Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Good MLB views, if fans know where to look

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON » Tucked under the center field seats at Fenway Park, down some stairs from Lansdowne Street in an area previously used as the visiting team’s batting cage, is a sports bar that is preparing to reopen from the coronaviru­s shutdown.

Largely windowless and decorated with sepia photograph­s hung on dark wooden walls, the main source of light is the sunshine streaming in through a thick metal screen that reveals the true treasure of the location: a view of the Boston Red Sox field, from Green Monster to Pesky Pole, that could make the Bleacher Bar one of the few spots to watch a major league game in person this season.

“It’s one of a kind. It really is,” said Joe Hicks, who runs the restaurant and three others in the area. “Kids and families, they get excited when they walk in here and they see how cool this is. People, they walk in and they’re just naturally happy.

“Being able to see inside the park, it doesn’t get much better than that.”

Major League Baseball suspended spring training on March 12, and the season that was scheduled to open on March 26 never did. Last week, players and owners reached an agreement to play an abbreviate­d, 60-game season that would start July 23 or 24 in teams’ home ballparks.

But they’re not yet ready to crowd the seats with tens of thousands of fans.

Instead, those hoping to see a game in person may have to settle for places like the Bleacher Bar, the Rogers Centre hotel or the Wrigley rooftops, pressing their face up to the windows or squinting through fences like the Knothole Gangs of yore.

The Roberto Clemente Bridge provides a look into PNC Park and a hotel in Baltimore might offer rooms with a view of the field at

Camden Yards.

“There is some irony in the fact that the kind of social areas that we’ve created in baseball parks may end up being the key to the social distancing that may be required when we do see the sport again,” baseball architect Janet Marie Smith said. “I think there’s some, yeah, some sort of cruel irony in that.”

Smith, who helped build the paradigm-shifting Camden Yards and worked on renovation­s for Dodger Stadium and Fenway, said ballpark designers have tried to find new ways to connect with their urban surroundin­gs after moving back from the suburbs in the 1990s.

The result: a picnic area in San Diego, a waterfront promenade in San Francisco, a street plaza in Baltimore, a nightclub in Miami.

And now those new knotholes could be a foot in the door for fans if teams and government officials deem them safe to open before the actual seating bowls.

“We’re seeing that the mixture of uses bode well for a lot of situations,” Smith said. “We weren’t looking for this one, for sure. But it does allow one to tiptoe back in and have a lighter touch than the traditiona­l way of thinking of a stadium or ballpark with all fixed seating.”

Most teams contacted by The Associated Press last week said they were following guidance from local officials on whether fans would be allowed to watch games from these areas. In many states, a key distinctio­n is whether they are designed for ticketed fans or outside the turnstiles; in Massachuse­tts, for example, the Bleacher Bar can reopen as a restaurant even while Fenway and other large arenas remain closed.

The Toronto Marriott City Centre is awaiting word from the Blue Jays on whether it can rent out the 70 rooms with perfect views of the field, general manager Anup Israni said. (As of Friday, the hotel had “Baseball Stadium view” rooms available for booking for late July and into August.)

A Chicago Cubs spokesman said it has not been decided if the rooftops along Waveland and Sheffield Avenues will be open.

San Francisco’s Portwalk, a promenade next to McCovey Cove that has views into Oracle Park, will remain closed, a Giants spokeswoma­n said. Kayakers are still hoping to paddle around, scrambling for splash shots.

The Clevelande­r Marlins Park, a nightclub with a swimming pool beyond the left field fence in Miami, also will not open, the team said. The San Diego Padres said the Park at the Park, a ticketed grassy area beyond the center field fence, will be closed for the regular season; it will be open for the spring training reboot, though, with fans required to social distance.

Eutaw Street, which runs beyond the right field wall in Baltimore, helped popularize the trend toward seatless viewing areas. On game days, it is typically filled with fans who hawk for home runs or purchase sandwiches at Boog’s BBQ.

But it is inside the Camden Yards gates, and it will remain closed, the team said. It was also off limits when the Orioles played a game without fans in 2015 because of protests over Freddie Gray’s death in police custody — until now, the only major league game played without fans in the ballpark.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A reporter photograph­s the view of the baseball field at Fenway Park from the Bleacher Bar in Boston.
ELISE AMENDOLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A reporter photograph­s the view of the baseball field at Fenway Park from the Bleacher Bar in Boston.

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