Cleveland Indians Tickets
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Ticket Inventory
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Cleveland Indian
History
"The Indians have been calling Cleveland home since 1901, one of only four charter American League teams that has played continuously in one city (Chicago, Boston and Detroit are the others). In 1920, the Indians won their first World Series. The 1920 squad led the A.L. in runs scored, doubles, triples, RBIs, walks and batting average. In 1947, the Tribe signed the A.L.’s first black player, Larry Doby and later Satchel Paige. Like Cleveland itself, the Indians suffered economically during the 1960s and 1970s. The club underwent seven ownership changes in 25 years (as many as occurred in the first 60 years of the franchise), and endured constant rumors that it would relocate to Seattle, Atlanta, New Orleans, or elsewhere. In 1974, the Indians introduced Frank Robinson as the first black manager in MLB history. In 1993, Cleveland moved into a new stadium and boasted an impressive roster. This team featured Roberto Alomar, Carlos Baerga, Kenny Lofton and Cleveland farm products Albert Belle, Jim Thome, Manny Ramirez, and pitcher Charles Nagy. The team was a perennial powerhouse for most of the 90s."
Cleveland Indian
Information
"The Indians play in the American League Central Division. Division rivals include the Chicago White Sox, Kansas City Royals, Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins. Major rivalries include Indians vs. Red Sox, Indians vs. Yankees and Indians vs. Mariners."
Jacobs Field
"The Indians play their home games in Jacobs Field in the heart of Cleveland. The $175 million stadium can seat approximately 43,000 fans and features a 19-foot high fence in right field. Despite its modern luxuries, Jacobs Field has some of the features of classic ballparks. The field is asymmetrical, and bleachers sit atop a 19-foot left-field wall. Because the park isn’t completely enclosed, fans can look out over the buildings of downtown Cleveland. Jacobs Field is similar in look and feel to Baltimore’s Camden Yards, opened two years earlier. But the Indians did some things with their ballpark that the Orioles didn’t. The seats down both lines are angled towards home plate so that fans don’t need to turn their heads to watch the game. An area behind first base is designated Kidsland, with special concessions and features."
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