Descriptive Essay: Entering The Baseball Field

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At a baseball game The atmosphere a fully packed Fenway is different, the big green walls of the oldest stadium still in use. Before you enter the stadium, you can hear the crowd, the cheers and sometimes the boos. Though you can hear the crown outside the stadium, it’s different when you walk in, the crowd is louder more clear. As you enter the 112-year-old stadium you can hear them chanting something, “Let’s go Red Sox, let’s go Red Sox!” yell the Boston fans. In the background, you hear the drowned-out cheers of the opposing team, trying to show their team that they are there to support them. You can hear the excitement in all the voices as you find your seat the right field bleachers. You can hear the yell of the vendors telling everyone about the peanuts, hotdogs or beer they have and how its only 5 dollars. You also hear the traffic on the Yawkey Street and the former Yawket Extension, now David Ortiz Drive, behind the Green Monster, a large wall sitting 302 feet from home plate. The sound is not the only thing you notice; you can’t help but notice the smell. The fresh cut grass makes you imagine big grass field, which a baseball field mostly is, …show more content…

At the bottom of the wall there is the hand-operated scoreboard with all the information about the game and the league you could want. To the left of the monster from the right field seats you see the seats behind ‘home plate’. Up from there you see the grandstand and the upper deck. Continuing up form there you see the 600 club and the press box with all the World Series titles hanging above. Spread throughout the stadium is the neon yellow shirts of the food vendors. Looking up you see the dimming blue sky and the large floodlights warming

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