The announced crowd for the Oakland A's home opener at Oakland Coliseum was 13,522 on Thursday. Those who would have been in many of those empty seats to witness the team's 8-0 loss to the Cleveland Guardians were instead outside the stadium protesting.
In what might be the last Opening Day in Oakland, fans bought tickets but boycotted going inside for the game as A's owner John Fisher moves forward with his plan to move the franchise to Las Vegas in time for the 2028 season.
According to the Associated Press, the mood outside the stadium was upbeat despite the murky future of the baseball team playing inside.
A half-hour before the game's first pitch, hundreds of fans gathered in the far corner of the parking lot. They displayed “Sell” T-shirts and flags, threw beanbags at caricatures of team executives — including owner John Fisher and president Dave Kaval — and danced to live music while munching on dinner from food trucks. ...
The A’s opened gates to parking lots just two hours before the game to align with what they said was the expected attendance, but fan groups that organized the boycott, including the Oakland 68’s and The Last Dive Bar, said it was an attempt to limit the protest.
The A's announced in May an agreement to build a 33,000-seat stadium on the Las Vegas strip after acquiring $380 million in state government financing, as well as unanimous approval from MLB owners to move the franchise. A rendering of the proposed stadium to be built in the parking lot of the Tropicana Resort and Casino was released in early March.
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