Jump to content

Baseball and gluttony


seaboy4hire
This topic is 6662 days old and is no longer open for new replies.  Replies are automatically disabled after two years of inactivity.  Please create a new topic instead of posting here.  

Recommended Posts

Posted

http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-dodgers-allyoucaneat&prov=ap&type=lgns

Chew on this: All you can eat at Dodger Stadium

By BETH HARRIS, AP Sports Writer

May 24, 2007

 

Fans hold their trays of food during the Los Angeles Dodgers' game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Dodger Stadium, in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 23, 2007. Fans in Right Field Pavilion get all the Dodger Dogs, Nachos, Peanuts, Popcorn, sodas and water, they can eat with the purchase of their game ticket. (AP/Photo by Richard Lui)

AP - May 24, 3:28 pm EDT

More Photos

 

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Luis Serrano is working on his second Dodger Dog and the game hasn't even begun.

 

"On a good night, I'll eat seven," he said, smiling.

 

That's how it goes in the new all-you-can-eat seats way out in right field at Dodger Stadium, where fans wolf down as many Dodger Dogs, nachos, peanuts, popcorn and soda as their bellies allow for one price.

 

Bring your own antacids.

 

"You get your money's worth, for sure," said Serrano, a slender 33-year-old from suburban Glendora who likes to bet his buddies how much they can chow down.

 

ADVERTISEMENT

"I've won almost all of them," he said, balancing a paper tray loaded with two more Dodger Dogs, nachos and peanuts on his lap.

 

His friend, Michael Latta of Alhambra, chomped on a mustard- and onion-slathered Dodger Dog in the right field pavilion, sponsored by, naturally, a chain of convenience stores.

 

"We're more prone to eating more since we're in here. We wouldn't have done this over there," Latta said, gesturing toward the rest of the stadium.

 

There's another eat-up-a-storm section in this venerable place -- the Dugout Club behind home plate. But at $400 a seat, which includes traditional fare delivered by a wait staff and a high-end buffet -- it's out of reach for many in the bust-a-gut section.

 

Launched this season, the outfield eat-a-thon opens 90 minutes before the first pitch and lasts until the start of the seventh inning. Ticket prices range from $20 for group sales to $40 for day-of-game walk-ups. Some games are $25 during designated promotions.

 

"The fans love it," said Marty Greenspun, Dodgers executive vice president and chief operating officer.

 

"It was an isolated area that we could really focus and test," he said. "No one has done this big of a seating section for this price in all of professional sports. It's been a hit since day one."

 

Some items aren't in play -- beer ($8 and $10), ice cream and candy are sold from carts at regular prices. But they are included at some other major-league ballparks, which do versions of the eat-til-you-drop concept in smaller seating areas.

 

The concept was tested three times last season before being launched in April.

 

The all-you-can-eat food stand is shown during the Los Angeles Dodgers' game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Dodger Stadium, in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 23, 2007. Fans in Right Field Pavilion get all the Dodger Dogs, Nachos, Peanuts, Popcorn, sodas and water, they can eat with the purchase of their game ticket. (AP/Photo by Richard Lui)

AP - May 24, 3:28 pm EDT

More Photos

Since then, the Dodgers say the section has sold out eight times in 24 home games, with attendance averaging 2,000 in the 3,000 seats.

 

The Dodgers have ranked second in attendance in the majors for three consecutive seasons, but the right-field pavilion often sat empty in the 56,000-seat stadium. It opened only if the left-field seats, which cost $10, sold out or for large groups. Last season, right-field seats cost $6-to-$8.

 

"Even with our great attendance, there's still seats that go unsold," Greenspun said, explaining that this model was a way to offer fans a defined price.

 

Greenspun said a handful of other professional sports teams have contacted the Dodgers about copying the idea, including the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers. The Milwaukee Brewers sent their stadium operations chief to check it out.

 

Fans are allowed four items per trip to the food counters under the stands. Soda stations offer unlimited drinks and bottled water is free.

 

"Before, no one wanted to work here. It was a hassle," said Joe Herrera, a 10-year stadium employee. "We used to have the registers and a lot of angry people backed up. Now, the lines go fast and customers don't complain."

 

At times during a recent game against the Brewers, lines were eight-deep as workers quickly handed over fistfuls of grub. The only registers are at the merchandise counter and beer carts.

 

"Who can turn down an all-you-can-eat?" asked Lori Nelson, who settled into the bench seats with her two children and her daughter's 18-year-old boyfriend. "It's like going to Vegas."

 

The boyfriend, Joe Grable, started his evening with two hot dogs, two sodas and nachos. "Right here is probably $30 worth," he said. "This is awesome."

 

In the rest of the stadium, Dodger Dogs sell for $4.75 and small sodas are $4.75.

 

Stadium vendors, including Coca-Cola, California Pizza Kitchen and Kraft, want to test their products on the right-field crowd, Greenspun said. Baby Ruth has already passed out free candy bars.

 

Liz Roseman of Gardena had one complaint.

 

Mike McCleary, 45, of Lancaster, Calif. enjoys a hotdog during the Los Angeles Dodgers' game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Dodger Stadium, in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 23, 2007. Fans in Right Field Pavilion get all the Dodger Dogs, Nachos, Peanuts, Popcorn, sodas and water, they can eat with the purchase of their game ticket. (AP/Photo by Richard Lui)

AP - May 24, 3:28 pm EDT

More Photos

"The only thing I'm missing is the chili," she said, picking up a cheese-slathered nacho chip.

 

Greenspun doesn't even try to spin the food frenzy so that it jibes with the nation's increased emphasis on eating healthy.

 

"This is really not about gluttony," he said. "This is really about offering a new fan amenity. It's all up to individual choices."

 

On a recent night, the right-field seats were two-thirds full of fans merrily munching away, washing it all down with sodas and trotting back for more.

 

"It's a trend that's here to stay," Greenspun said, "and is going to grow."

 

Along with waistlines and cholesterol levels.

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Updated on Thursday, May 24, 2007 7:24 pm EDT

 

I'm not sure how I feel about this. I do understand that this is a business and the team wants to fill as many seats as they can but eating seven hot dogs and a few nachos plus soda (water is free) seems a bit much for me. I do realize too that stadium food be it for a sporting event or concert can hit the pocket book so there is a certain amount of value these seats provide but is it really worth the side effects for those that can not control them selfs?

 

Hugs,

Greg

[email protected]

http://seaboy4hire.tripod.com New page for reviews http://www.daddysreviews.com/newest.php?who=greg_seattleLos Angeles June 28, 2007 One day only!CHICAGO June 29-July 2, 2007

http://img143.imageshack.us/img143/3307/dsc05257be3.jpg[/

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...