I Wear Pants wrote:
Maybe if it didn't cost a million dollars to go to a game people would give a shit.
The other major sports that cost a ton to attend at least have variety in the teams that dominate.
Baseball is dominated by the Yankees and Redsox every year so it gets boring.
You actually couldn't be more wrong with those statements.
Most teams have a few sections that are less than $10 and most have thousands of $20 or less seats. Hell the average ticket is only $22.21. The NFL averaged $58.95 most recently, the NBA $45.92, and the NHL $41.19. The Rangers themselves have the third cheapest ticket in baseball at a $15.81 average.
In the last 10 World Series there have been eight different winners. Yes, the Red Sox and Yankees were the two teams to repeat, but parity among champions is as good or better than any other sport. The NHL is the same with only the Devils and Red Wings winning two in the last ten years. The NFL has had seven different champions in the last ten years with one repeat (Pittspuke) and one three-peat (New England). And the most disparate, by a wide margin, is the NBA with only
three in the last ten years - Lakers six, Spurs three and Mavs one.
However, your statements bring up the biggest problem that baseball has - perception. It is the best value and most competitive sport out there, but many people think it is the opposite. Don't get me wrong, there are some real problems that need fixed, but like mentioned earlier some teams have it figured out even in small markets. They just have to have the desire and business accumen to make it happen.