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Rangers Thursday Workout |
Rumor has it that the first time Roger Clemens arrived at Fenway Park in a cab in 1984, he thought the cab driver made a mistake. I can see why. On a non-gameday, Fenway could look like something you'd see in an urban warehouse district.
"The cab ride in is always fun," said Michael Young. "You have a ball park pop up in the middle of the neighborhood."
This is my first trip here and I am digging it. I've been to some minor league ballparks that are nicer than these hallowed grounds. That being the case, it's an almost refreshing change from the MEGA-BILLION-MONOLITHIC-STADIUMS/BALLPARKS-ON-STEROIDS. Fenway doesn't scream at you from a highway. It just sort of invites you to come hang out and enjoy a game.
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Rangers Dugout Looking out to Green Monster |
David Murphy played his first major league game here with the Red Sox and still thinks coming to Boston is cool. "Everybody's going to the new expensive ballparks which are nice but to step in the batter's box on the field where so many incredible players have played and a lot of big games have been played it's just, as a baseball player, you find that special."
The Red Sox have spent more than $100 million dollars adding seats and upgrading the park but according to many Rangers perhaps the best improvement has nothing to do with aesthetics. Well, at least visual ones. I'd heard that Fenway sometimes stuck with you after you left. Kind of like the stench of a smoky bar that lingers on your clothes for a few days.
One Ranger, who shall remain nameless, mentioned to me that the vile, etched-in-the-concrete smell of urine/beer is gone.
"It feels different because they changed the tunnel from the dugout to the clubhouse," Josh Hamilton told me. When I asked him if it smelled better he smiled and said "Much!"