent Pepsi "dot" replaces the vintage Pepsi bottle from that iconic signage.



Close but not 'exact'.





Posted


Company-issued release:

]Pepsi gains branding rights to the name-entitled "Pepsi Porch," the 1,284-seat area in right field that extends over the playing field. This interactive brand showcase at the Pepsi Porch will immerse fans in a Mets and Pepsi experience with special entertainment programming broadcast to those in attendance and watching Mets games on SNY, the television home of the Mets. A 37-foot by 89-foot Pepsi sign, evocative of the iconic Pepsi-Cola sign facing Manhattan from Long Island City, will sit atop the Pepsi Porch. The sign will face into the ballpark and be visible from downtown Flushing and nearby highways and mass transit lines.


Posted


I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


Like the signage... mildly-- very mildly-- put off by the modern-Pepsi-dot-with-vintage-Pepsi-lettering juxtaposition of ad styles.

From the woulda-coulda-shoulda department: making the outfield "bridges" a little more evocative of the Triboro/Queensboro/Whitestone trifecta (not sure I buy the supposed Hell-Gate connection) would have made for a nice little architectural curlicue.


Guest OlerudOwned
Guests
Posted


Wouldn't have minded immersing my eyes in Pepsi at the ends of the last two seasons.


Posted


The language of such releases are all the same , jeez sounds like I'll have the expreince of my life if only I was sitting in the Pepsi porch.

I do like Pepsi though


Posted



Head groundskeeper Pete Flynn marks the baselines and grooms home plate at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)

Pinball machines in the Mets' new clubhouse at Citi Field. (Newsday / Audrey C. Tiernan / March 25, 2009)




Pepsi porch






I like the detail in the carpet.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


Those pinball machines are too close to the wall, and one another, to be playable.

However, I think can whip Jose Reyes' butt on either table.


Guest themetfairy
Guests
Posted


I love the pool table!


Posted


The pool table is coin operated?

You can buy any of these items in 35 years when the Mets move to a new stadium. I call dibs on the leather recliners.


Posted


I agree. It's garish. It's nice that they're honoring Shea with the neon players, but those big grey baseballs are hideous.

The first thing I'd do is replace that carpet with something with a blue-and-orange 1960's Shea Stadium shingle pattern.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


I'd do a pattern based on an acne-covered back.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


How does the warning track soil/clay stay packed like that?


Posted


="Benjamin Grimm":29ka38qg]I don't imagine that most fans will want to be "immersed in a Mets and Pepsi experience" while at the ballgame.

I know I wouldn't. I just want to watch the game, without any immersion at all.[/quote:29ka38qg]

Little known fact, the Jimi Hendrix Experience was originally known as the Mets and Pepsi Experience.







metirish
Apr 03 2009 01:04 PM


="soupcan"]Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?




Beautiful picture , one for the mantle I should think.

This story went with that picture in the NY Times

]

Mets Get a Late-Night Sneak Preview of Citi Field


By BEN SHPIGEL
Published: April 3, 2009

Out from the buses they spilled, marching through a gate, down a corridor and around a corner until, finally, there it was. Home. The Mets� shiny, new clubhouse awaited. And as Carlos Delgado poked his head inside at about 10:55 p.m. Thursday, he surveyed the sheer size of it all and said, �Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the big leagues.�

His teammates, arriving at Citi Field fresh off a flight from Florida that landed two and a half hours late, followed suit, each more mesmerized than the next. After locating his locker, Jos� Reyes opened a cabinet and wondered aloud how much clothes he could fit inside. Pedro Feliciano plopped into his ergonomic chair. Shaking his head, Razor Shines could manage only a �Wow.� Then he said it again.

�I�m overwhelmed,� Bobby Parnell said. �The other guys, they�re used to this.�

Their curiosity piqued, players wheeled their hand luggage to their lockers and started to explore. John Maine and Mike Pelfrey bounded down the steps, past the sprint track. �Mainer, you want to race?� Pelfrey said.

Ascending another set of stairs, they funneled into the dugout, joining Delgado and Carlos Beltr�n. Everyone looked up, almost instinctively, and then out, to the fences, scoping out the dimensions.

Ryan Church, pointing toward the 415-foot marker in right-center field, told Delgado, �I don�t think they made it deep enough.�

For the occasion, the lights had been turned on � �I should have brought sunscreen,� Darren O�Day said � and the grass glistened. But with rain in the forecast for Friday, when the Mets are scheduled to play Boston in an exhibition game, a tarp lay over the infield, preventing Johan Santana and friends from climbing the mound. Undeterred, many of the pitchers walked in the grass toward right-center, toward the bullpen, as quickly as their suits and dress shoes would allow them. Every few feet, J. J. Putz stopped, pointed the camera on his cellphone and snapped. The Mets occupy the bottom level of the two-tiered bullpen � just as the Phillies do in their ballpark � and the bullpen catcher Dave Racaniello wandered in. Assessing where the plate will be, he got into a crouch for a few seconds.


As �In My Life� by the Beatles played, the lights suddenly went out. All part of the plan, explained Jeff Wilpon, the team�s chief operating officer, as a montage of highlights, player introductions and construction footage played on the video screen. Luis Alicea, the first-base coach, spotted Wilpon and thanked him. �Beautiful,� Alicea told him. �Absolutely beautiful.�

When it ended, Wilpon escorted everyone into a tunnel behind the plate that led to the Jackie Robinson Rotunda. As workers took a break from polishing the terrazzo floors, Jerry Manuel and Sandy Alomar Sr. walked slowly, taking time to read each of Robinson�s nine values, which are inscribed in the floor. Behind them, Putz slipped his feet into Robinson�s footprints. They matched.

�Size 14,� Putz said.

On the way back inside, Howard Johnson took a detour to show two of his apt pupils, Nick Evans and Daniel Murphy, the video room and the batting cage. Murphy gazed through the window. The door was locked.

�Tomorrow,� Murphy said.








soupcan
Apr 03 2009 02:28 PM


Stole this from baseball-fever.com...









metirish
Apr 03 2009 02:30 PM


That needs a lot of dents in it.....too shiny.







Edgy DC
Apr 03 2009 02:38 PM


Needs a top hat is what it needs.

Strikes me that a cool reverence to the polo grounds could have been done by putting a recess in the wall out there.



Posted


="soupcan"]Delgado, last night.

Cool, huh?




Beautiful picture , one for the mantle I should think.

This story went with that picture in the NY Times

]

Mets Get a Late-Night Sneak Preview of Citi Field


By BEN SHPIGEL
Published: April 3, 2009

Out from the buses they spilled, marching through a gate, down a corridor and around a corner until, finally, there it was. Home. The Mets� shiny, new clubhouse awaited. And as Carlos Delgado poked his head inside at about 10:55 p.m. Thursday, he surveyed the sheer size of it all and said, �Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the big leagues.�

His teammates, arriving at Citi Field fresh off a flight from Florida that landed two and a half hours late, followed suit, each more mesmerized than the next. After locating his locker, Jos� Reyes opened a cabinet and wondered aloud how much clothes he could fit inside. Pedro Feliciano plopped into his ergonomic chair. Shaking his head, Razor Shines could manage only a �Wow.� Then he said it again.

�I�m overwhelmed,� Bobby Parnell said. �The other guys, they�re used to this.�

Their curiosity piqued, players wheeled their hand luggage to their lockers and started to explore. John Maine and Mike Pelfrey bounded down the steps, past the sprint track. �Mainer, you want to race?� Pelfrey said.

Ascending another set of stairs, they funneled into the dugout, joining Delgado and Carlos Beltr�n. Everyone looked up, almost instinctively, and then out, to the fences, scoping out the dimensions.

Ryan Church, pointing toward the 415-foot marker in right-center field, told Delgado, �I don�t think they made it deep enough.�

For the occasion, the lights had been turned on � �I should have brought sunscreen,� Darren O�Day said � and the grass glistened. But with rain in the forecast for Friday, when the Mets are scheduled to play Boston in an exhibition game, a tarp lay over the infield, preventing Johan Santana and friends from climbing the mound. Undeterred, many of the pitchers walked in the grass toward right-center, toward the bullpen, as quickly as their suits and dress shoes would allow them. Every few feet, J. J. Putz stopped, pointed the camera on his cellphone and snapped. The Mets occupy the bottom level of the two-tiered bullpen � just as the Phillies do in their ballpark � and the bullpen catcher Dave Racaniello wandered in. Assessing where the plate will be, he got into a crouch for a few seconds.


As �In My Life� by the Beatles played, the lights suddenly went out. All part of the plan, explained Jeff Wilpon, the team�s chief operating officer, as a montage of highlights, player introductions and construction footage played on the video screen. Luis Alicea, the first-base coach, spotted Wilpon and thanked him. �Beautiful,� Alicea told him. �Absolutely beautiful.�

When it ended, Wilpon escorted everyone into a tunnel behind the plate that led to the Jackie Robinson Rotunda. As workers took a break from polishing the terrazzo floors, Jerry Manuel and Sandy Alomar Sr. walked slowly, taking time to read each of Robinson�s nine values, which are inscribed in the floor. Behind them, Putz slipped his feet into Robinson�s footprints. They matched.

�Size 14,� Putz said.

On the way back inside, Howard Johnson took a detour to show two of his apt pupils, Nick Evans and Daniel Murphy, the video room and the batting cage. Murphy gazed through the window. The door was locked.

�Tomorrow,� Murphy said.



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