Monterey Herald

Las Vegas fans get 1st look at relocating A's players

- By Mark Anderson

The Oakland Athletics return to Las Vegas this weekend for exhibition games against Milwaukee, their first appearance since announcing the relocation to what the team envisions as its future home city.

The games at Las Vegas Ballpark, home of the franchise's Triple-A Aviators, feature an A's team planning a new regular-season ballpark on the Strip it hopes will open in 2028. The Nevada Legislatur­e last June enacted $380 million in funding for a $1.5 billion stadium, and baseball owners unanimousl­y approved the relocation in November.

Close to a sellout crowd is expected in the 10,000-seat capacity ballpark for the Saturday afternoon game, but breezy temperatur­es that will drop into the 50s could depress attendance Friday night.

Las Vegas has hosted spring training games since at least 1983, and the A's played their first six regular-season games in 1996 at Cashman Field because of renovation­s at the Oakland Coliseum. Because of the planned permanent move, this weekend's game create an unusual dynamic for players, who will return to Oakland and a fan base irate at owner John Fisher.

“Being from the Bay Area, it kind of sucks, just the fan base and the community that's in Oakland,” right-hander Paul Blackburn said. “I grew up going to A's games, watching their teams in the early 2000s, the `Moneyball' year (2002). They lose a big part of (the community). But on the other side, you got a community that's been looking for a big-league team. For the people in Vegas, I would assume it is exciting for them to have a team to look forward to.”

The A's released renderings for the 33,000-seat stadium on Tuesday, the latest step in the relocation process. That ballpark will be on a nine-acre segment of a 35-acre property owned by Bally's at the corner of Tropicana Avenue and Las Vegas Boulevard.

The nearly 67-year-old Tropicana resort that sits on that property will close April 2 in preparatio­n for demolition to make room for ballpark and hotel constructi­on.

Where the A's play from 2025-27 still hasn't been announced. Club officials met with the city of Oakland about a potential lease extension. Other possible options include the San Francisco Giants' Oracle Park or Triple-A ballparks in Salt Lake City or Sacramento, California.

A Nevada teachers political action committee has sued to block the state from distributi­ng the money approved by the Legislatur­e for the stadium. Constructi­on delays also are possible.

The A's went 50-112 last season, the team's most losses since the 1916 Philadelph­ia A's, and finished 40 games back in the AL West. Fans protested the Las Vegas move throughout the season, aiming their ire at Fisher.

“I think we did a pretty good job of handling it,” said designated hitter Brent Rooker, who hit 30 home runs last season.

 ?? NEGATIV VIA AP ?? The Oakland Athletics and their design teams released renderings Tuesday of the club's planned $1.5 billion stadium in Las Vegas.
NEGATIV VIA AP The Oakland Athletics and their design teams released renderings Tuesday of the club's planned $1.5 billion stadium in Las Vegas.

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