Celebrating Camden Yards’ 30th birthday


It was a writing assignment that I desperately wanted: now that Oriole Park at Camden Yards is turning 30 years old, how did it come to be?

I was living in Maryland in 1992. In fact, my office was just a couple of blocks away from the shiny new ballpark. You could look out of our conference-room windows and watch the construction as the park took shape.

I attended the first game ever played at the park — a five-inning exhibition against the Mets three days before the regular-season opener on April 6, 1992. On that Opening Day, I watched the proceedings from the roof of our office building.

The City of Baltimore was absolutely alive. Everyone was excited that the new baseball park was a reality.

At that time, though, we had no idea that Camden Yards was going to change the sport in profound ways.

So I put all I had into writing the article for USA TODAY Sports. I spoke to Jon Miller, the Orioles’ broadcaster at the time. Larry Lucchino, the team’s president. Janet Marie Smith, arguably the greatest ballpark consultant of all time (and should be in the Hall of Fame). Joe Spear, lead architect. Rick Sutcliffe, the O’s pitcher in the Opener. Lainy Lebow Sachs, the top aide to mayor-then-governor William Donald Schaefer. Kurt Schmoke, Baltimore’s mayor when the park opened.

It made for a very long article, but the editors at USA TODAY HQ didn’t flinch. They ran the entire piece, giving it three full pages in USA TODAY Sports Weekly, and posting it for all the world to see on USATODAY.com. It was a testament to the popularity and the impact of Camden Yards.

I had a lot of great material that I couldn’t fit into that print article, so I asked for permission to post it on this site — with additional quotes from all of the people I interviewed. Just click here and you can read the expanded piece.


The most popular spring training park


IN THE BALLPARK

by Joe Mock

To provide material for articles that I would be writing for the USA TODAY Spring Training Preview, I asked ReviewTrackers, a data-mining firm in Chicago, if they would do a research project. As they had done in 2017 with the regular-season parks of Major League Baseball (and I wrote this article about those results), I wanted them to examine online comments written by folks who had attended spring-training exhibitions. They agreed.

A couple of months later, Max Schleicher of ReviewTrackers informed me that they had completed their research on 36,000 user reviews by attendees of exhibition games. They summed up the findings in a wonderful paper called Voice of the Fan, which you can view on their website.

The report revealed their findings and provided context to the results by giving examples of actual online comments that supported why fans feel the way they do about the 23 spring-training ballparks. The report was fascinating. And the results surprised me.

As someone who has scrutinized every one of the 23 spring-training complexes, I expected the newer (i.e., more expensive) complexes like Salt River Fields in Arizona and The Fitteam Ballpark of the Palm Beaches (it just adopted this new corporate-sponsorship name, by the way) to top the rankings. After all, the architecture and amenities are, to me, phenomenal at these two facilities. And both cost a boatload of money to build. Read More