Roman529
Moon Runner / The 3 AM Crew
:eating: PASS ME ANOTHER DODGER'S DOG. :)
Chew on this: All you can eat at Dodger Stadium
By BETH HARRIS, AP Sports Writer
Thursday, May 24, 2007
(05-24) 16:24 PDT Los Angeles (AP) --
Luis Serrano is working on his second Dodger Dog and the game hasn't even begun.
"On a good night, I'll eat seven," he said, smiling.
That's how it goes in the new all-you-can-eat seats way out in right field at Dodger Stadium, where fans wolf down as many Dodger Dogs, nachos, peanuts, popcorn and soda as their bellies allow for one price.
Bring your own antacids.
"You get your money's worth, for sure," said Serrano, a slender 33-year-old from suburban Glendora who likes to bet his buddies how much they can chow down.
"I've won almost all of them," he said, balancing a paper tray loaded with two more Dodger Dogs, nachos and peanuts on his lap.
His friend, Michael Latta of Alhambra, chomped on a mustard- and onion-slathered Dodger Dog in the right field pavilion, sponsored by, naturally, a chain of convenience stores.
"We're more prone to eating more since we're in here. We wouldn't have done this over there," Latta said, gesturing toward the rest of the stadium.
There's another eat-up-a-storm section in this venerable place  the Dugout Club behind home plate. But at $400 a seat, which includes traditional fare delivered by a wait staff and a high-end buffet  it's out of reach for many in the bust-a-gut section.
Launched this season, the outfield eat-a-thon opens 90 minutes before the first pitch and lasts until the start of the seventh inning. Ticket prices range from $20 for group sales to $40 for day-of-game walk-ups. Some games are $25 during designated promotions.
Chew on this: All you can eat at Dodger Stadium
By BETH HARRIS, AP Sports Writer
Thursday, May 24, 2007
(05-24) 16:24 PDT Los Angeles (AP) --
Luis Serrano is working on his second Dodger Dog and the game hasn't even begun.
"On a good night, I'll eat seven," he said, smiling.
That's how it goes in the new all-you-can-eat seats way out in right field at Dodger Stadium, where fans wolf down as many Dodger Dogs, nachos, peanuts, popcorn and soda as their bellies allow for one price.
Bring your own antacids.
"You get your money's worth, for sure," said Serrano, a slender 33-year-old from suburban Glendora who likes to bet his buddies how much they can chow down.
"I've won almost all of them," he said, balancing a paper tray loaded with two more Dodger Dogs, nachos and peanuts on his lap.
His friend, Michael Latta of Alhambra, chomped on a mustard- and onion-slathered Dodger Dog in the right field pavilion, sponsored by, naturally, a chain of convenience stores.
"We're more prone to eating more since we're in here. We wouldn't have done this over there," Latta said, gesturing toward the rest of the stadium.
There's another eat-up-a-storm section in this venerable place  the Dugout Club behind home plate. But at $400 a seat, which includes traditional fare delivered by a wait staff and a high-end buffet  it's out of reach for many in the bust-a-gut section.
Launched this season, the outfield eat-a-thon opens 90 minutes before the first pitch and lasts until the start of the seventh inning. Ticket prices range from $20 for group sales to $40 for day-of-game walk-ups. Some games are $25 during designated promotions.