Current:Home > ContactOpinion: Corporate ballpark names just don't have that special ring -ProfitPoint
Opinion: Corporate ballpark names just don't have that special ring
View
Date:2025-04-13 14:42:16
Ballpark names aren't what they used to be. And I mean that — to use an overworked word of our times — literally.
Oracle Park in San Francisco used to be Pac-Bell, after it was SBC, after it was AT&T Park. U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, which some of us might think of as, "the new Comiskey Park", is now Guaranteed Rate Field. Does anyone ever say, "Gosh, they got great dogs at Guaranteed Rate Field!" T-Mobile Park in Seattle is the new name for Safeco Field. Progressive Field in Cleveland has nothing to do with Bernie Sanders — it's the name of an insurance company, on the stadium that used to be Jacobs Field.
The Houston Astros play in Minute Maid Park. It was Enron Field when the park opened in 2000, but in 2001, the oil company went bankrupt in a sensational accounting scandal. The Astros had to sue to get the Enron name off of their ballpark, but won their division. They had a better year than Enron.
Fans like me might be pointlessly sentimental when it comes to stadium names, but they used to be personal, not corporate. They were named after people, sometimes the owners: Comiskey and Wrigley in Chicago, Crosley in Cincinnati, and Griffith in Washington, D.C. Ebbets Field in Brooklyn was named for a man who used to be a ticket taker, but would come to own the Dodgers. Some other names came from the stadiums' locations: Fenway, a neighborhood in Boston, or Candlestick, for a tip of land that juts into San Francisco Bay.
And of course what name invokes more fame and grandeur than Yankee Stadium?
The change came when teams realized they could sell companies the rights to put their corporate monikers on their ballparks, and turn the whole thing into a billboard. But naming rights may not be as extravagant an expenditure as you think.
It costs JPMorgan Chase and Co. $3.3 million a year to put their bank name on the Phoenix ballpark. It costs Petco $2.7 million a year to put their pet supply company name on San Diego's ballpark, and the Guaranteed Rate Mortgage Company pays just over $2 million a year to have their name on the stadium where the White Sox play.
I don't want to characterize any of those fees as chump change. But the average salary of a major league ballplayer today is higher than any of those rates, at nearly $5 million a year.
Instead of seeing stadium names as one more chance to sell advertising, teams could salute players and fans by naming their parks after one of their own departed greats. There should be a Jackie Robinson Park, a Roberto Clemente Field, and one day perhaps, a Shohei Otani Stadium. They're the names that made games worth watching.
veryGood! (2167)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- DraftKings receives backlash for 'Never Forget' 9/11 parlay on New York teams
- A Montana man who was mauled by a grizzly bear is doing well but has long recovery head, family says
- Virginia police announce arrest in 1994 cold case using DNA evidence
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Man accused of walking into FBI office, confessing to killing Boston woman in 1979
- Peaches the flamingo rescued, released after being blown to Tampa area by Hurricane Idalia
- 7 people have died in storms in southern China and 70 crocodiles are reported to be on the loose
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- MLB power rankings: Even the most mediocre clubs just can't quit NL wild card chase
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Israeli Supreme Court hears first challenge to Netanyahu’s contentious judicial overhaul
- The Taliban have waged a systematic assault on freedom in Afghanistan, says UN human rights chief
- Rescue teams retrieve hundreds of bodies in Derna, one of the Libyan cities devastated by floods
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Hawaii volcano Kilauea erupts after nearly 2-month pause
- Ian Wilmut, a British scientist who led the team that cloned Dolly the Sheep, dies at age 79
- Is retail theft getting worse?
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Fantasy football stock watch: Gus Edwards returns to lead role
‘No risk’ that NATO member Romania will be dragged into war, senior alliance official says
Rockets guard Kevin Porter Jr. arrested for allegedly assaulting woman at New York hotel
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
MTV Video Music Awards return Tuesday, with an all-female artist of the year category
UN says Colombia’s coca crop at all-time high as officials promote new drug policies
Explosion at ADM plant in Decatur, Illinois, hurts several workers