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About the Author

LouGehrig
I have been a Yankees fan for many years. Thanks to what has occurred during the last few years, I am beginning to wonder.

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Did George Steinbrenner Help Decrease Yankees' Attendance?

by LouGehrig
created March 23, 2009, last edited March 25, 2009
8
Vote

by Harold Friend

This past July 4, the Yankees hosted the Red Sox in the final Independence Day baseball game ever to be played at Yankee Stadium. A crowd of 55,130 fans saw the Red Sox defeat the home team, 6-4, but it wasn't too long ago that the Yankees were complaining about July 4 attendance.

Only 22,021 Paid to See the July 4, 1994 Game

The first place Yankees hosted the Oakland Athletics on July 4, 1994 before only 22,021 fans. Yankees ' vice president Jack Lawn indicated that while 22,021 tickets were sold, only about 18,000 fans attended. Oakland defeated New York, 4-0, behind Steve Ontiveros, but what was significant was the small crowd.

Was it George Steinbrenner's Fault?

Some claimed that part of fault belonged to George Steinbrenner, who was pressuring New York City into either improving Yankee Stadium and the surrounding areas or building a new ballpark at the site of the Stadium or elsewhere. Mr. Steinbrenner had made it clear that moving the team was a possibility. The surrounding areas had to be redeveloped to reduce crime, an issue that the Yankees ' owner referred to whenever he discussed Yankees' attendance.

Frightening Fans

It was felt that Mr. Steinbrenner was deliberately trying to frighten fans to create leverage for his position of needing a new ballpark. Murray Chase of the New York Times wrote, "By constantly taking about the high crime area that is the Bronx, Steinbrenner has frightened fans away. He has told them time after time that they are risking their lives if they go to a game in the Bronx. When the man who owns the team loudly warns that it is dangerous to go to his team's games, what fool would ignore his advice?"

For more than a year, starting in 1993, the Yankees agitated taxpayers and politicians with reminders about how crime, lack of proper sanitation, poor parking facilities, bad highways, and traffic jams hold down attendance. In response to the July 4 "crowd" of 22,021, the Yankees circulated a press release, "Yankees Say Fear of Crime, Lack of Parking Kept Fans Away on Fourth of July." A prominent advertising executive expressed amazement at the Yankees' lack of marketing the team.

Missing Forever

The Yankees returned to winning World Championships in 1996, and attendance has increased dramatically. Since 2005, the Yankees have drawn over 4 million fans a season, despite not having been World Champions since 2000. Taxpayers have provided the Yankees with a new ballpark that will open in April. Many fans believe it will be a glorious experience to go to the new ball park, but there will be one difference compared to going to a game at Yankee Stadium, because one thing will be missing - forever.

"Yankee Stadium is what the new ball parks aspire to be. Yankee Stadium is an icon. You feel a chill come over you as the train comes out of the subway and you see the Stadium." When you walk through the runway and leave its darkness, the sight of the field where Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, and Mickey Mantle played awes you. We will never, ever again have that experience.

References:

Murray Chass. (1994, July 5). Steinbrenner a Factor In Low Stadium Gate. New York Times (1857-Current file),p. B9. Retrieved March 23, 2009, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2005) database. (Document ID: 116565027).

Richard Sandomir. (1994, July 12). Here's My Team. See It Soon at Your Own Risk :Come on up and get mugged, Steinbrenner seems to be saying.. New York Times (1857-Current file),p. B9. Retrieved March 23, 2009, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2005) database. (Document ID: 116605100).


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
233 days ago
Score 0+-
A question that I have asked anyone I consider knowledgable in the game: Will George Steinbrenner be a Hall of Famer? (My favorite answer so far was Frank Robinson's who said "Ooh. That's a good question. Probably not until he is dead." I am, of course paraphrasing without the more colorful adjectives.)
Permalink | Reply
LouGehrigRed-Shirting
233 days ago
Score 1+-
In the tradition of Pete Rose, you can bet on it. If Walter O'Malley is in, as Lanny Fratteire used to say after a Bucs win, "there was no doubt about it." Of course, Pete will never be allowed in, but that's another, although related, story.
Permalink
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
233 days ago
Score 0+-
I forgot to add that I do think he should be in, but no one will give him the satisfaction of experiencing it. I guess it still won't be long from now - he seems to be (in horse racing lingo) coming down the stretch in a hurry.
Permalink
Steel TownDraft Pick
232 days ago
Score 0+-
No more Lanny :(
Permalink
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
232 days ago
Score 1+-
I think Steinbrenner should be in the Hall. He took a team that was on the ropes, and turned it into a winning franchise. Think about it - they've won 6 of their 26 championships during his tenure as owner. That's almost 1/4!


All I can say is - yes, he may rub folks the wrong way - but Yankee fans have to be the envy of any team that doesn't win championships. I certainly wish the Phillies had had a similar philosophy since 1973.
Permalink
Mvicks21JV Squad
232 days ago
Score 0+-
You win and they will come. I think the main reason thier attendance was bad in those years is that they were so bad in the early nineties. The Yankees just started improving in 94. Attendance was down all over baseball too, compared to what it is now. People will look back 50 years from and say these were the glory days for baseball attendance.
Permalink | Reply
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
232 days ago
Score 0+-
I thought the same thing, so I looked it up. On 7/4/94, the Yankees were in 1st place by 2.5 games with a 48-31 record. They'd been in 1st place since May 9th.
Permalink
Mvicks21JV Squad
232 days ago
Score 0+-
I knew they were good in '94, but they just getting good that year and the fans hadn't bought into them yet. Remember too...they didn't have a roster filled with superstars then. They were just a regular baseball team...they didn't have all this tabloid bs that they deal with now. Sometimes I think the Yankees are more concerned with filling the seats than winning games.
Permalink | Reply
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
232 days ago
Score 0+-
This could be said for at least half of all major league teams. And really, this is true for all of them. Some are better at making the fans think they're more about the game or the fans. But in the end, they're all really about the greenbacks.
Permalink
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
232 days ago
Score 0+-
People knew the strike was imminent in '94. Remember, it happened in August. By July we all knew that nothing was going to stop it. I'm sure that if you looked at the numbers across the board they went down as 1994 progressed.

BUT, the Yankees were still a tainted product at that time. They were putrid just a few seasons prior, Steinbrenner was fresh off his suspension and Mattingly's back was hanging by a thread. The Yankees had little real star power O'Neill, Boggs and Jimmy Key despite showcasing such studs as Danny Tartabull, Melido Perez, Matt Nokes, Mike Gallego, Luis Polonia and Pat Kelly.

I really do miss the days when the Yankees sucked. Long live Stump Merrill!!!
Permalink
LouGehrigRed-Shirting
231 days ago
Score 1+-
I couldn't agree more.
Permalink
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User LouGehrig | March 23, 2009 | March 2009 | MLB Opinions | New York Yankees Opinions | George Steinbrenner Opinions | Yankees' Attendance Opinions

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