True, but the giddyness and enthusiasm and newness of the new building in 2009 was a factor.
That enthusiasm of the first year has been noticeably waning in the two years since.
I went to about 22 games last year (a pretty good sample size). But take out the DJ3K factor, and most games were dreadfully dull. The energy from the crowd is in precipitous decline.
It's just not like it used to be.
Look at the
attendance numbers from last 3 years of the old stadium (2006-2008). The old stadium averaged 92% of capacity (in a bigger building). The new building in it's first 3 years has averaged only 87% of capacity. IT'S FIRST 3 YEARS, when it should have been bursting at the seams. It's first three years, which include a season after a championship year, when most teams greatly improve attendance.
Worse yet, those attendance figures are total BS. Tickets sold does not equal fans in the seats. I was at many a game where by my estimation the stadium was LESS than half full. Yet, at the end of the night the attendance was reported at the usual 45-47,000.
Been to a Phillies game lately?
Or even to a Red Sox game in Fenway?
Have you heard the crowd noise at Citizens Bank Park?
Felt the energy of their fan base?
The bottom line in baseball is not the bottom line on a financial statement (ARE YOU LISTENING HAL?)
The bottom line is engaging your fan base. If your fan base is engaged, the money will flow. If your fan base is being eroded by mismanagement, raising prices to offset loss of interest is a doomed strategy. (Do I need to mention the fiasco with the parking lots).
There is a cancer eating away at the Yankees organization. The greed they exhibit in the fleecing of their fan base is going to catch up to them.
If you don't believe that, why are you reading this thread?