Houston Chronicle

In a push for fans’ safety … the net result

Minute Maid to extend protective covering from dugout to dugout starting this season

- By Hunter Atkins hunter.atkins@chron.com twitter.com/hunteratki­ns35

The Astros announced on Wednesday plans to expand netting at Minute Maid Park to run the length of both dugouts, following a trend throughout baseball the last two seasons to protect fans from batted balls and broken bats.

The netting above the dugouts will be 12 feet high and behind home plate 32 feet high, extending from section 112 to 126. Netting above the dugouts will be removed during batting practice so fans can still pursue autographs and put in place by first pitch. The Astros said the new material relies on a smaller mesh that allows better visibility.

Critics argued more netting would obstruct views, rob fans of foul balls and intrude on the crowd’s intimacy with the game. But mounting attention from fans struck by balls and bats inspired commission­er Rob Manfred in December 2015 to propose netting in front of any seats that are within 70 feet of home plate. Nineteen teams without such protection made immediate changes before the 2016 season. The Astros already had sufficient netting, but the latest alteration­s are further precaution­s.

Mobile devices, some boosted by improved high-speed internet at ballparks, increasing­ly distract fans. Manfred’s announceme­nt followed a national class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of a fan in Oakland asking for expanded safety measures throughout MLB. In 2014, 1,750 fans were injured by foul or errant balls in the stands at major league games, according to Bloomberg News.

In an age when customer choice has encouraged the Astros to replace Tal’s Hill with Shake Shack and Torchy’s Tacos, the latest adjustment­s let fans feel safer about sitting close while multitaski­ng on their phones.

“Going to the ballpark and watching a game of baseball is a different experience now than it was even 10 years ago with the growing popularity of social media and real-time updates,” Astros president of business operations Reid Ryan said in a team statement. “We want our fans to be able to enjoy a ballgame however they like, whether that’s from behind a more protective layer of netting or right in the middle of the action.”

The Astros expect the Minute Maid Park netting to be installed in time for the Shriners Hospitals for Children College Classic, which runs March 3-5.

The Astros already installed new netting at Whataburge­r Field, home of the Class AA affiliate Corpus Christi Hooks. Each extension runs 74 feet from a height of 31 feet, covering an additional 1,250 seats in four complete sections.

 ?? Houston Chronicle file ?? Fans behind the visitors’ dugout at Minute Maid Park offer drasticall­y varying reactions to a bat headed their direction. There will be netting to protect them this season.
Houston Chronicle file Fans behind the visitors’ dugout at Minute Maid Park offer drasticall­y varying reactions to a bat headed their direction. There will be netting to protect them this season.

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