PNC gets All-Star contest for 2006
An economic factor favored Pittsburgh over Phoenix and San Francisco.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Pittsburgh Pirates are enjoying better luck at winning All-Star game bids than they are in winning games.
The Pirates will play host to the 2006 All-Star Game at PNC Park just 12 years after staging the game at Three Rivers Stadium.
Commissioner Bud Selig was to make the formal announcement at a news conference today that the game on July 11, 2006, will be played in Pittsburgh -- the third time in 32 years the city will be the All-Star site.
Phoenix and San Francisco were also in the running for the All-Star game, but the Pirates convinced Major League Baseball the game would boost PNC Park attendance significantly, after it has sagged since it opened in 2001.
The Pirates will join the Indians as the only teams to have been host to five All-Star games. Cleveland was host to the game in 1935, 1954, 1963, 1981 and 1997.
Bucs' attendance declined
Since averaging a club-record 30,472 fans during the 100-loss 2001 season, the Pirates' crowds have declined more than 10,000 per game to 20,034 -- less than they drew during their final two seasons in Three Rivers Stadium. This season, they rank 27th among the 30 teams in attendance.
PNC Park has been widely praised for its sight-lines and exceptional views of the city skyline. But despite playing in one of baseball's best and coziest venues -- PNC Park's capacity of 37,898 is smaller than any park except Fenway -- a club-record run of 11 consecutive losing seasons has led to a 50 percent decline in season ticket sales since 2001.
The Pirates hope that landing the All-Star game will boost season ticket sales not only in 2006, but next season as fans scramble to make sure they have access to All-Star tickets. Pirates' season sales jumped 40 percent in 1994, when they played host to one of the best All-Star games in the last quarter-century, an 8-7 NL victory in 10 innings.
Economic factor
Major League Baseball apparently felt that awarding the game to Phoenix or San Francisco would not provide the same economic boost it would to Pittsburgh. The Giants already play to near-capacity crowds nightly, and Arizona's average attendance of 32,642 is more than 12,500 per game higher than Pittsburgh.
San Francisco would have been a popular pick for 2006, the year Barry Bonds potentially could break Hank Aaron's career homers record.
The 12-year turnaround between All-Star games for Pittsburgh will be the shortest since the major league expansions in 1961 and 1962 and will cause a logjam as teams with new or nearly new parks race to stage the game in future seasons.
Opened new parks
Cincinnati (last All-Star game in 1988), Philadelphia (1996) and San Diego (1992) have also opened new parks and probably will find themselves in the All-Star rotation in the not distant future. St. Louis will open a new park in 2006, and Florida, Arizona and Tampa Bay have not been All-Star sites.
Despite being two of baseball's premier franchises, the Yankees (1977) and Dodgers (1980) have each had long gaps since last hosting the All-Star game. Kansas City hasn't had the game since 1972, and Detroit will end a 34-year wait next year.
Major League Baseball is not required to alternate AL and NL cities as All-Star sites, but traditionally does, which is why NL teams were competing for the 2006 game. If the rotation holds in 2007, Anaheim's refurbished park and Tampa Bay would be prime candidates to hold the game.