Sellout ends from Don Kelley on Vimeo.
The Sellout Streak is Over.
The consecutive game sellout streak at Fenway Park ended last night – to no one’s surprise. Sox brass predicted it in early February when they admitted that season ticket sales were off by 10%.
It’s official.
Whether you believed it or not, it’s in the record books. 820 consecutive games – that includes playoffs which were obviously sellouts – that’s a record in all of professional sports. They’d send season ticket holders souvenir baseballs commemorating the 500th, 600th and 700th sellouts.
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So what was it like last night?
Raining. Pretty hard at times. The tarp was on the field for 43-minutes. You can see in the video that two ticket windows on Lansdowne Street were getting little or no action. On a typical night the line for the Day-of-Game tickets would stretch down the sidewalk under the Monster Seats all the way to Gate C. Not last night.
The bad news.
Joel Hanrahan imploded in the 9th, blowing a 5-3 lead and leaving us with an 8-5 loss, but I’ll spout off on him in another blog.
The good news.
Opening Day always sells out, but the second home game of the season is a notoriously tough sell everywhere. Despite that, the Red Sox had 31,800 people there on a cold, rainy night. Only four teams in Major League Baseball drew more than that, and they all had gametime temperatures in the mid-70’s. The Red Sox drew more than 25 other teams and had more fans last night than Kansas City, Miami and Seattle combined (and two of those even have a roof).
Ryan Dempster had a quality start (5 innings, 3 hits, only 1 earned run). Lester and Buchholz look teriffic. They’re in 1st place, and after the strong start season tickets are only off by 8%. We could see a new streak start sometime in May.