
The Padres are trying to forestall a Petco Park Dodgers takeover.
Tickets for Games 3 and Games 4 of the NLDS in San Diego were limited to individuals certain regions and notably excluded the five counties within the greater Los Angeles area.
Petco Park and Dodger Stadium are roughly 125 miles apart in Southern California, providing fans of each teams an roughly two-hour trip to absorb road games.
“Petco Park is positioned in San Diego. Sales to this event can be restricted to residents of San Diego County, southern Orange county, western Arizona, Las Vegas and the encompassing area, and all of Baja California. Residency can be based on bank card billing address,” the message states for those attempting to purchase tickets through the team site and re-directed to ticketmaster.com. “Orders by residents outside San Diego County, southern Orange county, western Arizona, Las Vegas and the encompassing area, and all of Baja California can be canceled unexpectedly and refunds given.”
That is the second time in three years the Padres have instituted such a measure, previously doing so in 2022 when the teams clashed within the NLDS, per the San Diego Union Tribune.
The Padres won that series in 4 games, including each games at Petco Park.
Dodgers fans are known for being a traveling bunch, with fans even making an impression at Yankee Stadium earlier this 12 months throughout the three-game series in The Bronx.
There are currently no tickets available via Ticketmaster, and the Union Tribune noted that lower than 1,000 had been available for public consumption.
The Padres are hoping for a home-field advantage when the series shifts to San Diego on Tuesday for Game 3 after which a possible Game 4 on Thursday within the best-of-five series.
Getting fans to the park has not been an issue for the team this 12 months with the Padres setting their record for attendance this season with greater than 3.3 million fans frequenting the stadium.
San Diego then welcomed a record crowd for every of its two wins against the Braves within the Wild Card series, setting recent marks with 47,647 on Tuesday after which 47,705 on Wednesday.
“Pitching in front of them is something that I absolutely love doing,” ex-Yankee Michael King said after the Game 1 win, per the Union Tribune. “I’m really comfortable we had home field for the wild card, because I feel it’s a tricky place to play as an opponent.”
The Padres are hoping for the same consequence as two years ago, although they might should accomplish that without starter Joe Musgrove after he exited Wednesday’s win with right elbow tightness. San Diego went 8-5 against the Dodgers within the regular season.
Dylan Stop opposes Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Game 1, while Yu Darvish will face Jack Flaherty in Game 2 before the series shifts to San Diego.

The Padres are trying to forestall a Petco Park Dodgers takeover.
Tickets for Games 3 and Games 4 of the NLDS in San Diego were limited to individuals certain regions and notably excluded the five counties within the greater Los Angeles area.
Petco Park and Dodger Stadium are roughly 125 miles apart in Southern California, providing fans of each teams an roughly two-hour trip to absorb road games.
“Petco Park is positioned in San Diego. Sales to this event can be restricted to residents of San Diego County, southern Orange county, western Arizona, Las Vegas and the encompassing area, and all of Baja California. Residency can be based on bank card billing address,” the message states for those attempting to purchase tickets through the team site and re-directed to ticketmaster.com. “Orders by residents outside San Diego County, southern Orange county, western Arizona, Las Vegas and the encompassing area, and all of Baja California can be canceled unexpectedly and refunds given.”
That is the second time in three years the Padres have instituted such a measure, previously doing so in 2022 when the teams clashed within the NLDS, per the San Diego Union Tribune.
The Padres won that series in 4 games, including each games at Petco Park.
Dodgers fans are known for being a traveling bunch, with fans even making an impression at Yankee Stadium earlier this 12 months throughout the three-game series in The Bronx.
There are currently no tickets available via Ticketmaster, and the Union Tribune noted that lower than 1,000 had been available for public consumption.
The Padres are hoping for a home-field advantage when the series shifts to San Diego on Tuesday for Game 3 after which a possible Game 4 on Thursday within the best-of-five series.
Getting fans to the park has not been an issue for the team this 12 months with the Padres setting their record for attendance this season with greater than 3.3 million fans frequenting the stadium.
San Diego then welcomed a record crowd for every of its two wins against the Braves within the Wild Card series, setting recent marks with 47,647 on Tuesday after which 47,705 on Wednesday.
“Pitching in front of them is something that I absolutely love doing,” ex-Yankee Michael King said after the Game 1 win, per the Union Tribune. “I’m really comfortable we had home field for the wild card, because I feel it’s a tricky place to play as an opponent.”
The Padres are hoping for the same consequence as two years ago, although they might should accomplish that without starter Joe Musgrove after he exited Wednesday’s win with right elbow tightness. San Diego went 8-5 against the Dodgers within the regular season.
Dylan Stop opposes Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Game 1, while Yu Darvish will face Jack Flaherty in Game 2 before the series shifts to San Diego.







