The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

IT'S SPECTACULA­R

Falcon's sparkling new home is big, bold and beautiful.

- Mark Bradley Bradley continued on

“Like the new digs?” Dan Quinn asked, 2½ hours before kickoff on opening night. “Pretty nice, huh?”

Yes. Pretty nice. Really nice.

Nicer than nice.

If you’re wondering who won

the Atlanta Stadium Derby of 2017, this untrained architect would say the Falcons. SunTrust

Park is a fine place, but Mercedes-Benz Stadium is proof that $1.5 billion goes a long way. It’s massive and therefore spacious, whereas STP feels a bit cramped. (Then again, MBS has nothing like the Battery on its campus,

and the Braves didn’t spend a nickel for a retractabl­e roof that can’t yet be trusted to retract.)

Of metro Atlanta’s two new big-league stadiums, MBS is — as we pretty much knew all along — the eye-popper. By itself, the halo video screen would carry that vote. And that’s not to mention the petal roof, assuming it flowers to specificat­ion. But that’s OK: SunTrust Park was built as a ballpark, not a palace. Mercedes-Benz Stadium was always drawn to palatial scale, and it achieves that exalted status. It’s pretty nice, really nice, nicer than nice.

Apologies for turning this into

an episode of “Mansion Wars,” but that’s kind of where we Atlantans are. The Braves are playing in a new ballpark. The Falcons have taken occupancy of a new stadium. The Hawks are redoing Philips Arena. Can’t tell

the bricks and mortar and pixelated matrix boards without a scorecard.

An hour’s unguided walking tour of MBS showed lots of neat stuff. There were food options — Farm Burger, Fox Bros. Bar-B-Q, to name two — that this diner has patronized in non-stadium form. The ushers were friendlies­t ever encountere­d. (Major thanks to Constance Glover, who went a half-mile out of her way to point the way back to the press box.) One of the blotches on the Georgia Dome was that, once inside, you couldn’t tell if it was night or day. Owing to the enormous window above the east end zone, you could see both sunshine and skyline.

Standing on the field, it was hard not to gawk. Quinn mentioned that his Falcons, in their walkthroug­h Friday, did a lot of that. Being a coach, he was concerned. “I keep saying, ‘Guys, between the white lines.’”

Perhaps it was just happenstan­ce, but the Falcons did play as if distracted. Matt Ryan’s first pass was deflected and intercepte­d. Another should-havebeen-INT was dropped. The visiting Cardinals — who not incidental­ly play in a stadium not dissimilar to this — seemed unimpresse­d by their surroundin­gs. They scored the first touchdown in MBS. They kicked the first field goal. The Falcons trailed 10-0 when Ryan was excused halfway through the second quarter. They trailed 17-nil two plays later, Matt Schaub suffering a sack/ fumble on his first snap.

Not that it mattered. The football part of Saturday night was negligible. (It was, we note for emphasis, an exhibition, as in “doesn’t count.”) The attraction wasn’t the game, but its surroundin­gs.

Twenty-five years after the Dome elevated this city to a different sporting plane, its bigger and brighter brother opened its doors and stands ready — cue Sly Stone — to take us higher.

We Atlantans take a lot of grief about our teams — the principal occupant of Mercedes-Benz Stadium is coming off maybe the worst loss in the annals of U.S. sports, about which even Peyton Manning has cracked wise — but we’re not hurting for creature comforts when it comes to watching them in per

son. In the space of 4½ months, we’ve seen the Cumberland Mall area transfigur­ed by the Braves’ arrival, and now downtown has a stunning new attraction/destinatio­n. Contrary to popular

belief, this isn’t the worst place in the world to be a sports fan. On Thursday,

the Falcons will end their exhibition season in MBS while Georgia State christens Turner Field for foot-

ball. On Saturday, it’s Alabama vs. Florida State under the closed roof. Labor Day will bring Georgia Tech against Tennessee. Come January, we’ll have the College Football Playoff title game. Come 2019, Super Bowl LIII. Come 2020, the Final Four.

We know the drill: We’re Atlanta, which means all our streets are

named Peachtree and our traffic stinks and we can’t drive in the snow and our teams always blow the big game and we often don’t show up to watch them play. There’s truth in all of above. (Indeed, there were empty seats at MBS on Saturday.) But there’s a new truth, too. We have a

nice new baseball stadium and a really nice football stadium, with a refurbishe­d basketball arena coming soon. We’re doing just fine, thanks for asking.

Oh, and just for the record: It doesn’t snow

here that often.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? If Saturday’s christenin­g matching the Falcons and Cardinals was an indicator, Mercedes-Benz Stadium is worth every cent of its $1.5 billion price tag. The halo board is state-of-the-art, and a walking tour reveals plenty of perks.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM If Saturday’s christenin­g matching the Falcons and Cardinals was an indicator, Mercedes-Benz Stadium is worth every cent of its $1.5 billion price tag. The halo board is state-of-the-art, and a walking tour reveals plenty of perks.
 ??  ??
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Falcons defensive ends Takkarist McKinley (left) and Jack Crawford (right) close in on Cardinals quarterbac­k Drew Stanton. Crawford was credited with a sack during the Falcons’ 24-14 loss in their third exhibition game.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Falcons defensive ends Takkarist McKinley (left) and Jack Crawford (right) close in on Cardinals quarterbac­k Drew Stanton. Crawford was credited with a sack during the Falcons’ 24-14 loss in their third exhibition game.
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Quarterbac­k Matt Ryan hands off to running back Tevin Coleman during the second quarter. Ryan’s night ended midway through the second quarter as the offense struggled against the Cardinals.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Quarterbac­k Matt Ryan hands off to running back Tevin Coleman during the second quarter. Ryan’s night ended midway through the second quarter as the offense struggled against the Cardinals.
 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Cardinals running back Chris Johnson loses control of the ball during the first quarter of the opening exhibition game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Cardinals running back Chris Johnson loses control of the ball during the first quarter of the opening exhibition game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

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