The Braves already have played two homestands
this season. They set capacity at 33 percent for their first
homestand April 9-15 against the Phillies and Miami Marlins, and
are at 50 percent for their current homestand that started
Friday against the Arizona Diamondbacks and will conclude
against the Chicago Cubs on Thursday.
When professional sports resumed last year after a pause at the
start of the COVID-19 pandemic in May, all professional sports
were first played without fans before moving to reduced capacity
in many markets.
The Texas Rangers were the first professional team to go to full
capacity, but they have struggled to sell all tickets to home
games at their new retractable-roof ballpark, Globe Life Field.
They sold 38,238 tickets to the season opener at their
40,300-seat stadium and have averaged 24,863 fans in 11 dates.
The Braves advanced to the National League Championship Series
last season and fell one victory short from a spot in the World
Series. But they were a disappointing 11-12 to start the 2021
season, going just 6-6 in home games.
As of Wednesday, the Rangers (40,300), Colorado Rockies
(21,363), Houston Astros (20,600), Braves (20,500) and Arizona
Diamondbacks (20,000) were the only MLB teams allowing up to
20,000 fans per game, according to The Athletic.
Six MLB teams have averaged at least 13,000 tickets sold per
game. The Rangers lead the list followed by the Astros (18,205
in 12 dates), Rockies (15,478, 14 dates), Los Angeles Dodgers
(15,179, 12 dates), Braves (15,141, 11 dates) and the St., Louis
Cardinals (13,100, 11 dates).
The Toronto Blue Jays, meanwhile, were selling 1,950 tickets per
home game for regular-season contests at their spring-training
stadium in Dunedin, Fla. The Blue Jays are not playing in
Toronto for the second consecutive season because of travel
restrictions into Canada. They played home games at Buffalo last
season.
--Field Level Media
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