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"Ballparks should be happy places." -- Bill Veeck

Detroit Tigers Tickets from Ticket Express

Enjoy Detroit Tigers Tickets for home games at Comerica Park


Recent Visits


Al Lang Field, Tampa Bay Rays
St. Pete's Al Lang Field has been in the news a lot lately, but for the wrong reasons: the Tampa Bay Rays will train there one last time in 2008 before shifting spring operations to Charlotte County in 2009, and the old ballpark is slated to be torn down to make way for a new waterfront home of the Rays. Now, Al Lang Field isn't the same venue it was in the 1940s and 1950s when it was a landmark in spring training, but it's still a great place to catch a spring-training game. We hope the Rays catch the spirit of the original Al Lang in their designs for a new ballpark, For the rest of us, a trip to Al Lang Field will be a mandatory event in Spring Training 2008.


Trustmark Park, Mississippi Braves
There's nothing wrong with Trustmark Park, the home of the Mississippi Braves (Class AA; Southern League). The wraparound concourse, luxury boxes, big scoreboard and varied concessions are all standard issue for a new minor-league ballpark these days. So why aren't we more excited about the two-year-old ballpark? Because there's nothing unique about it: except for a few Southern menu items at the concessions, there's nothing to link the ballpark to its surroundings. At a Mississippi Braves game, you could be watching a game anywhere -- and going local is one of the great joys of the minor leagues. Dustin Mattison reports.


Alliance Bank Stadium, Syracuse Chiefs
The biggest news at Alliance Bank Stadium, the home of the Syracuse Chiefs (Class AAA; International League): the current artificial turf will be replaced by real grass. That's good news for Syracuse baseball fans in terms of aesthetics, as well as players who need to field on an old, sometimes unpredictable surface. Otherwise, Alliance Bank Stadium is a perfectly serviceable ballpark: the Chiefs front office does things the old-fashioned way (i.e., not much in terms of between-innings shenanigans), but the ballpark is a comfortable place to watch a game, and the food is pretty good. Steve Kapsinow reports.

Features

2008 Ballparks
Billings
Lehigh Valley
Madison, Wis.
  (renovations)
Springdale, Ark.
Southern Maryland
Washington, D.C.

2009 Ballparks
Charlotte County, Fla.
Columbus, Ohio
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Glendale, Az.
Goodyear, Az.
Kansas City
 
(renovations)
LSU
New York Mets
New York Yankees

Pensacola, Fla.
University of South
  Carolina
Winston-Salem

2010 Ballparks
Minnesota Twins

2012 Ballparks
Oakland Athletics

Ballparks of the Past
Colt Stadium
Crosley Field
Durham Athletic
  
Park
Ebbets Field
Griffith Stadium
Huntington Avenue
  
Grounds
Jack Russell
Jarry Park
L.A. Coliseum
Metropolitan
 
Stadium

Muehlebach Field
Municipal Stadium
 
(Kansas City)

Sicks' Stadium
Tinker Field
War Memorial
 
(Greensboro)

Photo Galleries
Piedmont League

Book Excerpts
The Last Good Season

2007 Attendance
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  By team
  Affiliated - average
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  Indy - average
  Indy - total

  MLB - total
  MLB - average

2006 Attendance
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  Affiliated - average
  Affiliated - league
  Affiliated - total
  Indy - average
  Indy - total

2005 Attendance
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2004 Attendance
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall

2003 Attendance
  MLB attendance
  By league
  League overview
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall

2002 Attendance
  By league
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall

The Fine Print
Obligatory legal information: This site is copyright 1998-2007 Kevin Reichard/August Publications. All rights reserved. My wife is a lawyer, so she will come and chop off your hand in a legal fashion if you rip off this site in any form. All logos are the property of their respective owners.
Broadcasts
Virtually every MiLB team now streams broadcasts over the Internet, which makes it easy to follow your favorite team when you're on the road. In addition, you can catch MLB game broadcasts at MLB.com or via XM Radio. More on Internet radio and TV broadcasts here!
Archives
2007
Nov. 12-18
Nov. 5-11
Oct. 29-Nov. 4
Oct. 22-28
Oct. 15-21
Oct. 8-14
Oct. 1-7
Sept. 24-30
Sept. 17-23
Sept. 10-16
Sept. 2-8
Aug. 26-Sept. 1
Aug. 19-25
Aug. 12-18
Aug. 5-11
July 29-Aug. 4
July 22-28
July 15-21
July 8-14
July 1-7
June 24-30
June 17-23
June 10-19
June 3-9
May 27-June 2
May 20-26
May 13-19
May 6-12
April 30-May 5
April 23-29
April 16-22
April 9-15
April 2-8
March 26-April 1
March 19-25
March 12-18
March 5-11
Feb. 26-March 4
Feb. 19-25
Feb. 12-18
Feb. 5-11
Jan. 29-Feb. 4
Jan. 22-28
Jan. 15-21
Jan. 8-14
Jan. 1-7

2006
2005
2004
2003
2002

Comerica Park / Detroit Tigers

(click on the image for a larger photo)
 
Year Opened 2000
Capacity 40,950
Owner Detroit-Wayne County Stadium Authority
Architects HOK Sport (General), Rockwell Design Group (Themed Architecture)
Construction Hunt-Turner-White
Dimensions 345L, 370LC, 425C, 365RC, 330R
Original Cost $300 million
Playing Surface Grass
Last Visit 2007
Web Site mlb.com
Online Broadcasts Yes
Online Ticket Sales Yes
Phone 313/962-4000
Ticket Prices (2007) On-Deck Circle, $65; Tiger Den, $60; Infield Box, $40; Terrace, $35; Outfield Box, $30; Club Seats, $25; Upper Box, $20; Right Field Grandstand, $20; Mezzanine, $15; Pavilion, $15; Upper Reserved, $12; Bleachers, $10; Skyline, $5
League American League
Parking Lots near the ballpark charge between $5 and $20
Address/Directions 2100 Woodward Ave. Detroit, MI 48201. The ballpark is located in downtown Detroit, so basically if you head downtown via M-10 or I-375 you'll hit the ballpark.
Written by: Dave Wright
Photos by: Jim Robins
Rating


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A spacious main entryway opens to the stadium concourse and “Big Cat” food court.

Succeeding a local legend is never easy. In 1992, Bob Rathbun and Rick Rizzs were announced as the new radio broadcasting tandem for the Detroit Tigers. Both were fine announcers with long pedigrees. Unfortunately, they were replacing the beloved Ernie Harwell, the Hall of Fame voice who had been behind the mike for decades as the Voice of the Tigers. (Harwell had been fired as part of a series of foolish moves instigated by then-team president Bo Schembechler.)

From the start, the pair was roasted in the press and in the public. Although they lasted three years together, the joy in town was immense when Harwell returned in 1995. (Rathbun now calls games for Atlanta of the NBA and Rizzs is one of the voices of the Mariners.)

It’s an instructive way to introduce the current Tigers’ home park. Judged on its own merits, Comerica Park, which opened for business in 2000, is a perfectly fine facility. 

Yet, in the minds of many Detroiters, it suffers from the simple fact that it is not Tiger Stadium, where the club held court for 87 seasons.

In many ways, Comerica could be considered the anti-Tiger Stadium. It is as if team owner Mike Ilitch, who coughed up 62 percent of the ballpark’s $300-million price tag, gave the architects this instruction: Go to Tiger Stadium and take notes. If I see one thing that looks like the old park, you’re fired.

Traditionalists may decry this but the fact remains that a lot of what occurs at and around Comerica is a significant improvement over the old place.

Parking can be a bit of a problem. Most lots near the park went for $15-20. This is, remember, downtown Detroit so it is advised to have a pre-game plan where to park, how to get there and how to get out. But things have gone smoothly the two times I visited.


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Whereas Tiger Stadium’s direct neighborhood offered little of interest (and a lot to worry about), Comerica is located in the vibrant theater district in downtown Detroit. While it is seriously advised to know where you’re going, there is a lot happening around the ballparks. Several excellent bars and restaurants are within a block or two of the park. (Hockeytown Café, across the street from Comerica, is the best known of these places. Its reputation is well earned but can be hard to get into on gameday. Looking for a smaller place to have a cold beer and a good burger/hot dog at a lesser price? Pop into the Ellwood Grill, located behind the right-field fence near Ford Field.)


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Tucked behind the centerfield wall is a popular before-game hangout -- the Elwood Grill.

From the time you get near the gates of the park, you are quickly aware Ilitch wanted it to be more than just a ballpark with nooks and crannies.

Outside the park is a giant Tiger statue and a smaller one of Harwell, the peppery 81-year old who still pops in occasionally to call an inning or two of a game and writes a column for a local newspaper. Inside are non-traditional baseball entities such as a Ferris Wheel and a Carousel. There are times where one isn’t sure if he is visiting a ballpark or the Michigan State Fair.


(click on the image for a larger photo)
Is it a fair? Is it a shopping mall? No, it’s the food court at Comerica.

Interested in eating and drinking? There are concession stands everywhere. Some deals are better than others (The pepperoni pizza – Little Caesar’s, naturally – is a pretty good deal at $2.75. You can take your pick of other edibles at a large food court. Frisch’s Big Boy, a well-known Midwest restaurant chain, offers its trademark double burger for $5.50. They even offer a Kosher Hot Dog that is quite tasty.) I couldn’t keep track of how many different beers were available. Some are fairly expensive (a large Labatt’s goes for $8.50) but smaller tap beers were available for five bucks. Care to go a little harder? Have a daiquiri. Fancy a good smoke? Head to the Cigar Bar above Section 113.

Missed last night’s game? Pick up a free Detroit News. Want to take home a unique souvenir? The team actually has a jewelry table (and a catalog) that offered everything from pendants to an expensive copy ($3,700) of the ring given to the 2006 AL champs. There are a lot of souvenir stands. There are five separate merchandise outlets inside the ballpark, as it seemed like every player who ever wore the old English D had a signed baseball for sale.

In a betting mood? There are lottery machines that offer payoffs as high as $100,000.


(click on the image for a larger photo)

All this diversion from the game on the field is somewhat understandable when you remember that, before the remarkable turnaround that led to winning the 2006 AL flag, the Tigers had 12 consecutive seasons under .500. In their last year at their old home, they finished 27½ games out of first place. In 2003, they barely avoided history as the worst team in modern history by winning three of their last four games to finish 43-119, a game better than the 1962 New York Mets.

Perhaps as a salve to relieve the pain of watching the team on the field in the first few years of Comerica, the Tigers went whole hog reliving their past. Walk underneath the stands and you’ll find several displays with stories of the team’s 100-plus year history, noting the good years and bad. Even in their bad times, Detroit had a series of colorful players, ranging from Ron LeFlore, who was paroled from prison to play for Detroit (and eventually led the league in stolen bases) to Mark Fidrych, who talked to the baseball en route to winning 19 games as a rookie for a 69-92 team in 1976.


Twenty years at a time, the Decades Monuments pay tribute to Tigers’ achievements along the main concourse. Kirk Gibson famously celebrates his eighth-inning Game Five 1984 World Series homer off of the Padres’ Goose Gossage.

Since there is so much to see and do before you go to your seat, one was ready for the worst when entering the actual stands. Surprisingly, the inside of the place isn’t that bad. True, the ticket prices are a little higher than some teams ($60-65 around home plate) but I found a perfectly acceptable seat six rows from the field for $30 down the right field line. The center- and right-field bleachers (where the team has sold several season tickets) is a decent deal at $10. (Left field, which is up a little higher and under the main scoreboard, runs $15)


(click on the image for a larger photo)
Intimacy can be found at Comerica Park.

There is, however, one notable difference from its predecessor. Tiger Stadium was known for its lower deck angling close to the field. Or at least it seemed that way. If you land in the second level of the lower deck at Comerica, you are far away from the action. The good news is most of this seating area have a small table area between the seats to place drinks, programs, etc. The upper deck runs several rows but is not as high in the sky as some parks like, say, U.S. Cellular in Chicago.

There is stuff to see inside the park as well. Several statues and plaques honoring former Tiger greats abound everywhere. There are two huge cars sitting on the batter’s eye in center field. The city’s skyline looks nice behind the outfield wall. There are a few between-innings promotions and a new, nifty video board in right field to track out-of-town scores and game information.


(click on the image for a larger photo)
A leaping Al Kaline is among the row of Hall of Fame sculptures found beyond the fence in right-center.

Tiger Stadium’s main claim to fame was its reputation as a home-run park along with some quirky dimensions. There is no overhang in right field here and the flagpole isn’t in play. The team moved fences in a few years ago – and longball totals have dramatically increased. (This gives you more chances to see one of the park’s most enjoyable features – a huge Tiger whose eyes begin to glow when the home team hits a home run. One wonders if the eyes burned out last October when Magglio Ordonez hit the ninth-inning shot that sent the team to the World Series.)


(click on the image for a larger photo)

For years, the Tigers’ marketing techniques were as poor as their on-field play. They have stepped that up regard considerably and it shows. The vendors visited the box seats often. Ushers did a solid job of controlling traffic but allowed youngsters a chance to get close to the field prior to game time. There are a few interesting between-innings diversions and plenty of good customer service.

Comerica Park is never going to be as beloved or as celebrated as Tiger Stadium. It is a ballpark Donald Trump might like because there seems to be an endless font of ways for people to spend money. Ilitch looked at his club’s past and decided it had merit as a first course to the main meal. Traditionalists may not like the place but c’est la vie. The Tigers have learned that you can’t win the pennant every year but you can always find a new revenue source. As long as the person buying it is happy, what’s the problem?


(click on the image for a larger photo)
The lower-quality brickwork for Ford Field across the street from Comerica does not quite match. Renaissance Center looms in the distance.


(click on the image for a larger photo)
The plaque memorializing Ty Cobb, erected at Tiger Stadium in 1963, migrated to Comerica in 2005.

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In memoriam: Matt Minker

New name for Grasshoppers home: NewBridge Bank Park

Ballpark Visits

Current (by team)
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Current (by ballpark)
Alexian Field
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Ballpark at Harbor Yard
Banner Island Ballpark
Baseball Grounds of
  
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Bright House
  
Networks Field
Burlington Athletic

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Busch Stadium
C.O. Brown Stadium
Campbell's Field
CanWest Global Park
Carson Park
Cashman Field
Centene Stadium
Chase Field
Cheney Stadium
Chukchansi Park
Citizens Bank Park
Clark-LeClair Stadium
Comerica Park
Cooper Stadium
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Copeland Park
Cracker Jack Stadium
Damaschke Field
Dell Diamond
Dickey-Stephens Park
Doak Field at Dail Park
Dodger Stadium
Dolphins Stadium
Duncan Park Stadium
Durham Bulls
  
Athletic Park
Ed Smith Stadium
Elfstrom Stadium
Ernie Shore Field
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Fieldcrest Cannon
  
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   (Dayton)
Fifth Third Field
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Fox Cities Stadium
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Kauffman Stadium
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Stadium
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Stadium
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Arlington
Riverfront Stadium
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Russell C. King Field

SBC Park
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Sioux Falls Stadium
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T.R. Hughes Ballpark
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Trustmark Park
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U.S. Cellular Field
Veterans Memorial
  
Stadium
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Wade Stadium
Warner Park
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Wrigley Field

Wuerfel Park
Yale Field
Yankee Stadium

Spring Training
Ballparks
Al Lang Field
Bright House
  
Networks Field
Champion Stadium
Ed Smith Stadium
Hammond Stadium
HoHoKam Park
Holman Stadium
Joker Marchant
  
Stadium
Knology Park
Legends Field
Roger Dean Stadium
Scottsdale Stadium
Space Coast Stadium
Tucson Electric Park

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