With More Seats
Twins Finale Could Draw 100,000 Fans
Twins president Dave St. Peter told
Sports Headliners that the club could draw 100,000 fans for the
final game in the Metrodome next Sunday if that many seats were
available. That game is part of an historic series of sports
events including the first ever Big Ten Conference football game at TCF Bank
Stadium on Saturday and the first matchup of Vikings quarterback
Brett Favre against his old team, the Green Bay Packers, next Monday
night at the Metrodome.
The Twins play their last series in the
dome Friday, Saturday and Sunday, ending the 2009 regular season while
looking forward to next year and a new home at Target Field. St. Peter
said that if the Twins are still in contention to win the Central
Division championship, all three games could be sellouts. “Even in a
worst case scenario” he expects a crowd of close to 40,000 on Friday and
above that on Saturday, with a sellout of more than 50,000 on Sunday.
Normal baseball capacity is about 46,000
but the Twins are raising the curtain in right field to use seats there
to increase capacity to over 50,000 for Sunday’s game which is sold out.
Ticket demand for the game has been intense and the franchise is also
giving away free tickets to people who have worked for the Twins since the dome opened in 1982. St. Peter said if the Twins
were in contention for the division title and there was enough capacity
a crowd of 150,000 might watch the historic final game.
The Gophers will try to win back
Paul Bunyan’s Axe when they renew their border rivalry with
Wisconsin on Saturday. Like all home games at TCF Bank Stadium,
capacity 50,805, the game is sold out. The last three Gophers home
games against Wisconsin in the Metrodome attracted crowds of 59,000 or
more. With both teams off to winning starts (Wisconsin 4-0, Minnesota
3-1), a crowd of 60,000 to 70,000 would be a certainty if TCF had more
seats.
Next week’s Monday night Vikings game is a
local, regional and national phenomenon. This is a “perfect storm”
involving the Vikings and Packers, two long time NFC North Division
rivals with their own border battle legacy. Both teams entered this
season among the favorites to play in the NFC title game. Favre played in Green Bay for 16 seasons,
winning a Super Bowl, setting numerous NFL passing records and creating
a love affair with Packers fans who now feel betrayed by his signing on
here to play at age 39. And then interest went to an even higher
level (if possible) with Favre's miracle throw yesterday to lift the
Vikings over the 49ers, 27-24.
The game will be a sellout in the dome
with about 64,000 fans, mostly Vikings supporters but also including
Packer backers. But demand for tickets could push attendance to 90,000
if the dome had that many seats, according to knowledgeable sources.
The game will be televised across the
country by ESPN and seems likely to set a ratings record for cable TV
programming. Last year’s Monday night telecast of the Eagles-Cowboys
game was seen in almost 13 million homes.
On Tuesday night, October 6, night the Wild will
open its home season at the Xcel Energy Center against Anaheim. A
capacity crowd of 18,064 will attend, the franchise’s 342nd
consecutive
sellout, the longest streak in the NHL.
The Twins, Gophers, Vikings and Wild will
play before about 265,000 fans in four days. And that total might be
75,000 or higher if there was larger capacity for the games at the dome
and TCF Bank Stadium.
The attendance total would grow even
bigger if the Twins play a one game Central Division tie breaker against
Detroit a week from Tuesday before a Metrodome crowd of potentially
50,000 or more. And although it’s more of a participant than spectator
event, tens of thousands will be involved with the annual Twin Cities
Marathon next Sunday.
Extraordinary days lie ahead.