Home with the Detroit Tigers - Comerica Park b6

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Even though it?s car, bus, limo or luxury sedan ride on the reason for the Detroit suburbs, Comerica Park has changed into a big draw this season mostly because of the Tiger?s successful 2006 season and this?s current season along with a record above .500 with the year to this point.

The famous park is actually ten years old and is another inside the brand of the picturesque throwback era ballparks tucked in the center of an major downtown metropolis.

And naturally, tigers would be the theme in such a park. Its all brick exterior is circled by stone tiger heads having a baseball between clinched teeth. Huge tigers with menacing scowls guard the two main entrance gates, both about the right field line. Comerica Park has brick on the one place its likely to remain noticed -- the place extending from both sides of your tree-lined hitter?s backdrop.

The brick wall works as a Tigers Wall of Fame, with last names of six Tigers immortalized over the wall in left-center. To the concourse above, you can find six 13-foot sculptures of former Tiger greats Al Kaline, Hal Newhouser, Charlie Gehringer, Hank Greenberg, Ty Cobb, and Willie Horton. Apart from Cobb, who played before there was numbers, the additional five their very own retired number etched with the brick directly below their statues.

The next names of Tiger legends that played before numbers were worn adorn the correct-center field stretch of brick. A notable exception would be the name Harwell, in the famed Tiger broadcaster, who retired after the 2002 season after 55 years with the booth.

Comerica Park has numerous other distinctive features, while not all of them are original. First thing you find any time you watch out to the playing field will be the huge scoreboard in left field. At 147 feet high by 202 feet wide, it will be the largest in baseball. The concept was borrowed from Cleveland?s Jacobs Field Jumbotron, this was the biggest until Detroit copied the feature and made theirs slightly bigger.

Sitting atop the scoreboard, on either sides, are some orange and black tigers, whose eyes flicker green whenever a Tiger hits a property run and during the classic Survivor song ?Eye of your Tiger.?

The park takes other architecture cues from Jacobs Field with all the light towers by means of toothbrushes. While Tiger Stadium?s distinctive bank of lights can nonetheless be spotted from most places in Detroit, Comerica Park is visible from the short distance. The field is dug below street level, so your ballpark doesn?t look like massive when you approach it from the outside.

Directly on top of the hitter?s backdrop in center field is definitely the General Motors Fountain, which remains dormant over the game unless a Tiger homers. It happens to be used before and after games if it spurts water streams that can be choreographed to music.

The fountain is in addition the centerpiece within the fireworks demonstrate that occurs after every Tigers Friday night home game. Spraying water as much as 150 feet high, the fountain is designed to changing lights together with music. For those who sit inside upper deck, it is possible to look at cylinder shaped headquarters of General Motors directly behind the fountain so it sponsors.

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