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I was at yesterdays BMO Field / Toronto FC open house event, and it was worth attending. Basically any season ticket holder could eat themselves silly for FREE as they were giving away food vouchers. I got about $50 worth, which mind you didn't go far, but it did fill me and my brother's stomachs.

The venue itself is very nice, witch absolutely great sightlines. Our seats are about 5 meters away from pitch and the corners, which means when Beckham comes to take the corner kicks it will be a great sight.

There is room for expansion. The north and south ends of the stadium have giant pillars for upper stand expansion.

Overall, a very nice addition to the Exhibition place.
 
Before everyone starts anticipating wild expansions for the stadium, lets see if the 'fans' stick around for what could be a very lousy team. One or two bad seasons and they will have a hard time filling the seats they have, let alone expanding. Toronto sports fans are very fickle. Heck, major league baseball only gets about 15,000 out for most games.

The Blue Jays actually get close to twice as many. Nearly 30,000 per game. :rolleyes:


But I agree, there is always a novelty with new sports that enjoys a blip in their first year. If in 3 year they are still sold-out then they should expand. For example, The Rock had a drop now that their team is middle of the road.
 
finally in use

The Toronto FC website is saying that the team is having there first practice there today.

On a seperate note, it will be interesting to see how fans get to the stadium and where they spend those pre- and post- game dollars. My personal guess is that King West will see the majority of fans.
 
There is a new pub going into Liberty Village as well that is said to be owned by either the Fox'n'the Fiddle, or Firkin just east of Hanna on Liberty.
 
I was at yesterdays BMO Field / Toronto FC open house event, and it was worth attending. Basically any season ticket holder could eat themselves silly for FREE as they were giving away food vouchers. I got about $50 worth, which mind you didn't go far, but it did fill me and my brother's stomachs.

The venue itself is very nice, witch absolutely great sightlines. Our seats are about 5 meters away from pitch and the corners, which means when Beckham comes to take the corner kicks it will be a great sight.

There is room for expansion. The north and south ends of the stadium have giant pillars for upper stand expansion.

Overall, a very nice addition to the Exhibition place.

It's amazing you were able to redeem those vouchers! The lines weren't moving at all and I gave up about a minute before kickoff. No luck at the half either and I ended up back at the Sheaf.

We haven't met at a U-Sector event yet, but see you in 113!
 
so far so good

From the Star:

No goals, but TFC still scores big with home debut

Cathal Kelly says the lack of offence didn't matter yesterday; there were plenty of other promising signs for Toronto's fledgling soccer team, not the least of which was happy fans

Apr 29, 2007 04:30 AM

No, they didn't score. Toronto FC's futility at finding the space between the posts now reaches record levels. And yes, a goal would have been a nice way to begin.

But there were so many wonderful things about this city's new soccer dawn that it seems churlish to dwell on statistics.

There was the enormous red-and-white scarf clad crowd making the long walk down Ontario St. to BMO Field on an unfairly chilly morning in late-April.

There was the way they started the game fifteen minutes late to accommodate stragglers and no one seemed to care.

There was the sell-out crowd of 20,148 showing a fervour not often seen in this city outside of the hockey playoffs.

There was the way that same crowd charitably took up the tune of "The Star Spangled Banner" when the anthem singer forgot the words.

There was the awesomely powerful pair of confetti blasters in the south end. Well, they were fun for those of us not being hit by them.

There were the Red Patch Boys in the southeast corner bringing a boisterous European atmosphere to the match that spread infectiously through the other stands. Afterward, coach Mo Johnston said he got goosebumps.

There was a team that leaped into this game after looking lackadaisical and/or hapless in their previous three losses.

With a little more luck, Maurice Edu or Andy Welsh or Alecko Eskandarian might have snapped that goalless streak in the first half.

There was the announcement of an immediate cult hero in the person of lanky forward Danny Dichio. In his first match with the team, the Englishman launched himself at opponents like a 6-foot-4 torpedo.

"Someone told me the Maple Leafs are looking for a front man who nails goalkeepers, but that's not my job," Dichio said afterward. "I'm a physical player. I like getting involved."

By ``getting involved,'' Dichio means ``nailing goalkeepers.'' He nearly decapitated Kansas City netminder Kevin Hartman on one tackle. Then he drove his spikes into the side of Wizard Jose Burciaga when the defender ventured in too close. On another occasion, Dichio cut off his downfield chase for the ball to turn upfield and clothesline an opponent. After the game, he accused the referee of being "picky."

In between, Dichio looked dangerous on crosses into the box and did a ploughman's work helping out in midfield. Look for a run on Dichio's No. 9 jersey starting yesterday.

There was a more rigid defence with the deployment of Kiwi Andrew Boyens and the strong play of fullback Marvell Wynne.

TFC may not yet be scoring goals, but they looked like they've finally stopped bleeding them.

There was the way the crowd showered Kansas City goal scorer Eddie Johnson with $10 beer and water bottles when he tried to preen in front of them at the touchline.

All TFC opponents should be warned – celebrate your goals at midfield.

There was the sense that TFC was still in this game with only seconds to go, the first time that can be said of them.

There was the crowd's full 90 minutes of aural assault on the Wizards.

"I think they were scared," Eskandarian said, almost apologetically, of his opponents.

There was the finishing roar, as the fans rightly celebrated their own performance as much as the team's.

There was the honest astonishment in the dressing room at the greeting the team received.

"It was such a loud noise, I couldn't hear a thing," Dichio said. "It was just a fantastic atmosphere, a lot like what we get back home in England."

There was the sense that BMO Field immediately becomes the most intimidating venue in Major League Soccer.

There was a little hope when it was learned that Ronnie O'Brien, the man expected to supply badly needed service to Dichio and Eskandarian, will finally be fit in time for the team's next match against Chicago.

Yes, they lost. Yes, they will continue to lose more than they win. But Toronto FC and their fans showed yesterday that this city is ready for soccer. And that matters far more than any story told by a scoresheet.
 
the game was awesome and a win would be better.the next game is in two weeks which gives the team lots of training time. ronnie o'brien will be back for that game so our team will be even stronger.
 
The Toronto FC website is saying that the team is having there first practice there today.

On a seperate note, it will be interesting to see how fans get to the stadium and where they spend those pre- and post- game dollars. My personal guess is that King West will see the majority of fans.

This touches on two points I was going to make. I was going to go there via street car. Shock! No street car service to the EX. the buses were very late and already packed. boo TTC, next time i'll drive. After the game we went to Fionn McCools on King West, so your powers of prediction are very accurate in my case.

For the stadium, it was really good, Chip Butties are my new favorite food. The like the hard plastic seats, it makes it easier to jump out of the seat and sit back down without having to look behind you to put the seat part down.
 
The TTC has a knack for doing things at inconvenient times. They sell chip butties at the games? That's great- I was weaned on those as a kid. Try one slathered in marmite.
 
The TTC lack of streetcar service was the result of severe track problems on Fleet, so the Bathurst cars are running Union-Bathurst Station. Though I think they should have ran some ALRVs from Dufferin Loop and across King - the TTC is not good at special events.

I passed by the new stadium on the way from BUF on the bus yesterday - it looked good from the Gardiner, and pleasantly surprising, the ad tower is more of a sign for the stadium (with a flip ad and a LED ticker, rather than a regular video screen), and looks fine. I take back much of my criticism on that point.

The seats - how comfortable are they?
 
I can't understand why the TTC and Toronto Hydro aren't doing the full Fleet Street upgrade right now. I guess there wasn't enough time to do it right before the FIFA World Cup U-20.
 
The TTC has a knack for doing things at inconvenient times. They sell chip butties at the games? That's great- I was weaned on those as a kid. Try one slathered in marmite.

Yep Chip Butties... My buddy from across the pond said they were close to the real deal, The Chips were regular fries, not wedges as I gather is the norm. Didn't see any marmite, it came with tartar.

The seats - how comfortable are they?

Aside from being a little wet, pretty good. Not as cramped as Skydome.
 
Yes- a very nice view from the western stands. Nice to see the fans so into soccer in a north american city. Some serious looking yobs in a couple of those pics- "Here we go.. here we go.. he..."

Tartar- nasty. Gotta be ketchup or marmite for me :)
 

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