I wish someone would just ask Dusty to plainly lay out the rationale behind it. In explicit terms and in comparison to other options.
let me be honest. I'm not talking about Astros. I love MMP and I make the effort to go. reliant sucks to get to which means the rodeo sucks to get to but they do a good job with the busses for that. I would never go to Toyota center though. Parking while not even that far from MMP, is horrible.Beau Holder said:
I get that, and I'm afraid by even posting this that things are going to go sideways, but I don't want to just ignore you. Isn't that the tradeoff as old as modernity? With density in cities comes things to do all around you at the cost of space and some amenities. With suburbs comes nice yards and lots and school districts at the cost of the things characteristic of a city.
I live two miles from MMP. As a huge Astros fan, being able to bike down the bayou to go to as many games as I want was a minor factor in that decision. Along with food options and three music venues within 10 minutes of me and lots of other considerations. I didn't want to live in a burb, but if I did, I wouldn't have done it with the expectation of a major sports franchise setting up shop there.
EDIT: I should also say, you're right about the experience in this regard: I love this city, but public transpo is 100% one area in which it needs to get its crap together. No reason there can't be routes of some kind from the Beltway-ish neighborhoods toward downtown.
Its ****ing stupid! You know how many times Dubon started in CF with JV on the mound in the playoffs last year? NONE!!!!!!!!!Prosperdick said:Probably the best we can hope for...Dubon in centerfield is still such an oddity but whatever.Wabs said:
So with JV pitching (and Maldy and Dubon being "required" to play)...
1. Altuve 2B
2. Breggy 3B
3. Yordan DH
4. Tucker RF
5. Chas LF
6. Diaz 1B
7. Pena SS
8. Dubon CF
9. Maldy C
Lonestar_Ag09 said:let me be honest. I'm not talking about Astros. I love MMP and I make the effort to go. reliant sucks to get to which means the rodeo sucks to get to but they do a good job with the busses for that. I would never go to Toyota center though. Parking while not even that far from MMP, is horrible.Beau Holder said:
I get that, and I'm afraid by even posting this that things are going to go sideways, but I don't want to just ignore you. Isn't that the tradeoff as old as modernity? With density in cities comes things to do all around you at the cost of space and some amenities. With suburbs comes nice yards and lots and school districts at the cost of the things characteristic of a city.
I live two miles from MMP. As a huge Astros fan, being able to bike down the bayou to go to as many games as I want was a minor factor in that decision. Along with food options and three music venues within 10 minutes of me and lots of other considerations. I didn't want to live in a burb, but if I did, I wouldn't have done it with the expectation of a major sports franchise setting up shop there.
EDIT: I should also say, you're right about the experience in this regard: I love this city, but public transpo is 100% one area in which it needs to get its crap together. No reason there can't be routes of some kind from the Beltway-ish neighborhoods toward downtown.
I didn't move to a suburb hoping a team would follow although I did get my hopes up when they discussed moving a minor league affiliate to the Woodlands area.
I just think the areas I mentioned would be well served if they put a Hockey stadium and I guess relocated the Rockets to the North side. It would still be on the beltway so easy enough to get to for south siders and those inside the loop. And reasonable to get to for cypress/spring/Tomball/woodlands etc.
Also many areas around there which could be aught up and demolished for the stadium followed by areas to add in bars/restaurants etc. also great proximity to the airport
I always find some of these stats interesting.redline248 said:
Since July 1...Jake is a little better
In August, Dubon has the advantage.
Jake strikes out way too much no matter what, but does have more pop.
edit: and I don't think that's an accurate measure of defense since Dubon is going to have some infield time
texasaggie2015 said:
I just made the worst decision of my life and made a LLWS bet (Mexico moneyline) to keep me entertained at work
We need to tear down the Beacon and replace it with something 10X better.Farmer1906 said:This area needs to be developed into something awesome.Beau Holder said:
Agree Coors ballpark neighborhood is great. T-Mobile has a solid street of brewpubs next to it. Wrigleyville is obviously a platonic ideal.
Pre and postgame in EaDo is a lot of fun and honestly not even that far of a walk to/from the stadium, but it would be nice to have something on the MMP side of 59.
Eado is fine.
West of the ballpark is solid enough with V&A, Irma's, & Osso & Kristalla's are some nice places to eat.
A little farther south is fine too - Biggio's, Grotto, Saltgrass, Grove.
We need home plate & BUS to be replaced with something 10x better. Not just a parking lot.
https://www.sumhlc.org/resources/covid-19/national-gambling-addiction-hotlines-and-additional-resources/#:~:text=The%20National%20Problem%20Gambling%20Helpline,assist%20with%20their%20gambling%20addiction.Marvin said:texasaggie2015 said:
I just made the worst decision of my life and made a LLWS bet (Mexico moneyline) to keep me entertained at work
Betting on 12- year olds? Or 16 in the case of those Far East teams.
No idea. I was just looking at what was posted.redline248 said:
There is probably some quality of contact in there, idk? Or maybe b/c Dubon had so many more ABs over that stretch?
I'm sorry my rounding from memory included the last week of July in my comment.redline248 said:
Dubon's July was actually friggin terrible.
.200/.234/.267, 36 wRC+. His Performance so far in August is pulling him waaay up in that very first photo I posted.
Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
CoachAg19 said:Beau Holder said:
Agree Coors ballpark neighborhood is great. T-Mobile has a solid street of brewpubs next to it. Wrigleyville is obviously a platonic ideal.
Pre and postgame in EaDo is a lot of fun and honestly not even that far of a walk to/from the stadium, but it would be nice to have something on the MMP side of 59.
I've been to Wrigleyville, and it's great. Unfortunately never made it to a game at Wrigley though. I'm going to Chicago next summer when the Astros play the White Sox and then making a stop for a Cubs game the next day.
MMP definitely needs more pre-and-post game attractions surrounding it.
CoachAg19 said:
They do, but I'm going with a group, and we can't all go on those particular dates.
No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
What? That's what you took from my postAgLA06 said:No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
You aren't speaking of realities.
AgLA06 said:No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
You aren't speaking of realities.
I was part of the first residential project in downtown Houston in 40 years. Compared to anywhere else, very few live downtown. It's 90%+ office space.Beau Holder said:AgLA06 said:No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
You aren't speaking of realities.
Plenty of people live Downtown actually. Probably more soon with two brand new high rises having just gone up. And tons more live in the inner-loop neighborhoods immediately surrounding it. And several others still live south of it and aren't going to The Woodlands for a sporting event, which was htxag's point.
Over 7 million people live in the Houston area and burbs. Between 10k-12K downtown. It would be one of the smallest, if not the smallest population of all the named suburbs of Houston.Beau Holder said:AgLA06 said:No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
You aren't speaking of realities.
Plenty of people live Downtown actually. Probably more soon with two brand new high rises having just gone up. And tons more live in the inner-loop neighborhoods immediately surrounding it. And several others still live south of it and aren't going to The Woodlands for a sporting event, which was htxag's point.
just like i won't drive from my house near sienna to Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion for a concert, i definitely wouldn't drive that far for a regular season ballgame i can watch on tv. maybe for playoff/wsBeau Holder said:AgLA06 said:No one lives downtown.htxag09 said:Yeah, people will easily travel from Sugar Land, Pearland, etc. for games in downtown.bigjag19 said:
There is nothing south of downtown Atlanta really. The baseball attending population was well north of downtown for the vast majority. It made sense.
Our population is everywhere. Downtown is all that makes sense.
I'd wager a fraction of those people would travel to Spring or The Woodlands.
You aren't speaking of realities.
Plenty of people live Downtown actually. Probably more soon with two brand new high rises having just gone up. And tons more live in the inner-loop neighborhoods immediately surrounding it. And several others still live south of it and aren't going to The Woodlands for a sporting event, which was htxag's point.