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  • Deflationary Newz

    Lowering Prices From Obscene to Outrageous

    (Enjoy the schadenfreude, Petertribo ;))

    DETROIT – It says something about the starting price of Yankees tickets that even the reduced rates announced on Tuesday are very, very high. Those $2,625 seats that sat empty during the first homestand? Now the Yankees are practically giving them away, for $1,250 each.

    Richard Sandomir has all the details here, and it’s a safe bet the Yankees must be embarrassed by having to make this decision. It turns out there is a limit on what even the wealthy public will pay to see the pinstripes.

    Look at the big picture for the Yankees so far, and it’s amazing they’re just a game under .500 with all that has gone wrong.

    ¶The new $1.5 billion stadium opened, and two topics overshadowed everything else: unfilled luxury seats within an instantly notorious concrete moat; and the jet stream to right field that produced more homers in the first six games than any other ballpark ever had.

    ¶The Yankees are paying $73 million to three players, and this is what they have to show for it: one victory by C.C. Sabathia, a .220 average by Mark Teixeira, and nothing from Alex Rodriguez but a steroids admission and a hip operation in spring training.

    ¶Horrendous losses on opening day in Baltimore and the home opener in New York, and 22-4 and 16-11 blowouts on the Fox “Saturday Game of the Week.”

    ¶Injury flare-ups from Hideki Matsui (age 34), Johnny Damon (age 35) and Jorge Posada (age 37), who is missing his second game in a row Tuesday night with a strained left hamstring.

    ¶A near-complete collapse of the bullpen (including an elbow injury to the top setup man, Brian Bruney) and a 6.18 E.R.A. by the pitching staff as a whole, worst in the majors.

    ¶The virtual abandonment of the Brett Gardner experiment in center field after three weeks and a .254 on-base percentage.

    ¶No decisions and a .306 opponents’ average in three starts by Joba Chamberlain, who has not quelled the Joba-to-the-bullpen chatter.
    ¶Chien-Ming Wang… well, you know about him.

    On the plus side, Robinson Cano and Andy Pettitte have been great, and Mark Melancon looks quite promising.

    http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/0...to-outrageous/

  • #2
    Re: Deflationary Newz

    They had already sold 3.5 million tickets before Tuesdays decision. The empty seats just looked bad on tv. If however the Yankees do not make the playoffs, both the G.M. Cashman, and the manager Girardi are toast.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Deflationary Newz

      Originally posted by don View Post
      Lowering Prices From Obscene to Outrageous

      (Enjoy the schadenfreude, Petertribo ;))

      DETROIT – It says something about the starting price of Yankees tickets that even the reduced rates announced on Tuesday are very, very high. Those $2,625 seats that sat empty during the first homestand? Now the Yankees are practically giving them away, for $1,250 each.

      Richard Sandomir has all the details here, and it’s a safe bet the Yankees must be embarrassed by having to make this decision. It turns out there is a limit on what even the wealthy public will pay to see the pinstripes.

      Look at the big picture for the Yankees so far, and it’s amazing they’re just a game under .500 with all that has gone wrong.

      ¶The new $1.5 billion stadium opened, and two topics overshadowed everything else: unfilled luxury seats within an instantly notorious concrete moat; and the jet stream to right field that produced more homers in the first six games than any other ballpark ever had.

      ¶The Yankees are paying $73 million to three players, and this is what they have to show for it: one victory by C.C. Sabathia, a .220 average by Mark Teixeira, and nothing from Alex Rodriguez but a steroids admission and a hip operation in spring training.

      ¶Horrendous losses on opening day in Baltimore and the home opener in New York, and 22-4 and 16-11 blowouts on the Fox “Saturday Game of the Week.”

      ¶Injury flare-ups from Hideki Matsui (age 34), Johnny Damon (age 35) and Jorge Posada (age 37), who is missing his second game in a row Tuesday night with a strained left hamstring.

      ¶A near-complete collapse of the bullpen (including an elbow injury to the top setup man, Brian Bruney) and a 6.18 E.R.A. by the pitching staff as a whole, worst in the majors.

      ¶The virtual abandonment of the Brett Gardner experiment in center field after three weeks and a .254 on-base percentage.

      ¶No decisions and a .306 opponents’ average in three starts by Joba Chamberlain, who has not quelled the Joba-to-the-bullpen chatter.
      ¶Chien-Ming Wang… well, you know about him.

      On the plus side, Robinson Cano and Andy Pettitte have been great, and Mark Melancon looks quite promising.

      http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/0...to-outrageous/
      Let's hope that things keep going just as well for the Steinbrenners and their team throughout the season and on into eternity.

      Comment

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