The Mercury News

A’s draw their smallest crowd in 24 years

Despite Coliseum open to full capacity, just 4,739 show up

- By Shayna Rubin srubin@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The Oakland Coliseum opened up to 100 percent capacity for the first time since the COVID pandemic for the A’s game against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday night to a surprising­ly empty house.

The A’s drew just 4,739 fans after averaging 5,510 for the 42 limited capacity games, the fewest fans for an “open” Coliseum game in 24 years.

Overall, the A’s rank second-to-last in the majors in average home attendance, better than only the Blue Jays, who have been forced to play at their minor league affiliate ballparks this season, first at

Dunedin, Florida and now in Buffalo, New York, until Canada allows the team to travel in and out of the country.

Tuesday’s game didn’t figure to be a huge draw — a Tuesday night against the Rangers, who are in last place and own the second-worst record in the American League. Even A’s officials are calling Friday night’s series opener against the Boston Red Sox the official reopening.

But the A’s are fighting for another division title and had drawn fairly well earlier in the season, attracting several crowds of more than 7,000 despite health restrictio­ns that capped capacity at 12,000.

The empty house was even more dramatic juxtaposed with the crowds of 35,000-plus the A’s played in front of during the Bay Bridge Series over the weekend at Oracle Park, the first games at that facility played without COVID restrictio­ns.

Sparse crowds are nothing new at the Coliseum. The A’s infamously played in front of 250 fans (653 tickets were sold) for an April game against the Mariners in 1979 and attendance (or lack of it) for years has been at the heart of the quest for a new ballpark.

The 4,739 fans on Tuesday were the fewest for a game without COVID restrictio­ns since 4,651 fans watched the A’s lose to the Detroit Tigers in mid-September of 1997. The A’s headliners at that game was firstround pick Ben Grieve and future MVP Miguel Tejada.

Before Tuesday, the A’s hadn’t played at home in front of such a spare crowd since May 30, 2018 when a crowd of 6,705 braved temperatur­es of 54 degrees at first pitch. The previous low since the 1997 game had been in 2003, when the A’s made up one of the games from their canceled Japan trip for a crowd of 6,295. The A’s drew a crowd of 4,116 in a mid-September game, also against the Rangers, in 1986.

The A’s drew fewer than 5,000 fans for 20 of their 42 COVID-restricted games this year. The smallest crowd of the season was 2,865 on May 25 against the Mariners.

With a team gunning for a fourth straight postseason and restrictio­ns lifted, can the A’s inch back up toward the 20,521 attendance average from 2019, the last season fans were allowed in the ballpark?

Hope is on the way in the form of the Boston Red Sox and a fireworks show.

A’s officials are expecting at least 30,000 for each of their three upcoming weekend games against the Red Sox. The A’s will host a fireworks show following the game on Friday night.

Oakland’s biggest home crowd came this season on Opening Day, drawing 10,436 with the ballpark at limited capacity. And 8,000-10,000 filled the Coliseum seats for a weekend series against Shohei Ohtani and the Los Angeles Angels on Memorial Day weekend.

The A’s were the last of the five California Major League Baseball teams to open up their ballpark to fans at full capacity. The A’s returned from a three-city road trip to New York, Texas and San Francisco

after the official June 15 state of California reopening. Since Opening Day, the A’s were operating at 33% capacity with restrictio­ns that included consistent mask-wearing and mobile concession­s.

• Per the A’s statement on opening up the Coliseum to full capacity, some of the health and safety measures remain in place, including cashless transactio­ns, mobileonly ticketing and concession pickup. Mask wearing is not enforced, but the A’s encourage fans to be fully vaccinated or obtain a negative COVID-19 test prior to attending.

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