I guess the Chiefs wouldn't exactly mind having that huge-ass parking lot to themselves...
Royals owner says the team will leave Kauffman Stadium and is exploring locations for a $2 billion stadium and entertainment district near or around downtown. Lease ends in 2031 but they're hoping to move before then.
https://www.kshb.com/sports/royals-...or-stadium-entertainment-district-in-missouri
I guess the Chiefs wouldn't exactly mind having that huge-ass parking lot to themselves...
Damn, I'm gonna miss those Craft & Draft seats!![]()
"Please everybody, don't flush at once!" Do they end up with a sewage problem, like Oakland if they do?If memory serves, the Truman Sports Complex has the same issue that Baltimore does with Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium, in that the two stadiums share utility infrastructure, most notably plumbing, and as a result they cannot hold games simultaneously.
I doubt it will be as bad as that render. A larger scoreboard in center isn't a bad idea, we'll see.Fuck.
I LIKE Kauffman Stadium.
And it's easy to find.
Oh well, if nothing else, it would sure make things easier for the A's. They could move back to KC!
@Tom Hendricks, I'm curious what you think of this...
Miguel Cabrera has said that 2023 will be his final season. I thought 2022 was?![]()
Miguel Cabrera has said that 2023 will be his final season. I thought 2022 was?![]()
What is Don Mattingly doing? I thought he had a guaranteed FO job with the Marlins.
Always with the rulesPerry's 1974 autobiography was titled "Me and the Spitter," and he wrote it in that when he started in 1962 he was the "11th man on an 11-man pitching staff" for the Giants. He needed an edge and learned the spitball from San Francisco teammate Bob Shaw.
Perry said he first threw it in May 1964 against the New York Mets, pitched 10 innings without giving up a run and soon after entered the Giants' starting rotation.
He also wrote in the book that he chewed slippery elm bark to build up his saliva, and eventually stopped throwing the pitch in 1968 after MLB ruled pitchers could no longer touch their fingers to their mouths before touching the baseball.
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