Friday, April 21, 2023

200 Is the New 300

After Oklahoma and Texas, the final stop on my Easter vacation trip was Los Angeles.  Unfortunately, I did not get to see Clayton Kershaw pitch while I was there.  He won his 199th career game in San Francisco while I was in Texas.  And he won his 200th game back at Dodger Stadium when I was back in New York.  I have no been to 13 games at Dodger Stadium, all during Kershaw’s career.  Sadly, Kershaw has only pitched in one of them.  Fortunately, it was a really good one.  While it would be awesome to get more opportunities to see him pitch at Dodger Stadium, I have gotten to see him pitch in other places ten times. I’ve seen him pitch a bunch of great games at Citi Field (the best of those was in 2015), another great one at Citizens Bank Park, and solid starts at Nationals Park (before the blog, but here’s the box score) and Yankee Stadium.  As I covered in my last post, he’s one of the top five left-handed pitchers of all time.  But where does he rank in Dodger history?

I think based on just regular season performance, Clayton Kershaw has passed Sandy Koufax as the best player to ever play for the Dodgers.  It took me a long time to feel comfortable saying that, but when you combine 2011-2017 for Kershaw stacking up pretty well against 1961-1966 for Koufax plus Kershaw’s longevity clearly surpassing Koufax, I think Kershaw has him beat at the best player ever for the Dodgers.  But I would still call Koufax the greatest Dodger ever because he was part of four World Series Champions (although barely part of the team in 1955) and he was just ridiculous in the World Series in 1963 and 1965 (two World Series MVPs with complete game shutouts in Games 5 and 7 of the 1965 World Series).  Kershaw doesn’t get enough credit for the really good games he’s pitched in the playoffs (there are a lot of them, but people want to focus on the other ones).  But Kershaw has only won one World Series so far (hopefully there will be more).  So while he doesn’t match up with Koufax in the postseason, let’s not forget that Kershaw should have two championships and he was awesome in the 2017 World Series in the 11 innings he pitched at Dodger Stadium (one run with 15 strikeouts, five hits, and two walks) when the Astros weren’t able to cheat and he was really good in the 2020 World Series.  He was 2-0 with a 2.31 ERA and 0.86 WHIP. He had a dominant performance in Game 1 and a gritty performance in Game 5 (two runs in 5 and two-thirds) in a game they probably needed to win (the series was tied 2-2 and after the way they lost Game 4, they probably would have lost the series if they lost Game 5).  If not for Corey Seager, he might have been the MVP.


While Kershaw is no longer the pitcher he was from 2011-2017, he is still very good and will occasionally show flashes of what he was like back then.  He was fantastic against the Mets to get his 200th win.  He’s got a chance to pass Don Drysdale for second in franchise history this season (209).  He will most likely need at least two more years after this year to pass Don Sutton for the franchise record (233).  If he wants to keep pitching and can stay relatively healthy (like making 18-25 starts per year), he could definitely get there (he’s 35 years old), but it seems like it’s a year to year thing with him at this point.  But also, like Koufax, his win total is pretty much irrelevant at this point.  They’re two of the top five left-handed pitchers in the history of baseball and they are both clearly ahead of Don Sutton in terms of where they rank in Dodgers history even if Sutton has the franchise wins record.  The big number for pitchers was 300 wins.  I don’t think we’re going to have another pitcher win 300 games again unless there’s a change in the way the game is played.  Justin Verlander is the active leader with 244, but he’s 40 years old.  The only other active pitchers ahead of Kershaw are Zack Greinke with 223 (39 years old) and Max Scherzer with 203 (38 years old).  The first active pitchers on the list younger than Kershaw are Madison Bumgarner (33, but just designated for assignment) and Gerritt Cole (32) at 134 wins each.  So 300 is not looking likely anytime soon.


I’ve seen five of those 200 in person and none of his  88 losses.  I’ve also seen six no-decisions (the Dodgers are 5-1 in those games).

Anyway, I got to California on Thursday afternoon and Sean picked me up at Burbank (I try to avoid LAX at all costs) and it was a relaxing day.  It would have been nice if the Dodgers had a home game, but they had a day off after winning a series in San Francisco.  The one California-y thing I did was get In-N-Out.  I think the last time I had In-N-Out was four years ago.  It feels like something I should do any time I’m in California.  It ended up being good to just relax because I was pretty tired from not getting a lot of sleep with my travels over the previous few days.


On Friday, I had some plans.  My first stop was USC.  I went to see two of my former students, Patrick and Briana.  I taught Patrick for three out of four years and Briana for four straight years.  They go to USC and I don’t have anything bad to say about them so that tells you what kind of people they are (we’ll get to USC people who I have something bad to say about at the end of this post).  I’m looking forward to when Briana graduates and gets a job with the Dodgers (pretty much the whole reason she went to USC).  Along with Lorenzo (who I would see later in the day), they rank ahead of 2008 NBA Champion Brian Scalabrine (1.8 points per game in 48 regular season games and 0 games played in the playoffs that year, but he is still a beloved Celtic) and 2020 World Series Champion pitching coach Mark Prior on the very short list of USC people that I like.  Anyway, we had talked about the possibility of doing a Dodger Stadium tour, but that didn’t work with Briana’s class schedule.  So I just met up with them a little after 2:00 and they showed me around.  We started at the Our Savior Parish/USC Caruso Catholic Center.  Then we got lunch and walked around the campus.  It was cool seeing the baseball stadium, which included the Mark Prior Bullpen.  I haven’t been to many college baseball stadiums, but I do know that there’s a wide range of college baseball stadiums.  Some are like minor league stadiums and some feel closer to high school fields (Notre Dame’s definitely isn’t like a high school field, but it also doesn’t feel much like a minor league stadium).  USC’s stadium definitely had the feel of a minor league stadium.  So it was good to see Patrick and Briana.  Sean picked me up from USC and we were off to the Dodger game with a stop at Philippe’s.


Much like Mr. Feeny teaching Corey, Topanga, and Shawn, I just kept teaching them every year.  Unlike Corey, Topanga, and Shawn with Mr. Feeny, they didn’t need me.  A trained monkey could have been their teacher and they would have done well. 

We met Lorenzo at Philippe’s.  It’s only like a mile to Dodger Stadium so it’s a good place to stop on the way to a Dodger game.  I think this was my third or fourth time at Philippe’s.  I first heard of Philippe’s from Man v. Food.  It’s where the French dip sandwich was invented.  There are different options for meat, bread, and cheese and you can choose single dip, double dip, or wet.  I went with the beef on a French roll with cheddar cheese and wet.  It was excellent.  Wet might have been a little too messy, though. I’d probably go with double dip if I ever go again. Unlike anywhere else I went on my trip, they had real mustard.  It would be awesome if they had a Philippe’s stand at Dodger Stadium.  At the very least, they should have Philippe’s mustard as an option.  I’ve never had it on a hot dog, but I would like to try it on something other than a Philippe’s sandwich.  It’s a unique mustard.  There’s yellow mustard (which, as I’ve covered before, isn’t mustard), honey mustard, Dijon, spicy brown, etc.  I’m partial to spicy brown.  Philippe's mustard is spicy, but it’s kind of an orange color.  I can take a lot of spicy brown mustard without much difficulty, but you have to be careful with the Philippe’s mustard.  I added a small amount to my sandwich.  After Philippe’s, we were off to Dodger Stadium.


We got to the stadium in the 6:15-6:30 range.  I wanted to go in through the center field gate because I hadn’t seen the Sandy Koufax statue yet.  Jackie Robinson was the first to get a statue and rightfully so as he’s the most important player in baseball history.  Now Sandy Koufax has a statue also.   It was cool to see the Koufax statue.  The next statue (and probably the last one until Kershaw gets one some day) should be Vin Scully.  When Koufax’s statue was unveiled last year, Vin wasn’t there, which was probably a sign that he wasn’t doing too well.  When I heard that he died last August, I was as sad as I possibly could be about somebody who I never met dying.  I covered how much I miss him back in October. He was the greatest broadcaster of all time and probably the most beloved figure in the history of the Dodgers.  I was wearing my Vin Scully shirt to the game since it was my first one at Dodger Stadium since he died, but it was in the 50s so I kept my sweatshirt on the whole time.


The Dodgers are two for two on statues.  You could have made the case for Vin Scully getting one before Koufax, but I think Vin probably would have been against the idea.  But now, the Vin Scully statue should get announced on the anniversary of his death and then unveiled next year.

After checking out the Koufax statue, we went up to the loge level because there’s one stand with a very good craft beer selection.  I know about that stand from my last couple of trips to Dodger Stadium, but they really need to do a better job of making good beer widely available throughout the stadium.  When I was there in 2021, I got Kershaw's Wicked Curve, which was from the Buzzrock Brewing Company in Torrance, California.  I had to get it because of the name, but it was legitimately good and I would drink it again even if it wasn’t named after my favorite player.  They didn’t have that one this year so I got another beer named after one of my favorite players, Andre Ethier’s Walk Off Blonde from the Tarantula Hills Brewery in Thousand Oaks, California.  It wasn’t as good as Kershaw’s Wicked Curve, but it was good and again, I would drink it again even if it wasn’t named after Andre Ethier.  Then we were headed up to our seats.  I stopped to get a Dodger Dog.  There are other food options, but if I’m only going to get to one Dodger game this year, I had to have a Dodger Dog.  Philippe’s and Dodger Dogs were a good way to celebrate Meat Friday after Lent.  Sadly, yellow mustard was the only option.  I know I’ve had real mustard at Dodger Stadium in the past, but the last couple of times I’ve been there, it’s only been yellow mustard.  I’m going to have to try to find some real mustard packets to smuggle into the game the next time I get back to Dodger Stadium.


I had that whole pregame schedule planned because I didn’t want to miss three innings of the game standing in line for food and beer now that the pitch clock is shortening games.  I got back to my seat from the Dodger Dog stand just in time for the Cody Bellinger tribute video.  It was awesome being there for Cody Bellinger’s first game back at Dodger Stadium.  Justin Turner, Kenley Jansen, and Kiké Hernandez haven’t returned to Dodger Stadium yet.  Joc Pederson and Corey Seager have.  Along with Bellinger, all of those guys should always get a good reception at Dodger Stadium for what they did throughout their time with the Dodgers.  I think everybody would have hoped for more from Cody Bellinger as a Dodger after he was Rookie of the Year in 2017 and MVP in 2019, but besides that, he was the 2018 NLCS MVP, he made a great catch to take a two-run home run away from Fernando Tatis that would have given the Padres a 5-4 lead in the playoffs in 2020 in Game 2 of that series, he hit the home run that gave the Dodgers the lead in Game 7 of the NLCS to complete their comeback against the Braves in 2020, and then he hit a home run in Game 1 of the World Series to give the Dodgers a 2-0 lead.  He did a lot that Dodger fans should always remember him fondly for.  He got a good ovation after the video.  And then he was getting another ovation when he came up for his first at bat and got called for an automatic strike because he wasn’t in the box in time.  I’m really happy about how the pitch clock is improving the pace of play, but that was ridiculous.  There should be some umpire discretion there to not call a strike.  That was an automatic strike that could help the Dodgers, but no Dodger fan actually wanted that strike called.  So that’s one thing that needs to be fixed with the pitch clock.


This was our view in Section 1 Row N of the Reserve Level for the game.  My ideal seat at Dodger Stadium is this section, but down lower than we were.  It’s right above the broadcast booth that Vin Scully spent decades calling games from.

Pete met us at the seats after the top of the first.  It had been two years since I last saw him so it was good that he was able to make it to the game.  It was a bad game for the Dodgers.  Noah Syndergaard gave up three runs in six innings (definitely not a terrible start, but not great either).  Chris Taylor and Max Muncy hit home runs for the Dodgers and it was 3-2 Cubs.  Then the eighth inning happened.  Andre Jackson gave up three home runs and then another one in the ninth and the Cubs won 8-2.  Oh well.  That made the Dodgers 8-5 in games I’ve been to at Dodger Stadium.  It was the first time I saw the Dodgers lose at Dodger Stadium since 2018.  This might be a down year for the Dodgers, but it was a fun day in Los Angeles.  Hopefully I’ll be able to see at least one Dodger win in person this year (I am planning on getting to some more Dodger games this season and not just in New York).


It was Friday Night Fireworks after the game.  I’ve done Friday Night Fireworks three times before I think.  They let fans out on the field.  The last one was two years ago and we stayed in our seats.  But the other times we went on the field.  We tried going out on the field this time, but we didn’t make it before they cut it off.  So we watched the fireworks from right by the field.  The game took two hours and 20 minutes.  Attendance was 52,298 (the only game I’ve been to at Dodger Stadium with a bigger crowd was Opening Day in 2013).  The temperature at the start of the game was 59°, but I actually felt colder at the game in Oklahoma City when it was 75° at the start of the game (it definitely dropped into the 60s and there was some wind).  Hopefully I’ll get back to Dodger Stadium for a couple of games in 2024.


It was a bad game, but it’s always good to be at Dodger Stadium.

I first debuted my Sports Villain Power Rankings a year ago.  I updated the rankings in the fall and it’s time for another update (especially after saying nice things about USC people).  I’m just going to do a top 15 this time because after this, I’m inducting my first class into the Jim Sports Villain Hall of Fame.  Let’s start with the active villains:


15.  Kevin Durant- The good news is that if the Suns win, then Monty Williams wins, and if the Suns lose, then Kevin Durant loses.

14.  Lincoln Riley- He was on the list last year and I said that he had the potential to move way up.  The only reason that he’s not higher on the list is that it’s the spring and not the fall.  He’s brought back USC as a team of hired mercenaries, just like when Pete Carroll was the coach.

13.  Brian Kelly- I will never root for Brian Kelly unless LSU winning could directly help Notre Dame.

12.  Manny Machado- He was one of the most dislikable Dodgers ever and now he plays for the Padres.

11.  Fernando Tatis- I initially had him ahead of the next five people.  He is a cheater, but he never cheated the Dodgers out of a World Series championship.

6-10.  (Tied) Jose Altuve, George Springer, Carlos Correa, Alex Bregman, and Yuli Gurriel- The Astros cheaters from 2017 who are still in the Majors.

5.  Rob Manfred- The pitch clock is mostly good.  The shift restrictions are good.  But he handled the Astros cheating scandal terribly and I will never forgive him for the DH in the NL or the runner on second base for no reason in extra innings.  I’m also anticipating that there will be some really stupid realignment that gets rid of the NL and AL whenever expansion comes.

4.  Trevor Bauer- I’m limiting this to people who are active and you could argue that I should take Trevor Bauer off the list because he is definitely not active in Major League Baseball this season.  I’m leaving him on here because the Dodgers still have to pay him this year and he has messed up so many things for them ever since they signed him.

3.  Caleb Williams- He’s the most dislikable college football player since Reggie Bush. I hope Jordan Botelho sacks him a few times and Benjamin Morrison intercepts him a few times in October.

2.  Anthony Davis- Everything about the Lakers is dislikable.  In my lifetime, they’re always built on players that force their way to the Lakers rather than having any loyalty at all (with the exception of Kobe Bryant).

1. LeBron James- If the NBA playoffs are going on and the Lakers are in the playoffs, LeBron James is an obvious number 1.


There are some pretty big villains who didn’t make the top 15 for various reasons.  Bill Belichick, Pete Carroll, and Jim Harbaugh are all top 15 possibilities when it’s football season.  Kyrie Irving ranked number 1 when I first did this last year, but the sports cancer that is Kyrie Irving killed the Mavericks so quickly that they didn’t even make the playoffs (I had him at 17 when I was working on a draft of this post).  He’ll very likely be back in the top ten when the 2023-2024 NBA season starts.  And he’s a lock for induction into the Jim Sports Villain Hall of Fame when his career is over.  The first Baseball Hall of Fame class was five absolute legends so this has to be five players/coaches who are no longer active who are as villainous as they come in my lifetime as a sports fan.  Here we go:


Barry Bonds- He played for the Giants and he ruined the two greatest records in baseball by being the biggest cheater in the history of the sport.


Tom Brady- He played for Michigan and the Patriots and cheated to win more Super Bowls than Joe Montana.


Reggie Bush- The most famous sporting event I have ever attended was the 2005 Notre Dame-USC game.  Notre Dame would have won if USC didn’t have a highly paid professional football player playing college football.


Phil Jackson- Those first three were so obvious.  Now it gets a little more interesting.  There had to be a Laker on here and it’s Phil Jackson by the process of elimination.  Magic Johnson as a basketball player is really before my time (I remember him as a basketball player, but I don’t remember him winning a championship) and he was part of the group that rescued the Dodgers from being owned by Frank McCourt so he’s a hero for me, not a villain.  I don’t remember Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as a basketball player and he was excellent as Roger Murdoch in Airplane! Shaquille O’Neal is likable from everything else in his career besides his time with the Lakers.  Kobe Bryant was actually drafted by the Lakers and wasn’t a mercenary or somebody who forced his way to the Lakers.  I didn’t like him, but he’s not the type of person that makes the Lakers so dislikable.  Also, he was a practicing Catholic and went to Mass on the last day of his life.  So I can’t put him on here.  LeBron James will instantly be a Hall of Famer once his career is over, but he doesn’t qualify now.  So it was between Phil Jackson and Pat Riley.  Pat Riley is a double villain for his time with the Heat, but I don’t remember his time with the Lakers.  Phil Jackson never would have won so many championships without Michael Jordan, Shaquille O’Neal, and Kobe Bryant and he was always so smug. I hate smugness. Smugness is not a good quality.


Rafael Palmeiro- This one might come as a surprise.  When I was growing up, I had a friend whose father would sometimes get tickets that were in the first row behind the visitors’ dugout at Yankee Stadium.  I probably sat in those seats for three or four games.  Whenever the visiting team would come off the field, we would ask for a ball (back when there was no screen behind the dugout).  One time, Rafael Palmeiro tossed a ball to somebody and pointed at me and said he would get me after the next inning.  And then he never did.  So I always disliked him.  I didn’t know at the time that he was a cheater.  Later on he would go on to lie under oath to Congress about taking steroids.  So he is an all time sports villain for me.


There are some big villains left out, but you have to leave some people out if you’re limiting it to five. So I didn’t include Matt Leinart, Mark Sanchez, Rex Ryan, Alex Rodriguez, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Roger Clemens, Dwyane Wade, or Jim Boeheim (I’m probably forgetting some). It’s kind of like Cy Young (49.1%), Rogers Hornsby (46.5%), Grover Cleveland Alexander (24.3%), Lou Gehrig (22.6%), Jimmie Foxx (9.3%), and Lefty Grove (5.3%) not coming close to getting elected to the Hall of Fame in 1936.


Anyway, Easter vacation was fun. I already have something planned for the summer, but I won’t rule out doing a quick weekend baseball trip before that, but I don’t want to schedule anything in advance since I’m going to try to focus as much as possible on the NBA and NHL Playoffs until the summer. Sidney Crosby is not in the NHL Playoffs this year so there’s no hockey villain that I really want to see lose. I really don’t like that the Islanders have two Notre Dame players on their team. I want them to score a whole bunch of goals and for the Islanders to lose high scoring games. But we have plenty of NBA villains (there would have been a few more if I went beyond 15 on my active villains list). Hopefully they will crash and burn in the playoffs.


Let’s Go Celtics!

Let’s Go Rangers!

Sunday, April 16, 2023

Baseball in SEC Country

I had done an Easter vacation trip for many years and then the pandemic started.  In 2020, I was supposed to do Louisville, Wichita, and Los Angeles during Easter vacation.  Of course, that didn’t happen (I ended up going to Louisville in the summer of 2021).  There was no Easter vacation trip in 2021 or 2022.  But this year I was able to take an Easter vacation trip once again.  I wanted to do three stops with stops 2 and 3 being Texas and Los Angeles.  I thought about going to Notre Dame and doing a baseball game there for my first stop.  But there were a number of reasons by I ended up not doing that:


1.  I’ve been to Notre Dame baseball games before (not many, but I’ve done it).

2.  The weather at Notre Dame in early April is a huge wild card.

3.  The Oklahoma City Dodgers were home and it would be easier to get from Oklahoma City to Texas.

4.  They’re the Oklahoma City Dodgers.  I’ve been to a lot of minor league games in the last decade, but the only time I’ve seen a Dodgers’ affiliate was in 2015 in Montana for a rookie league game (that level of the minor leagues doesn’t exist anymore).  This was triple-A so I would get to see some high ranking prospects and some players that I knew so that was cool.

5.  I had only been to Oklahoma in 2014 when I stopped at Mickey Mantle’s house during my Missouri (St. Louis and Kansas City)/Arkansas/Oklahoma/Kansas trip.  So this was the first time I was going to see a sporting event in Oklahoma and spend a night there.


I got to my hotel around 4:00 and the game was at 6:00 so I didn’t have time to do anything else really.  I took a walk around the stadium and saw the statues of Mickey Mantle, Johnny Bench, and Warren Spahn.  Those are three legendary players. Warren Spahn is a player I don’t think about much, but he has more wins than any left-handed pitcher ever (363). I would have to do more digging into numbers, but my initial thought is that the five greatest left-handed pitchers of the last 100 years are Sandy Koufax, Clayton Kershaw, Warren Spahn, Randy Johnson, and Steve Carlton (not necessarily in that order). My next group of five would be Lefty Grove, Tom Glavine, Whitey Ford, Carl Hubbell, and CC Sabathia.


It’s definitely appropriate to have a Mickey Mantle statue at a baseball stadium in  Oklahoma, but it does seem a little weird to have a Mickey Mantle statue outside a stadium that’s home to a team named the Dodgers.

Inside the stadium was pretty cool.  There was a pretty good selection of food and beer.  It was $2 beer night for the cheap stuff.  The good stuff was $3.  I had a COOP Aleworks American Lager.  I had a COOP beer as part of my four-state beer flight in Omaha in 2018.  There were a number of COOP beers on tap at the stadium.  I went with the American Lager because it seemed appropriate for my first baseball game of the season and also the tap handle said “OKLA” with the LA being the Dodgers’ logo.  It was pretty good, but I suspect I would have liked the Amber better.  I just had a hot dog to eat.  Like I said, there were other options, but again I went with the appropriate choice for my first game of the year.  Unfortunately, there was only yellow mustard available, which is the worst version of mustard (calling it mustard is a stretch).


This was my view for most of the game.

The game was the Dodgers against the Sugarland Space Cowboys.  Normally I don’t care about who wins a minor league game, but it was the Dodgers’ affiliate against the Astros’ affiliate so I definitely wanted the Dodgers to win.  The Dodgers’ number three and four prospects were playing.  Michael Busch was starting at second base and Gavin Stone was the starting pitcher.  Busch had a double and a walk.  Gavin Stone had a really good season in the minors last year.  He went from single-A to triple-A and was good at every level.  On this night, he was good for three innings, but then he gave up a solo home run in the fourth and he couldn’t get anybody out in the fifth.  The Dodgers trailed 3-0.  They ended up coming back and tied the game in the bottom of the ninth on a bases loaded walk with two outs.  Unfortunately they could not win the game on the ninth.  So it went to extra innings.  My policy on extra innings is that if it’s up to me, I will not watch extra innings of a game that I don’t care about (I cared about this one more than most minor league games, but it was still a minor league game so I didn’t really care).  That was not my policy before, but the runner on second base to start extra innings is pretty much tied with the DH for the stupidest rule in baseball (the difference is that the DH makes every game worse, but the runner on second base in extra innings only makes games that go to extra innings worse).  If it’s a game that I actually care about, I’ll stay.  If I don’t care but I’m with people, it’s up to them.  In this case, I was by myself and I didn’t really care so I got up and left as soon as the ninth inning ended.  The box score says there were 3,856 people there.  I’m guessing it was actually a little less that that (my guess before I saw the box score was about 3,000).  It was a Tuesday night in April so the small crowd isn’t too surprising. The stadium was pretty good.  It seems that it’s bigger than it needs to be.  There are two decks.  All the seats down the first base line on the second deck have been taken out and they have ads in those areas now.  So that’s not particularly aesthetically appealing, but it was a nice stadium other than that.  And although it wasn’t a big crowd, they were into the game.  So I’ll rank Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark pretty high on my list of minor league stadiums. I was initially going to rank it behind Louisville Slugger Field, but then I remembered that they played Vin Scully saying “It’s time for Dodger baseball!” when the game was about to start and that bumped it up a spot. Here are the updated rankings (click on each ballpark if you want to read my blog post about them):


25. Arm & Hammer Park in Trenton

24. Dehler Park in Billings

23. Arvest Ballpark in Springdale

22. Autozone Park in Memphis

21. TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, New Jersey

20. Memorial Stadium in Boise

19. KeySpan Park in Brooklyn

18. Newman Outdoor Field in Fargo

17. Isotopes Park in Albuquerque

16. TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha

15. Daniel S. Frawley Stadium in Wilmington

14. Sahlen Field in Buffalo

13. Greater Nevada Field in Reno

12. NBT Bank Stadium in Syracuse

11. Richmond County Bank Ballpark on Staten Island

10. Dickey-Stephens Park in Little Rock

9. Joseph L. Bruno Stadium in Troy

8. Bethpage Ballpark in Central Islip

7. Four Winds Field in South Bend

6. Louisville Slugger Field

5.  Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark

4. Frontier Field in Rochester

3. Joseph P. Riley Jr. Park in Charleston

2. Dunkin Donuts Park in Hartford

1. Regions Field in Birmingham


The next day I was on the train to Fort Worth and a Lyft to my hotel.  Whenever I’m in Texas, I’m amazed at how much open space there is.  I guess it makes sense.  Texas has about 1.5 times the population of New York, but it’s 5.5 times bigger geographically.  If you compare Texas and California (after New York, the states where I’ve spent the most time are probably Indiana, Virginia, Florida, and California), Texas is about 1.7 times bigger than California, but California has a population that’s 1.3 times bigger than Texas.  So New York and California are much more densely populated than Texas.  Dallas/Arlington/Fort Worth are all medium-sized to big cities (Dallas is the 9th biggest by population in the US, Fort Worth is 13th, and Arlington is 50th), but most of the area seems rural to me.


That’s a statue of Nolan Ryan in the foreground.

After going to a game in Oakland in 2019, I had been to all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums.  But then Globe Life Field opened in 2020 and I was back down to 29.  I probably would have gone to Globe Life Field in 2020 if not for the pandemic.  I didn’t get around to going until this year.  It was built right by Globe Life Stadium (now Choctaw Stadium) and AT&T Stadium.  I got there early and Matt arrived shortly before the start of the game.  I wanted to get there early to get something to eat at the Hurtado Barbecue stand.  I had done my research on the stadium and there were some concession stands with barbecue that doesn’t measure up to Texas standards, but Hurtado was legit.  Normally, I’d wait to get food until the game started, but I had read that the lines at Hurtado were ridiculous and it was my first Major League game with the pitch clock.  So I didn’t want to spend four innings standing on line (I was thinking of the Shake Shack lines when Citi Field opened).  Also I was thinking about how I couldn’t remember what I ate at the old stadium when Matt and I went back in 2015 so I checked the blog post and it turns out that we had issues waiting on line back then and didn’t eat anything at the game.  So anyway, I was able to get brisket tacos without a wait.  They were quite tasty.  I walked around the stadium while I waited for Matt to arrive.


I was excited about seeing 2020 Dodgers hero Corey Seager.  He was amazing in the playoffs that year (NLCS and World Series MVP) and then the Dodgers traded for Trea Turner and the Dodgers didn’t seem to eager to keep Seager when he became a free agent (I’m sure they would have liked to have him back on a cheap contract, but they weren’t going to realistically compete with the offers he was getting from other teams when they had Trea Turner also).  I wish Seager was still a Dodger, but there were no hard feelings at all about Seager leaving.  But they announced the lineup and he wasn’t in it.  I went on the MLB app and he was listed as being one of the players on the bench.  But then I checked ESPN and saw the story that he was out four weeks with a hamstring injury.  So it was disappointing not to see him.


This was our view for the game.

Anyway, it ended up being a not very good game.  The Rangers took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first and then ended up losing 10-1.  The game took two hours and 24 minutes.  Matt and I talked about how this game would have taken like three hours and 20 minutes if it had been last year.  Attendance was 18,380.  It’s not too surprising that it was a small crowd considering it was a Wednesday night in April against the Royals. It was good to see Matt. I last saw him about 12 and a half months ago at Jon’s wedding. Hopefully I’ll be able to see Matt and some Notre Dame friends at a football game again in the not too distant future. It’s been far too long.


It was a bad game, but it was good to see Matt.

Globe Life Field will rank pretty high on the list of stadiums with a retractable roof.  Fortunately the roof was open.  Matt was saying how he had only been to games with the roof closed and he liked it better with the roof open.  I rank the stadiums based on my experiences there so experiencing it with the roof open will help its ranking.  It’s kind of unique in the way it’s built.  Of course, most stadiums you enter on the lowest level.  Then there’s Dodger Stadium where you can enter on any level.  But with Globe Life Field, you pretty much enter on the middle level.  The field is so far below street level that you enter the stadium pretty high up.  And the lowest level has suites and stuff that you would usually find higher up in most stadiums.  So that was interesting.  One negative is the artificial turf.  We had gotten down only having two stadiums with artificial turf (Toronto and Tampa Bay), but now we’re up to five (Toronto, Tampa Bay, Arizona, Miami, and Texas).  Four of those stadiums have retractable roofs.  What are we doing with this artificial turf?  One big positive is that the Dodgers won 11 playoff games at Globe Life Field.  They swept the Padres, they came back from 3-1 down against the Braves in the NLCS, and then they beat the Rays in the World Series (if you were going to play a neutral site World Series, I was happy that it was against the Rays so that I didn’t have to watch the Dodgers play World Series games in the Rays’ stadium).  The food selection was decent, but the beer selection needs work.  There was one concession stand called Crafthous ‘72, but it was all Anhueser Busch beer.  All the draft beer was Anhueser Busch stuff.  I found a concession stand with a decent selection in cans and I got a Rollertown Beerworks Big German (it was labeled as a Kolsch style ale from a Celina, Texas brewery).  It was very good.  But good beer should be more widely available throughout the stadium.  There is big variation throughout the majors as far as the beer selection.  Some have a very good selection and some just don’t at all.  I don’t get how some stadiums just don’t have a good beer selection in the year 2023.


So I’ve now seen Major League Baseball games played at 35 different stadiums. One of them was Sahlen Field in Buffalo. I included that one in my minor league rankings (14th) even though I’ve only seen a Major League game there because it didn’t really make sense to compare it to Major League stadiums. Anyway, let’s get to the rankings. Click on each stadium for a blog post about it (the Oakland Coliseum blog post contains more explanation of the rankings).


34.  Tropicana Field
33.  Oakland Coliseum
32.  SkyDome (You might know it as Rogers Center, but it will always be SkyDome to me)
31.  Chase Field
30.  Guaranteed Rate Field
29.  LoanDepot Park
28.  Minute Maid Park
27.  Turner Field
26.  Progressive Field
25.  Angels Stadium of Anaheim
24.  American Family Field
23.  Coors Field
22.  Shea Stadium
21.  Comerica Park
20.  Globe Life Park

19. Globe Life Field
18.  Truist Park
17.  Citi Field
16.  New Yankee Stadium
15.  Citizens Bank Park
14.  Oriole Park at Camden Yards
13.  Nationals Park
12.  Busch Stadium
11.  Great American Ballpark
10.  T-Mobile Park
9.  Target Field
8.  Oracle Park
7.  Kauffman Stadium
6.  Petco Park
5.  PNC Park
4.  Wrigley Field
3.  Old Yankee Stadium
1.  (Tie) Dodger Stadium/Fenway Park