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The 2009 All-Star Game Highlights from baseball’s big event, including the Home Run Derby and the rosters for the AL and NL teams. more photos |
NEW YORK - Baseball heads toward the All-Star break with most teams still in contention for a playoff spot and more fans deciding it's just not worth the money to watch the races unfold in person.
The game's top story in 2009 — at least, so far — is the economy. It's not a pretty tale.
For all of Major League Baseball, average attendance was down 6.2 percent through Thursday, even with many teams offering discounts to battle the recession. An Associated Press-Knowledge Networks poll released this week found 63 percent of fans think the cost of a game is baseball's biggest problem.
The new Yankee Stadium became Exhibit A for baseball in the downturn, with front-row seats in the plush new park going empty at up to $2,625 each, and only the opener selling out among the first 42 games. Things weren't a lot better across town at the new Citi Field, where tickets topped out at $495 and the Mets sold out only five of their first 43 home games.
Get past the money, and achievements on the field still had trouble turning attention away from another old scourge — performance-enhancing drugs. Manny Ramirez and Alex Rodriguez became the latest big-name players implicated.
When the focus finally shifted to the diamond, though, there was lots to see.
Randy Johnson (300 wins) and Mariano Rivera (500 saves) achieved major milestones, while only Joe Torre's Los Angeles Dodgers led a division by more than five games.
Baseball officials, of course, have been watching the economy closely. To them, the news isn't all bad.
"I would think we've been very pleased with the reaction of our fans, very pleased with the reactions of our sponsors," MLB chief operating officer Bob DuPuy said. Part of the attendance drop, they note, has been caused by lower seating capacities in both New York stadiums.
Some players had a different take.
"I know the cost of building these megastadiums that we have right now, with all kinds of different forms of entertainment — steakhouses within the stadiums, museums within the stadiums," Los Angeles Angels outfielder Gary Matthews Jr. said.
"The fans have a choice — to buy tickets or not buy tickets. With the economy the way it is in general, you're seeing people priced out of certain forms of entertainment."
Even Tiger Woods took notice.
"We don't want to have what happened at Yankee Stadium," he said at the AT&T National, which he hosted. "Tickets are so overpriced that you can't bring the family."
Attendance drops in some places are trickling down to the field. The Chicago White Sox have seen average attendance fall nearly 9 percent this season and might not be able to make a trade that adds significant payroll.
"Well, if I'm being completely honest, money is more of the issue now. We expected a little more support than we've gotten," general manager Kenny Williams said. "I think it's a reflection upon the economy."
MLB also has been dealing with the pending sale of the Chicago Cubs from Tribune Co. to the Ricketts family and loans to the parent company of the Texas Rangers.
Meanwhile, aside from money, drugs are still a big issue.
A-Rod's February admission that he used steroids from 2001-03 and Ramirez's 50-game suspension for use of a banned female fertility drug sparked outrage among commentators, but fans — at least, Yankees and Dodgers fans — seemed to have little trouble forgiving and moving on.
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Only three teams entered the first half's final weekend more than 10 games over .500: the Dodgers in the NL, and the Boston Red Sox and Yankees in the AL. And 23 of the 30 teams entered Friday within eight games of a playoff spot.
"If people are talking about wild card before midseason, it's got to be good for baseball," San Francisco Giants closer Brian Wilson said. "It gets the fans into it. It gives the team something to look forward to, even though maybe you shouldn't be concentrating on certain things like that. It's almost like in a race, if you can keep yourself within the distance of that guy, you're running for something."
SportsTalk: Albert Pujols signs with the Angels and Prince Fielder joins the Tigers. Which team is better now?
DeMarco: Plug in a well-heeled ownership group and negotiate one of those mega-bucks TV deals that are going around, and the Dodgers could become the west coast version of the New York Yankees or Boston Red Sox.
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