About as easy to predict as rain in Florida – the Gwinnett Braves suffer average attendance drop for the fourth straight year
Sometimes I wonder at what point will people see beyond all the rah-rah rhetoric about how the Atlanta Braves and all their owned affiliates are good for economies, communities and are actually burdens and ballasts to towns that weren’t exactly unanimously ecstatic about their presences? Will a player have to kill someone? I mean, Braves players have been busted in various forms of domestic abuse, and nobody seems to sour on the organization. The organization has fleeced pretty much every small town in which their minor league affiliates exist in, as well as the future home of the big club. When will people realize that baseball isn’t just America’s Pasttime, but also a cold, calculated, greedy, money-grubbing business that often acts like a leech on the places they invade?
But anyway, about as sure as the sun rises in the morning, the Gwinnett Braves are struggling to draw people to their ballpark. I mean, who would have thought a minor league ballpark that’s barely 60 miles away from the major league parent, with ticket costs equivalent to major league prices and has a staunch no-outside food policy unlike the parent, would suffer weak attendance numbers? I mean, who wouldn’t want to see Sean Kazmar instead of Freddie Freeman, or whenever a superstar visiting player like Clayton Kershaw or Andrew McCutchen comes to Turner Field?
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