Opening Day in Montreal

words by Jackson Ellis | Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Labatt Park

Apr 1, 6:35 PM EDT

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Montreal Opens Labatt Park In Style

By ALEXANDER POUTINE
Associated Press Writer

MONTREAL, QC (AP) — After a six-year delay held up by the complicated sale of the Montreal Expos by failed businessman Jeffrey Loria to Stephen Bronfman, the Montreal Expos celebrated the long-awaited opening of Labatt Park by pounding the Philadelphia Phillies 11-6.

Nick Johnson’s tiebreaking RBI double off Tom Gordon highlighted a five-run ninth inning–a satisfying opening before the sellout crowd of 36,287 long-suffering fans.

Labatt Park“The 1994 pennant was stolen from us, and then we had to sit by and watch the offseason firesale,” commented fan Francois Cochon. “Things looked pretty bleak for a long time–but that relocation proposal in 2003 seems like a distant memory.”

Thanks to private investors and mounting public pressure to excommunicate Loria without compensation, the jewel at the corner of Peel and Saint-Jacques opened to rave reviews.

Providing relief from the current trend of “retro” ballparks, Labatt Park features a unique post-modern design, incorporating rare dimensional symmetry and a one-of-a-kind glass facade with the best elements of the throwback park: limited seating (smallest in baseball) that is close to the field, open air, natural grass, and a city sightline rivaled only perhaps by Pittsburgh in all of Major League Baseball.

In stark contrast to the weather-screening, rooftop blocking owners of Chicago’s Wrigley Field, Labatt’s unique construction offers many views from the outside to the inside, lending a sense of closeness and intimacy to not only the players and the playing field, but to the surrounding community.Labatt Park at night

And located a mere two blocks from the Molson Centre, “The Big L” has inadvertently become a part of North America’s finest urban sports complex.

“I’ve long believed that Montrealers will support a team that has a chance to win,” said former manager Felipe Alou, who threw out the first pitch to Hall of Famer Gary Carter. Forgive Alou for his error: Montreal fans have showed support for even the mediocre clubs, ranking seventh in the NL is attendance during the 1980s.

With a new stadium and the security of knowing “nos amours” are nowhere near leaving town, the city of Montreal can now breathe a sigh of relief, welcoming a new age of Canadian baseball in the Labatt Park Era.

Labatt Park

Originally published at Chinmusic.net

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