Since relocating to Southern California, I have observed many differences in the sports mentality. Last night, while attempting to get my beer one thing became crystal clear to me. In Chicago, sports venues are places where beer is readily available and games happen to take place. I went to a Bears game in negative temperatures where my beer froze but still we drank beer. A large majority of fans leave and venture to a bar after the Seventh Inning; unless one is at Sox Park where you relocate to the dugout bar in the stadium where beer is served till after the game. The largest and most annoying difference is the lack of beer vendors calling out “Beer, get your Beer.”
Folks from the Midwest you might be shocked to know that sporting venues do not have beer vendors.
And to my Southern California, in other parts of the country stadiums pay employees to walk though sections and sell beer as well other adult beverages. You don’t miss the game standing in line waiting for beer, you don’t disturb your neighbors with you frequent trips to the kiosk, and someone has a job…talk about a win win for everyone.
I lost two innings last night endeavoring to buy a beer. A 90-year-old woman was manning the first place I went, which has Stella, so after 15 minutes I went elsewhere. Oh, Corona…. your credit card machine isn’t working. ATM is down that way…oh and it is out of service. Excuse my, do you take credit cards? No, your credit card machine is broken. After, visiting for kiosks with broken machines I find a lady who’s machine is working and informs me that every other person was lying because they didn’t want to reconcile the receipts at the end of the night. Nice. I’ll take two.
Due to the smallness of this world, I knew Faith and Charity who were randomly sitting next to me at the game and they were not overly annoyed by my up and down.
Admittedly, I did poor planning and should have visited the Cash Station prior to the game, as it is a good rule of thumb to always carry enough money to be able to pay for two overpriced beers. And the beer vendors are cash only transactions but if there had been beer vendors I would have been prepared. However, I have never stood in line that long for a beer in Chicago. At Sox Park and Wrigley Field unfill becomes refill with complete ease.
Overall, I will say that people in the Midwest are much bigger sports fans. When I talk to people about this they claim, “there is so much more to do in So Cal.” Um, there is also a lot to do in Chicago such as museums, the beach, shopping and some of the best live theater in the country but people still go to games. The Cubs could be the worst team in baseball and every single game would still be sold out while every pub in the area (a neighborhood) known as Wrigleyville after the ballpark would be packed on a Tuesday in June at 2:00. This might be why the Rams left Los Angeles to move to Saint Louis—cause their drunken fans whom are buying their beer from vendors care about them.
What other differences are there between Midwest and So Cal sports fans? What is it like in other geographical areas?
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New Jersey has stabbing or no stabbing sections at Giants Stadium.
ReplyDeleteThere's nothing better than a beautiful summer day in Chicago at Wrigley Field. Cold beer, hot dogs, the smell of the grass, the smell of urine...
ReplyDeleteAnd the beer is Old Style which is tough on your body...but yet we skip work and head to the ballpark.
ReplyDeleteAlyssa,
ReplyDeleteI love that you are becoming so attuned to your feelings in relation to the SoCal ambiance and its differences from Chicago/MidWest. Having lived my first 22 years in CA, my view is that in Chicago people lose themselves in activities like rooting for the Cubs/Sox/Bears. There's something about CA, people don't try to lose themselves so much. From reading your very interesting blog, it's obvious that you are not losing but finding yourself and I thank you for sharing your voyage of discovery with us! Rent a car and go out to Joshua Tree National Park soon, before the itty bitty flowers shrivel up for another 49 weeks. You'll find lots to challenge yourself out there!
h the beer all over the stadium. Just where we were. If we had paid for better seats the beer is flowing much easier. Just a hot tip from Faith and Charity to you :)
ReplyDeleteBaseball without hot dogs and beer is a treason. In Anaheim, you can watch the game on the video monitors which are placed strategically so that more people will buy stuff.
ReplyDeleteOne year I had the privilege of being in the dug-out (luxury suites) behind home plate. Rather than vendors or standing in line, you walk back around five steps and the their is a caterer. Although I was overwhelmed by the wonder of being closer to the batter than the pitcher was, it just didn't "feel" like a baseball game. There is a charm to the nosebleed section...
Are you Missing Chicago ?
ReplyDeletesounds like there is no place like home !!!
no place like home!!!
What about Lakers fans in SoCal? Are they a big population demographic there?
ReplyDeletewhen I was living in dc, game day (be it the caps, wizards, redskins) the city was buzzing! I found myself at several games just because sometimes, you get caught in with the crowd. I always associated that with the fact that the venues were metro accessible. if there was a train that went from somewhere walking distance to the pond, it would be wrap. I would be at a ducks game every day and twice on major holidays. as it stands, cold beers with the family in front of the big screen works for me.
ReplyDeleteThe Lakers seem to be the excpetion but it still isn't the same.
ReplyDelete