Fenway Park Seating Chart History
There is only a handful of truly historic ballparks left in the majors. As new stadiums are built and old ones torn down, the list of venerable venues has dwindled to a precious few and there can be little argument that Fenway Park tops that list along with Yankee Stadium and Wrigley Field. The oldest stadium in the majors, Fenway opened in 1912 and nearly a century later it is one of the world’s most famous sports sites. And with a capacity of just 38,805, Fenway Park tickets and Boston Red Sox tickets are always tough to find.
So many of today’s new parks have tried to go retro, but there is no way to duplicate the mystique and history that Fenway exudes. From the famous Green Monster (atop which you can now sit if you get some scarce Red Sox tickets) to Pesky’s Pole to the Lone Red Seat, where Ted Williams’ ball landed in 1946 after a long journey of 502 feet as the longest home run to stay in the stadium, going to Fenway stadium is like visiting a living museum.
The on-field history includes Bucky Dent’s 1978 home run over the Green Monster, over which Carlton Fisk famously waved his home run fair in 1975. And of course there is the 2004 ALCS and World Series victory, although much of the remarkable action that year took place at Yankee Stadium and Busch Stadium. If you’ve never been to Fenway Park, you owe it to yourself to get Boston Red Sox baseball tickets at least once and visit this historic stadium.
Of course the hottest Red Sox baseball tickets are always for the games when the New York Yankees come to town, and that will be the case even more so this year as Johnny Damon comes back to Fenway with pinstripes and without a beard and long hair. If you want Red Sox –Yankees tickets, you better plan ahead and get them now.
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