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We did it!! 96,000 at the Big Owe one more time!!

rumpleforeskiin

It's a whole new ballgame
Jan 20, 2007
6,561
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Where I belong.
200 more people than last year.


Nearly 100K Montreal fans show love of baseball

MONTREAL — It was mission accomplished for Montreal baseball advocates as over 96,000 fans came out for two Toronto Blue Jays exhibition games at Olympic Stadium.

On Friday, 46,314 people watched the Blue Jays lose 2-0 to the Cincinnati Reds. On Saturday afternoon, more than 50,000 people showed up as the Jays beat the Reds 9-1.

The atmosphere during Saturday’s win was reminiscent of the Montreal Expos’ greatest triumphs and gave hope to those dreaming of a return of Major League baseball to the city. The Montreal Expos played their last game in 2004.

MLB officials have been pleasantly surprised by the response of Quebecers to this second series of Blue Jays exhibition games held at Olympic Stadium.

This year’s attendance is 195 more people than came last year for Major League Baseball’s inaugural return.

"These are impressive numbers," said John McHale, senior vice president of MLB. "We thought that because of the Easter holiday and the novelty perhaps wearing off this year, there might have been fewer people for this year’s games. We wouldn’t even have thought that was bad."

MLB’s new commissioner, Rob Manfred, said in the past week that Montreal had successfully passed the first test toward a return of baseball to the city: demonstrating great interest.

Earlier this week, he said the city would also need "a firm, committed-to plan" for a new stadium.

Montreal’s mayor Denis Coderre, who attended the game wearing an Expos hat, is just one of many Montreal baseball fans hoping to bring another team to the city.

McHale is expected to make a report on this weekend’s games to the league on Monday.

"We’ll hold a meeting and I can tell you that with the commissioner’s new team in place, many people are interested in reading the report," he said.

McHale, who returned to New York before Saturday’s game, repeated that the League would not write off the idea of holding regular season games — either Blue Jays or another team — in Montreal in the near future.

"We’ve done it in the past," McHale said. "Sadly, with the Expos, who played in San Juan, Puerto Rico."

This would mean playing regular league games at Olympic Stadium.

Steve Rogers, the former Expos pitcher speaking on behalf of the MLB players’ association, said the event’s organizers did an exceptional job to prepare the surface and correct minor imperfections noted last year.

"I don’t see why they couldn’t do the extra improvement needed to meet all our standards," he said. "Since it isn’t a permanent surface, there are a few imperfections that we wouldn’t want to see for games that counted in the standings, but they know it, it’s no mystery. I’m sure it wouldn’t be a problem."
 

Coors

New Member
Sep 12, 2012
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The Laurentians
Was at both games this year and last. Had an amazing time. Great to see so many people out in EXPOS gear. Showing MLB we want our team back!
 

CaptRenault

A poor corrupt official
Jun 29, 2003
2,098
933
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Casablanca
Bien fait et félicitations to the fans in Montreal who have again demonstrated that they would support a team. I would also love to see a team, because a stadium with the Montreal skyline as a backdrop would be a great place to spend a summer evening. However, the main challenge for Montreal baseball is the same as it was ten years ago--funding the cost (between CDN $500M and $1B) of a new stadium.

[h=1]Willes: Would baseball thrive again in Montreal? Absolutely. Will it happen? Hmm...[/h]If you conduct an Internet search for “new Montreal baseball stadium,” you’ll get a dozen images of the Montreal Expos’ field of dreams. They’re all open-air and stunning. They’re all located in or near the city’s vibrant downtown. The favoured site appears to be at the foot of Peel Street, hard against the locks near the city’s old port, which would only be perfect.
You can see it, can’t you? The Expos playing in front of a packed house on a warm summer’s evening, the way they were meant to. The crowd singing. The ghosts of Le Grande Orange, The Hawk and The Rock smiling down. For a kid who sat in the left-field bleachers at Jarry Park; who worshipped the Expos in the ’70s and is still scarred by Blue Monday; and who swore off baseball after we were robbed of our World Series in ’94, it’s a beautiful vision.


But is it a realistic vision? Right now, that’s a question without an answer...
 
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