

For specific details about sections and different start times, read on.

Weekend day games and getaway games start at 1:10 p.m. and evening weekend games at 6:10 or 7:10. The Rockies keep a different schedule than most MLB teams, starting evening weeknight games at 6:40 p.m.


Are a few favored ones getting the suite year after year?Īnd are only charities in line? What about board members’ families and friends? There are probably hundreds of worthy non-profits in metro Denver. “Then at the end when there are 10 or 12 or 15 dates left” - it’s more like 25 - “they are disbursed back out to the non-profits.” Each member county also gets it “four or five times a year” (it’s four, Sugar told me). Each board member gets the suite four times a year, he said. Despite the presence of all seven board members at the hearing, Baker did most of the talking and had to correct others several times - including once over stadium seating capacity.īut in discussing ticket distribution, even Baker was opaque. “In round numbers,” he acknowledged, “I think the senator is correct.”īaker has been on the board since its inception, for 22 years, and seems to be the repository of district facts. It took board chairman Ray Baker to set the record straight. Board member Patricia Imhoff said, “I think those numbers sound crazy, but I don’t know where they came from.” “If we get that many tickets, then I’ve been shortchanged ever since I’ve been on the board,” quipped Ruben Valdez. No less astonishing, several board members seemed to have no idea this was true. Over the past two decades, that would equate to a veritable fortune of premier seats.Īnd there is no formal process for distributing them?
Rockies tickets plus#
Every year, Kefalas noted, the team supplies the board with about 1,600 free seats (14 in the suite, plus six, times 81 games), with a current annual value of $145,000. John Kefalas, D-Fort Collins, laid out the scope of the public interest last week at what should have been a routine Senate committee hearing on the reappointment of district board members. Remember, we’re dealing with a public asset here. Tickets that aren’t used by board members or distributed to the seven member counties are given to charities, he said, through a process that he acknowledged is “very informal.” I asked district spokesman Matt Sugar if I could see a log of who used the tickets over the past year or two, and was told such records didn’t exist. The district board is awash in valuable tickets - not only an executive suite but six prime seats between first base and home - and yet it doesn’t seem to keep records of who gets them. But this lack of transparency - papered over in recent days by the hasty posting of bare-bones minutes - is only the tip of the iceberg. If you’d gone to the website of the Denver Metropolitan Baseball Stadium District as recently as a couple of weeks ago, you’d have found no minutes for any meeting during the past 12 months. Digital Replica Edition Home Page Close Menu
