I'm still saying no to season tickets this year. This is not a decision I made lightly. I'm a longtime ticket holder, and White Sox baseball is important to me. However, there comes a point where this is a bad investment.
I replied to my ticket rep and offered these three reasons on why we're taking a pass:
1. We've lost confidence in the on-field product. We've been following
the offseason moves carefully, but these acquisitions are all fifth
infielders, fourth outfielders and back-end starting pitchers. We had
hoped the organization would be committed to making sure a season like
2023 never happens again, and we wanted to see some impact players
acquired. Unfortunately, that has not happened to this point. We were
told that Chris Getz was promoted to GM because he was already familiar
with the organization, and that there wasn't a year to waste as far as
getting back in contention. So far, we don't feel as though the actions
live up to those words.
2. There have been too many things that we enjoyed taken away. We miss
SoxFest. We miss Grinder Bash. We miss having access to the 100 level as
500-level season ticket holders. My girlfriend and her dad miss
Father-Daughter Day at the ballpark. The first year post-pandemic, we
understood why some of these things went away. But that shouldn't be an
issue any longer, and it is disappointing that none of it has come back.
These are perks we enjoyed, even when the Sox were disappointing us on
the field. This "season ticket holder party," to be honest, did not
excite me. I used to take a vacation day on the Friday of SoxFest,
because the two- or three-day event was worth my time. However, I'm not
going to leave work early to fight Friday traffic for 90 minutes to
spend a couple of hours at the Field Museum.
3. Lastly, it's very disturbing that I've read media reports about the
team possibly moving to Nashville. I haven't forgotten the feeling that I
had when I was 11 years old and this very same chairman threatened to
move my beloved baseball team to St. Petersburg, Fla. I've never fully
forgiven him for that. He can deny it all he wants, but he's lost the
benefit of the doubt with me, after what happened in the 1980s. I'm sure
it's just business to him, but for us, the White Sox are a civic
treasure. Generations of our families have been coming to 35th and
Shields to watch baseball. We've been very loyal, and we've sat through a
lot of tough seasons. The fact that we're having to talk about this,
again, is insulting. The Sox organization has failed to deliver on big
promises, and that is not the fault of fans.
Maybe we'll change our minds in 2025, but some positive changes have to be made before we consider committing to a ticket plan again.
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