Blog about my Ballparking Trips and reviews.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Tuscon Electric Park

Vacant

8/10

10,000 plus for the last D-Back home game at TEP.
This park was an excellent venue for spring training games.
This place was jammed.
I went to my one and likely only game at then Tucson Electric Park in 2010, during Spring Training. The Arizona Diamondbacks played their last game as a full-time tenant here against the Milwaukee Brewers. I dragged my stepfather out here, as he wanted to take me to the Pima County Air Museum and I shoehorned him into going to the game as well. I had to agree to leave early, but a deal was struck.

We arrived early enough, but got stuck in a large line to park, had to buy tickets(military buy 1, get one free, yay!) and got inside in the 2nd inning. Stayed for 5 innings, then left at the end of 7, to beat the crowd.

I thought from a baseball standpoint, the park was well laid out, concessions were good and not very expensive, but we only had some light fare(Ice Cream Sandwiches and perhaps some Beer). It's a relatively straightforward layout with a wraparound concourse, a decent view of some nearby mountains and a 2nd level with some shaded seating.

This stadium is a somewhat cautionary tale. The spring tenants left for Phoenix when that trend continued. The Sidewinders suffered from low attendance, because of Tucson's 100+ degree summers. The AAA Padres were clearly a temporary resident and struggled to draw over 2,500 in their three seasons here. Now, it hosts 4th tier soccer(sometimes) and two or three Cactus league games a season. This was strictly a location issue, as the park itself is new and at the time of its being yanked, was still better than at least 2 of the stadiums in the Phoenix area.

 Overall, this is still a relatively nice park, with the location being the main reason that someone isn't training here. The capacity crowd was a strain on everything, but it was still an enjoyable place to catch a game. Hopefully someone will move back in here soon, but with the Arizona summer being what it is, Spring Training is the only thing that seemed to work.


Update 2018:  I still have not been back here, but since my last review, another tenant has come and gone. The Pecos League put the Tucson Saguaros here and while the team played well, baseball in the summer heat of Tucson just didn't sell to anyone and with sparse crowds, the expense of playing here just wasn't justified. They will move to a city park with a capacity of around 1,000 for this year. The team only played here Thursday-Saturday, with Sunday home games in nearby Bisbee, although this year, Sundays will be in Winslow, 4.5 hours away.  The park is known as Kino Veteran's Stadium again, after the sponsorship deal with Tucson Electric expired.

Pima County, who own the facility, made a push at the end of 2017 to have the Milwaukee Brewers relocate their Spring Training here from Maryvale, after a possible new park in Gilbert, on the east end of Phoenix, fell through. This doesn't appear to have gotten any traction, as the Brewers are reportedly now negotiating a long term lease to stay in Maryvale, which I'm glad to hear about.

I would give this place a point for facility, if only barely, so it remains an 8.

Linescore:
                      123    456    789   RHE
Milwaukee       000    000    100   1XX
Arizona           104    100     21x  9XX

Temp: N/A  Time:  N/A   Att: 10,009 

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Ballpark of the Palm Beaches

Houston Astros, Washington Nationals (Spring Training)

8/10 

The weather in Florida was borderline stupendous the entire time I was there.

There isn't an easily photographed entrance around here. Any further back and the posts would have obstructed everything.

Looking in on my walkaround.


I came here in 2017, the year it had opened. Both the Astros and Nationals had moved here,out of older parks in Kissimmee and Viera. The park was brand new, built midway between the Florida Turnpike and I-95 about 100km north of downtown Miami. It's obviously a pretty nice, new, clean park. In terms of it's extravagance, I'd rate it somewhere above parks like Goodyear or Surprise, but below other new parks like Sloan Park or JetBlue. Come to think of it, it compares nicely to Camelback Ranch. Anyhow, parking is in a field off to the one side, I cannot remember if it cost anything. There are a few fountains on the paths to the park surrounded by ponds, marked with signs warning of alligators.

There's not really an entrance to speak of, just some signage over a gate along the third base side. The concourse and aisles are roomy and the concourse is wrap around, which is practically a requirement these days. The food menu was pretty average, with some favourites from D.C.(I think), but nothing memorable. I saw Ichiro live for probably the final time and Bryce Harper silence the "overrated" chant from one guy(and only one guy) by promptly hitting a homerun.

On the whole, I'd give this place an extra point for the facility, although maybe a half for the Nationals' fans bringing some of their quirkier cheers. I'd go back here for sure. 


Linescore
                       123     456    789   RHE
Miami               000    020    000   270
Washington      000     001   100    230
Time: 2:33 Temp: N/A Att: 4,004