|      Fresh from    pitching against solid Atlanta hitters, Jake Westbrook    faced a far trickier test: Guess how much fans paid for box seats to watch    the exhibition game. "Hmmm, I have no    idea," the St. Louis starter ventured.    "Twenty bucks?" Gotcha! $54 for top    tickets sold Tuesday at the Braves' ballpark at    Walt Disney World Resort. "Wow,"    Westbrook said. All over Florida and    Arizona, teams are paying the price. Spring training    attendance is off and several things are to blame, aside from pricey tickets    — early start, cold weather and lineups depleted by injured stars and players    dispatched to the World Baseball Classic. The dip is nearly 14    percent lower than it was on this date last year, STATS said. Games started about a    week earlier this season because players wanted to get in shape for the World    Baseball Classic. That meant games were scheduled before many fans arrived    for vacation and spring break. By the end of    February, several teams had already played for a week. "I think we started    about eight or nine days too early. That means a whole lot," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. The weather hasn't been    ideal, either — a freak winter storm out West and a cold snap down South. Normally a big draw wherever    they go, the Yankees played to a crowd of 3,213 when they visited the Houston    Astros. Then again, the glitziest name in New York's split-squad lineup that    day was Matt Diaz. The Orioles often sold    out home games versus the likes of the Yankees, Boston and Philadelphia. Not    this year in Sarasota, Fla. "With the WBC and a    whole different start, people plan spring training according to spring break.    People have other things going on in their life," Baltimore manager Buck    Showalter said. Big league exhibitions    began on Feb. 22 and averaged 5,789 fans through March 12. They started on    March 2 last year and averaged 6,703 by that same date, with several teams on    their way to setting attendance records. Major League Baseball    drew 30,895 per game during the regular season last year, its best mark since    2008. Oakland A's manager Bob    Melvin noticed the empty seats in Phoenix. "It seems like it's    down some," he said last weekend. "The schedule seems more spread    out this year. A lot of people come to games with certain dates in    mind." Better be ready to spend    money, too. It costs more than $25    for a good seat at most spring parks. Several teams vary their prices    depending on the opponent or the day — a ticket behind the third base dugout    to see the World Series champion Giants host Colorado this Sunday sold for    $68.75 on San Francisco's online site. The    Cardinals are    among the most popular teams every spring. Like other clubs, they expect    bigger crowds throughout March. "I think in general    we were kind of chalking it up to, it's kind of cool, we started so early.    You are not going to get a whole lot of people showing up in February,"    Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. The Cardinals share Roger    Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Fla., with the Miami Marlins. Mike Bauer, who runs    the ballpark, said the attendance pattern is predictable. "Anytime we start in    February, we start off a little slower than usual," said Bauer, the    stadium's general manager. "If you compare this    year to last year, it's going to be a decrease because they had the World    Series championship on the Cardinals side and a new facility on the Marlins    side. But it's been right about where we expected," he said. The Braves aren't too concerned,    either. "We got a bump with    the Daytona 500 falling the weekend we opened. Then attendance fell off, as    you would expect with the first games so early," Atlanta general manager    Frank Wren said. "Crowds always pick up with the start of spring break    in March, especially here at Disney." Among those at the    Braves' park on Tuesday were Bill Heuvelman and son Patrick, who drove from    St. Louis to see their team. For a week at spring training, they didn't mind    the prices, even with Cardinals stars Carlos Beltran and Yadier Molina away    at the WBC. "This is something    we do. It's worth it," Bill said. A sign outside the box    office that listed lower level reserved seats for $54 — tickets cost $5 more    on game days — caught the attention of four college-age friends from Auburn,    Ala. "I noticed it right    away. Seemed pretty steep to me," Nick Goudreau told buddy Chase Hoyle. But Brett Frizzell said    he'd already warned pal Brooks Cowing. "I sent him a    picture on Instagram that showed it," Frizzell said. "October prices    for spring training baseball."  |    
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