Delaware North takes a hit at Camden Yards
The baseball stadium’s concessionaire won’t say how much the disruptions in the Orioles’ schedule have hurt business, but another source indicates it's considerable.
April 30, 2015
BALTIMORE — Delaware North would not say how much business its foodservice concessions at Camden Yards have lost since civil unrest disrupted traffic at the Baltimore stadium, but a website indicates the lost sales topped $95,000 on Wednesday alone.
That was the day the Orioles played the White Sox, but without allowing fans into the downtown stadium, an epicenter of violence during the weekend. A baseball website called TheFieldsofDreams.com says a typical midweek game against a team like the White Sox would have likely drawn a crowd of 15,000 to see the O’s. Typically a family attending the game buys two beers, four sodas and four hotdogs, for an average food expenditure of $25.50.
If 3,750 families had attended the game, as would be normal, the sales would have amounted to $95,625, according to the site’s figures.
In addition to banning an audience at Wednesday’s game, Major League Baseball cancelled two games and rescheduled three others to be held in Miami.
A sportswriter from Philadelphia has established a fund to compensate Camden Yards workers who lost hours because of the racial strife that erupted this weekend over the death of a young man while in police custody.
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