Where Are All The Fans? Watching Soccer, Actually
We're barely a week into the season, and already teams are freaking right the fuck out about empty seats. And the numbers sure have been embarrassing.
If that Marlins crowd up there isn't telling enough, we'll use the AL East as a case study. Remember, there are more than three teams in the big bad East, though from this week's games, even fans in Toronto and Baltimore seem to have forgotten about the also-rans.
Yesterday, Toronto drew a record-low crowd to the Rogers Centre; just 10, 610. The Orioles did them one better, when only 9,129 came out to see them on Monday. That's insane to me. I can remember when Skydome and Camden Yards were shiny and new, and it was impossible to get tickets. Now, they're struggling to reach five figures.
The Orioles have a season-ticket base of about 10,000, which means when you include walk-ups, a ton of people simply swallowed the cost of their tickets, rather than attend that game.
Their PR guy gave a number of reasons for the low turnout, all of which are legitimate: It was a Monday. It was early April. It was against Tampa Bay. And we'll add two more: that walk-up tickets are subject to a surcharge, and that the Orioles are terribad.
Of course, that last one's the most important. Good teams draw, while bad teams don't, unless they're the Cubs. And unless your ballpark is a license to print money, you're stuck in a never-ending shit-spiral where you don't get the attendance revenue to turn your team around. It's a troubling cycle, but it's not inescapable. The Rays have averaged a respectable 27,000 fans a game so far.
But take an unwatchable product, throw in a lingering recession, and there are going to be an embarrassing amount of empty seats. That's business.
Interestingly, one league that's doing gangbusters is MLS. Through the first few weeks of their season, they're averaging bigger crowds than hockey or basketball. Don't read too much into it: extended honeymoons in Toronto and Seattle, a new stadium in New York, and a new team in Philadelphia are inflating those numbers. And, of course, the NHL and NBA are constrained by the size of their arenas.
But on this Tax Day, perhaps the most American of days, it's definitely worth noting that soccer is on its way up, while baseball is lagging dangerously in many place.
(Screengrab from Dupes in Columbus)
Related
How the Pittsburgh Steelers Can Survive Without T.J. Watt
UFC Vegas 112 Picks: Best Bets for the Final ESPN-Era Card
Why a Joe Burrow Trade to the Vikings Actually Makes Sense
- Why the Blackhawks and Bruins Are Playoff Longshots Worth Betting
- Falcons vs Buccaneers Thursday Night Football Week 15 Betting Picks
- NBA Picks December 10th: Thunder vs. Suns and Spurs vs. Lakers Best Bets
- NHL Futures Picks: Best Value Bets for Teams to Miss the Playoffs
- Tuesday NBA Cup Best Bets: Picks for Heat vs. Magic and Knicks vs. Raptors
- NHL Picks for Tuesday: Best Bets for Lightning vs. Canadiens and Ducks vs. Penguins
- College Basketball 2025-26 National Title Contenders Best Future Bets

