Tickets here being sold for '21 Caribbean Series |
Last
week, the Venados announced prices for seven-day tickets in prime
seating at Estadio Teodoro Mariscal, with five days of doubleheaders
between Sunday, January 31 through Thursday, February 4 for first
round games preceding a semifinal twinbill on Friday, February 5 and
the title game on Saturday, February 6.
The
highest prices for the 13-game event are 28,600 pesos (US$1,187) for
Deluxe Supreme seats in the ballpark's lower level behind home plate.
The next tier involves Diamond seats, where patrons will pay 22,580
pesos (US$936) per lower-level seat from above both dugouts into
shallow left and right fields, respectively. Finally, there are the
Platinum seats at 19,570 pesos (US$811), which span all the second
level of seats above the interior walkway from shallow left past home
plate and into shallow right right. No tickets for upper deck, foul
territory or outfield seats have been put up for sale. Online ticket
broker Boletomovil says seats can be reserved for a deposit of
1,000 pesos (US$41), with the remainder to be paid by October 15.
In
comparison, when Mexico hosted the 2018 Serie del Caribe in
Guadalajara, the top price for a weeklong ticket was 19,500 (US$809)
for lower level seats between third and first bases.
Although
the imbroglio is being called "political" on several
Mexican baseball websites, where writers expect things to be resolved
in time, a May 12 story on El Fildeo was headlined, "Don't
Buy the Tickets Yet!" and detailed how COPABE will convene a
meeting next month where if a signed letter from the Mazatlan City
Council granting the Venados (and, by proxy, the LMP and COPABE) full
control over the stadium for the Caribbean Series is not presented,
the tournament may be moved to another city.
WORLD
BASEBALL CLASSIC CANCELLED FOR 2021
WBC qualifiers in Tucson were already cancelled |
Joel
Sherman of the Post says the WBC may be moved to 2023 amid the
current Wuhan virus panic. The 2021 edition had been scheduled for
March 9-23 with games in Taiwan, Tokyo, Phoenix and Miami. The
postponement comes as no surprise, according to Rojas, because WBC
qualifier events in March were called off indefinitely as MLB and
other baseball organizations throughout the world placed their
seasons on hiatus in reaction to the spread of the Wuhan virus. "It's
not a priority right now," a source reportedly told Rojas.
Despite
their close proximity to source country China, however, Taiwan's
Chinese Professional Baseball League opened their season on April 11
as scheduled while the Korea Baseball Organization began their
schedule a few weeks later. Both circuits played early games in front
of empty stands before the CPBL allowed up to 1,000 spectators per
opening recently and are poised to increase that number to 2,000 live
fans soon.
The
delay of the World Baseball Classic puts the future of the event in
doubt, Rojas says. He notes that the event was negotiated in the
current Collective Bargaining Agreement between MLB (which oversees
the WBC) and the MLBPA players union. However, the CBA will expire in
December 2021 and the WBC would have to be renegotiated.
Mexico manager Juan Castro to focus on '21 Oympics |
Mexico
has played in all four previous World Baseball Classics (2006, 2009,
2013 and 2017), winning seven of 18 games, reaching the second round
twice and defeating the United States in both 2006 and 2013.
Cancellation of next year's WBC means National Team manager Juan
Gabriel Castro will devote his full attention for the Verdes
Grande on the Tokyo Summer Olympic Games, which were rescheduled
for next year after being postponed for 2020 due to the Wuhan virus.
PROBEIS BUYS BALLPARKS IN HERMOSILLO, OBREGON
While
it's certain that such a sales pitch never took place, Mexico's
federal government has indeed purchased a pair of former longtime
Mexican Pacific League facilities for a combined 1.075 billion pesos
(US$44.2 million) with an eye to using them as baseball academies in
the future. Lots of numbers and currency conversions coming in this
story, so be prepared:
According
to Septima Entrada, Sonora's State Treasury Secretary Raul
Navarro announced that Estadio Hector Espino in Hermosillo has been
bought by federal agency Probeis for 511.7 million pesos
(US$21.4 million). The ballpark served as home to the LMP Naranjeros
between 1972 and 2012 before the team moved into the new,
state-of-the-art Estadio Sonora in 2013. The older facility, renamed
in 1976 after Mexican baseball legend Hector Espino (who played 24
winters in Hermosillo), seats 15,000 spectators and was the first
ballpark in Latin America with a big screen and LED scoreboard, although the site has fallen into some disrepair. It
was the site of six Caribbean Series tournaments and hosted a number
of Arizona Diamondbacks exhibition games. The Naranjeros won 11 of
their 16 Mex Pac titles playing there.
Probeis
previously agreed to purchase Obregon's Estadio Tomas Oroz Gaytan for
548.7 million pesos (US$22.9 million) in May of last year. Funded by
the Sonora state government (as was Estadio Hector Espino) and opened
in 1971, the 13,000-seat Estadio Tomas Oroz Gaytan was home of the
Obregon Yaquis for 45 years until Estadio Yaquis was christened in
2016. The older ballpark was named after a longtime baseball figure
who served as Sonora's state treasurer from 1967 until his death in a
car accident in 1973. The Yaquis, who won six of their seven LMP
pennants playing at their former stadium, have not been able to
recreate the magic at their new ballpark, where high ticket prices, a
less accessible location and a less-competitive team on the heels of
Obregon's three-time pennant winners between 2011 and 2013 have
resulted in lower attendance figures.
Estadio Tomas Oroz Gaytan, Obregon |
Probeis'
stated purpose in acquiring the older facilities is to create
regional baseball schools, in keeping with their mission of
developing domestic interest and players for the sport, but they are
not necessarily getting a bargain in either case. According to an
April 20 story in El Heraldo de Mexico, Estadio Tomas Oroz
Gaytan was given an overall value of about 221 million pesos (US$9.2
million) a year ago, which suggests the government paid 347 million
pesos (US$14.3 million) more than the ballpark was worth. In an April
17 story, on the other hand, El Sol writer Enrique Hernandez
says the federal government saved nearly 118 million pesos (US$4.9
million) in the purchase of Estadio Hector Espino, which was valued
last year at 626.5 million pesos (US$26.2 million).
When
the numbers are added up, that's a net loss of 229 million pesos
(US$9.6 million) for the feds, who are paying for the ballparks out
of a National Infrastructure Trust Fund created by former president
Felipe Calderon in 2008 as an investment vehicle in several areas,
including the "operation and transfer of projects with social
impact or economic profitability." Current president (and
Mexico's Number 1 baseball fan) Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador is
seeking to make the fund "disappear," Hernandez says.
5 comments:
Hi. Here in Japan, the World Baseball Classic has always been hugely popular. I know that's not the case for the fans in the States, but the cancellation of WBC is a disppointment for Japanese fans (to be honest, I'm not a very big fan of international baseball competition).
I love the WBC, even though MLB runs it. To me, it's the epitome of international competition (at least in theory) and a chance to watch a nation's best actually going head-to-head with another's on the playing field. The WBSC rankings only do so much. I know it's really only about brand-building with MLB, but the WBC is always must-watch baseball for me.
Hi. Though I prefer to watch regular season games of MLB or Milb or indy leagues, one thing I love about the international competition is to be able to know my favorite players are still playing. You may never heard of them, but Ofilio Castro of Nicaragua and Kalian Sams (former Mariners farmhand) of the Netherlands are my favorites.
I haven't followed the international baseball scene as much as I used to, beyond the Caribbean Series or whatever competition the Mexican National Team is playing in. I really hope the U-23 Baseball World Cup in Obregon and Los Mochis comes off because I definitely want to cover that, but baseball in Mexico is a big question mark right now.
I'm from Seattle and the Mariners have been my favorite MLB team since they began in 1977, but I can't say I've heard of either Castro or Sams. Not to say that I WON'T because the Mariners are in the middle of an organization overhaul emphasizing player development, so both Castro and Sams may benefit from that.
I must admit that I don't follow MLB closely at all anymore, partly because it's become more profit-oriented and less fan-friendly (especially since Rob Manfred became commissioner), but also because I find Mexican baseball so much more INTERESTING. If I had to write about MLB I'd get bored pretty quickly, but that's never a problem with the LMB or LMP. When the Mexican League camps shut down and the season was postponed, I was concerned about having enough new stories to write here. Instead, I've had a backlog of stories and have yet to bring back my Mexican Baseball Road Trip or Maestros of Mexico pieces from earlier BBM or Viva Beisbol columns.
Great readding this
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