Imagine yourself not being able to purchase a beer at America's favorite pastime which is a baseball game. It happened to Cincinnati in 1880. The first American professional baseball team was expelled from the National League because of its rejection to discontinue renting out their ballpark on Sundays and to stop selling beer during games. Since then, a lot has changed. Hot dogs, peanuts, Cracker Jack and most of all Beer are some of the highlights of going to a baseball game, or in-particular, a Red game.
They are identified as the "Reds" from their original name the Cincinatti Red Stockings. They are the very first team in Major League history that has used an airplane to travel from one city to another (Cincinnati to Chicago).
Here is a background of the team Cincinnati Reds that have played in seven home fields.
The first home of baseball's original professional team was the Union Grounds and is located near the area now occupied by the Museum Center in the Union Terminal train station. The park is could accommodate 4,000 fans and it is anchored by a grandstand called "Grand Duchess".
Initially named Redland Field and was into Crosley Field in 1934, was the first Reds ballpark to feature a double-decked grandstand. The facility,
http://chs.glazenfyre.net/index.php?...4852#msg424852, found at the corner of Western Avenue and Findlay Street, was the site of baseball's first night game. And it was hosted Cincinnati's first World Series Championship team.
It was in June of 1970 that Riverfront Stadium was finished at an approximate cost of $45 million. The new park covered more than 48 acres of real estate, and can accommodate more than 52,000 fans. The triumph of the Reds during the 1970s combined to build some astonishing attendance figures. The Reds topped the one million mark in season attendance only four times at Crosley Field, yet at Riverfront, the club has never failed to draw one million. As a matter of fact, the Reds drew more than two million fans for eight successive seasons from 1973 through 1980.
Great American Ball Park was their last ballpark and is by the Ohio River in downtown Cincinnati. Hamilton County voters passed a one-half percent sales tax increase to fund the building of two new venues for both the Cincinnati Reds and the NFL's Cincinatti Bengals in 1996. Before,
http://club.sz.net.cn/page/topic/tblThreads.do?method=searchOne&threadId=1000321629 5&newThread=yes, the team's joint occupancy of Cinergy Field,
http://mercyleague.org/socialnetwork...sta-fashion-in, however complained that the aging multi-purpose stadium lacked modern amenities and other enhancements needed for small market teams to be competitive. The park has a grass playing surface and can accommodate holds 42,
http://www.dkrs.se/stallbloggen/entr...8u&e_id=767347,036 fans.
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July Davidson is interested in baseball,
http://war.the-archmage.info/index.p...9455#msg409455, writing for baseball and visiting baseball parks.
July Davidson loves baseball, writing for baseball and visiting baseball parks.
She agrees that getting cheap Red tickets is easy with your Event Ticket Butler.
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