I haven't seen the new ballpark, so can't make any judgements on it. It DOES take a little while to find its stride, though. Not just a new park, but the team has only been there a short while, so you don't have that die-hard fan base yet. If (one of these years) the team goes on a big run, makes the playoffs, then you might see a more permanant uptick.
...
Sure, you can get more comfortable seats, better views, cheaper food, parking, and tickets, and some years you can see a better team (but not right now, arguably), but Fenway is one of those Shrines of Baseball. Wrigley would be another close example. In these kinds of places, it becomes more than just a game or a ballpark, it's something special...
Agreed. It's been ten years and a World Series win and I feel that the BoB (and the team) is only just now really hitting it's stride with the fans.
I think Dodger Stadium is another good example of this too. Two to three million people a year attend the games there.
It would seem that whoever built places like FedEx Field and Tropicana Field has not done their homework, as both of those places are apparently so run down that they already need to be replaced, only about a decade after being built!
(Tropicana Field already is going away, as the Rays are planning to build a new ballpark.)
As well it should. It even SOUNDS ghastly.
BTW - while the Rays are only ten years old, the Stadium is a lot closer to it's 25th birthday than it is to it's 10th. IIRC, it opened about '85. So, by the time it's replaced it will be only 5 to 6 years younger than the cookie cutters were when they started being replaced.