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Poll: Citi Field Outfield Fences


batmagadanleadoff

Poll: Citi Field Outfield Fences  

39 members have voted

  1. 1. Poll: Citi Field Outfield Fences

    • Yes
      11
    • No
      21
    • Undecided (I'm Sitting on the Fence on this one)
      7


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Posted


So you're getting on Rubin for posting stuff that we've known about for months, yet there must be something new here, otherwise Lennon and others, as you say, wouldn't have tweeted it yesterday.

And if it's worth reporting by them, why shouldn't Rubin report it too?

This thread is about the changes to Citi Field, not your peevishness towards Adam Rubin.


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Posted


Ceetar wrote:
Edgy DC wrote:
I don't know why you're putting that in quotes. He didn't write "most power."


sorry, in a hurry. he wrote "Natural" power, which is even more of a misrepresentation of how power hitters/hits work.

No, it isn't.


Posted


Yeah.

Take a lesson from the Astros. Too often you start off on the road to Quirky and end up in Goofy insetad.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
While I won't miss the Mo Zone either, I think I'll be most glad to see the end of the orange home run line that takes an arbitrary 90-degree turn.


Yeah, given the choice between changing the LF area or the RF I'd go with the LF first.
I have no particular beef with a far wall or a high wall - the problem with that one is that it's both. Plus I hate home-run lines, those are just asking for trouble.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


Looking forward to the new $ponsored gimmick for the extra seats they jam between the old and new fences.

Come and sit in the Wal-Mart Wall-Gap! Always the best seat in the house. Always! ($125 for Bronze games, 150 for Silver, $114.98 for Cubic Zirconium)


Posted



Source: Citi Field changes on tap

By Adam Rubin
ESPNNewYork.com

"... Alderson added at the time that offense sells. And the Mets need to fill seats, having experienced three straight seasons of declining attendance.

"We're not looking for an advantage with respect to home runs versus visitors' home runs," Alderson said last month. "


I'm not buying into Alderson's publicly stated reasons for changing Citi Field's dimensions. The organization, most likely, will move the fences in because it now believes that the changes will provide the Mets with a tactical game advantage over the present dimensions. And good for them. They're supposed to be looking for whatever edge they can get. But this idea that they're moving in the fences for us --- the fans ---is classic corporate speak where the organization does something primarily for their own self-interest and then claims that it was done mainly for us.


Ceetar wrote:
the 'most power' to right center is the misrepresentation. most of his power is to left. all _people_'s power is mostly to pull.


I don't know for sure where Wright presently hits most of his HR's, or what side of Citi Field is predominantly robbing Wright of HR's, but I wonder if you're confusing "power" with "tendencies". That a batter, all things being equal, can hit the ball farther when he pulls it, doesn't preclude that same batter from displaying the tendency to hit the ball to the opposite field with greater frequency than to the pull field. In any event, I'm positive that the Mets never specifically confirmed that they would move in their fences until the last day or two.


Posted


The point, and it should be obvious, is that Wright's marginal power is hedged to an uncertain degree with difficult power alleys in right and left center. While a typical player may indeed pull most of his homeruns, Wright --- like Strawberry (to a lesser extent) and Piazza before him --- had more success than most distributing them around the park.

Here are Wright's homeruns from 2007 --- perhaps his best year, despite going all of April with no homers, four doubles, a triple, and six RBI.


DateOppBallparkField
1-MayFLAShea StadiumRCF
3-MayARIBank One BallparkRF
11-MayMILShea StadiumLCF
14-MayCHCShea StadiumRF
19-MayNYYShea StadiumLF
19-MayNYYShea StadiumLCF
20-MayNYYShea StadiumRF
23-MayATLTurner FieldLF
7-JunPHIShea StadiumLCF
8-JunDETComerica ParkRF
9-JunDETComerica ParkLF
10-JunDETComerica ParkRF
27-JunSTLShea StadiumRCF
30-JunPHICitizens Bank ParkLCF
4-JulCOLCoors FieldLCF
7-JulHOUMinute Maid ParkLF
18-JulSDPPetCo ParkLF
21-JulLADDodger StadiumCF
2-AugMILMiller ParkRCF
9-AugATLShea StadiumLCF
11-AugFLAShea StadiumLF
11-AugFLAShea StadiumLCF
24-AugLADShea StadiumRF
29-AugPHIBank One BallparkCF
2-SepATLTurner FieldCF
3-SepCINThe Great American BallparkRF
6-SepPHIShea StadiumRF
8-SepHOUShea StadiumRCF
10-SepATLShea StadiumLCF
14-SepPHIShea StadiumLF


FieldTotal Kabooms
LF7
LCF8
CF3
RCF4
RF8


Posted


And a similar survey of this year's homers shows he's gone from hitting 50% of his homeruns from centerfield to the rightfield line to hitting 28.6% there.

DateOppBallparkField
24-AprARICitiFieldLF
24-AprARICitiFieldLF
16-SepATLTurner FieldLF
16-SepATLTurner FieldLCF
2-AprFLASun Life StadiumRF
11-AprCOLCitiFieldRF
21-AprHOUCitiFieldLCF
13-MayHOUMinute Maid ParkLF
24-JunFLASun Life StadiumLF
27-JunCINThe Great American BallparkCF
8-AugSDPCitiFieldLCF
17-AugSDPPetCo ParkLCF
24-AugPHACitizen's Bank ParkRF
2-SepWASNationals ParkLCF


FieldField
LF5
LCF5
CF1
RCF0
RF3


Posted


I've never bought into the argument that offense sells.

I don't have a problem with being honest and saying that there's a concern that free agent hitters won't want to come here. At least I totally understand that reason.

I wouldn't frame the argument in terms of any current Met players, though. The Mets have been coming up woefully short in the power department both at home and on the road, and the possibly exists that the people we've been expecting more home runs from just aren't that good anymore. I think it's incredibly naive to think that adjusting a wall will make certain players' lost ability miraculously reappear.


Posted


dgwphotography wrote:
That can also speak of a change in approach due to the dimensions in right field...


Certainly. But whatever the factors, his output has been negatively affected.

I'm not presenting this data to argue for this change. I'm saying it's a pretty well supported point that his homerun power the other way had been one of the things that had distinguished him, and that it's not been there as much.


Posted


Edgy DC wrote:
dgwphotography wrote:
That can also speak of a change in approach due to the dimensions in right field...


Certainly. But whatever the factors, his output has been negatively affected.

I'm not presenting this data to argue for this change. I'm saying it's a pretty well supported point that his homerun power the other way had been one of the things that had distinguished him, and that it's not been there as much.


I completely agree with all of these points.


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


Centerfield wrote:
Well done.

Now re-sign Reyes.


This will be the response to everything until it happens.

"Mets release partial plan info"

"Well done. Now re-sign Reyes."


Posted


This is supposed to be the new shit:



Based on what the team is 'saying,' using those plot points, this is basically how the wall would run (not curved) on a direct line.
by Matthew Cerrone 10:05 AM


Does that mean the wall will be curved or not? Who here speaks Cerrone?


Guest metsguyinmichigan
Guests
Posted


BLUE WALLS!!!


October 31, 2011 � The New York Mets today announced they are moving in portions of the outfield wall at Citi Field as much as 12 feet and lowering the height of the home run line to 8 feet throughout the outfield. The outfield wall will become blue in 2012 concurrent with the Mets 50th Anniversary season. The home run line and distance markers will remain orange.

The Mets will erect a new wall in leftfield starting between the New Era and Caesars signs and angled to the Citi sign in left-centerfield (see renderings). The new wall will be closer to home plate by approximately 4 feet in leftfield and up to approximately 12 feet in deep left-centerfield.

A new wall will start in right-centerfield and extend toward the bullpen, and be as much as approximately 11 feet closer to home plate. The fence in front of the Mo's Zone/Modell's Clubhouse will move in approximately 10 feet. The distances from home plate to centerfield and the foul poles in leftfield and rightfield will remain the same.

"We wanted to make Citi Field fair to both pitchers and hitters," said Mets General Manager Sandy Alderson.

"After conferring with Sandy and all members of his staff, Ownership concurred with the recommendation to change the dimensions at Citi Field," said Mets COO Jeff Wilpon. "We decided to change the outfield wall from black to Mets blue, which many of our fans have wanted."

As a result of moving the walls in, the Mets will create a unique seating section in leftfield between the new and existing wall to accommodate about 100 fans. The club will also expand the Modell's Clubhouse in rightfield to incorporate an outdoor seating area for approximately 40 additional fans.


Posted


Jeff Wilpon ... also maintained that the original impetus to design such a big playing field came from the previous Mets regime headed by Omar Minaya, who was the general manager from the 2005 season through 2010, when he was dismissed. He said the decision to make the changes came from Alderson.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/sports/baseball/mets-to-alter-dimensions-of-citi-field.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/sports/baseball/mets-to-alter-dimensions-of-citi-field.html



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