The traffic argument may be Torononian's justification for it... but if so it seems like a proxy for being weakly attached fans.
Yeah, we have bad traffic, but we also have the second highest transit usage for MLB cities, both in total and per capita terms, between the TTC and GO. Toronto also has maybe the highest employment densities near the stadium (our density of jobs downtown is one of the highest in N.A., and other cities with dense downtowns that I can think of have further out stadiums.) Toronto also has a pretty high downtown population density around the stadium thanks to all of those condos.
tecumseh18 wrote:
For one thing, where do guys you park? For Raptors games, I always park on the East (Jarvis) side of the Esplanade parkade. $5 on a weeknight - cheaper than a two-way transit fare. But for Jays games?
And via transit, I never figured out an easy way to get to the Rogers Centre. The skywalk from Union Station is a bit of a hike, especially with kids in tow.
You walk further from East of Jarvis to the ACC than the skywalk to the Dome. Though depending on your gate, walking down to the ACC and across Bremner can save you a couple minutes, especially with the recent path extension letting you skip the light at Simcoe. Also, depending on where you live, the Spadina streetcar is often your best bet.
SharoneWright wrote:Toronto draws from significant population 1 to 1.5 hours away. Hamilton, St. Catharines, Niagara Falls, Guelph, K-W, Oshawa, etc... are all significant municipalities that are far more likely to take the time on the weekend to commute into Toronto to catch a game than on a weeknight. Much different than Chicago, Dallas/Ft.Worth, Minneapolis/St.Paul, St. Louis, etc, whose population is far more concentrated with less satellite affiliates in the surrounding areas.... (just a theory)
That is the opposite of reality - Toronto is the most dense of any of those cities, and Toronto's near suburbs are also far more dense than than the burbs anywhere in America.
Take a look at Chicago, for instance - the Chicagoland area is the same geographic size as something like Peterborough to Barrie to KW to St Catherines, and has more of its population in outlying areas than Toronto does. And Chicagoland is dense compared to Dallas/Ft Worth.