Cleveland Indians

2006 Cleveland Indians

After an impressive performance in the 2005 MLB season, the Cleveland Indians finished the 2005 regular season with a .574 win average, placing them in the top two of the American League Central, just behind the team that went all the way to win the World Series. In 2006, the Tribe are the team in the division most likely to offer the White Sox a challenge. Most of the team that caught fire in the second half of 2005 will be back, giving Cleveland baseball fans reason to hope for continued excitement in the Indians' game this season. Tickets to Jacobs Field are selling like hotcakes - don't miss your chance to catch the Cleveland Indians in action in 2006!

The Cleveland Indians are one of the charter franchises of the American League, now playing in the American League Central Division against such rivals as the Minnesota Twins, Chicago White Sox, and Kansas City Royals. The Indians won their first World Series in 1920, won again in 1954, but have yet to win another championship since losing in seven games to the Florida Marlins in the 1997 World Series.

That Indians team was known for its strong offense led by sluggers Jim Thome and Albert Belle. The Indians were not considered a good franchise during most of the period of time between championships, with an especially weak period in the '60s and '70s, but for the second half of the '90s they were perennial contenders in the American League Central. After their last American League Central Championship in 2001, the Indians began a rebuilding process.

The Indians used to play in Cleveland Municipal Stadium, a large multi-sport facility used by both the Indians and the Cleveland Browns of the NFL. The stadium, often referred to as "the Mistake by the Lake," was built in 1932 and by the 1990s was extremely out of date. In 1994, Cleveland opened a brand-new baseball-only stadium on Lake Erie called Jacobs Field. The opening of Jacobs Field coincided with the team's resurgence as a contender, and Indians games, which used to be sparsely attended, became a very hot ticket. The Indians have sold out many games in their plush new surroundings.

The building of Jacobs Field along with 'The Q,' (Quicken Loans Arena, the home of the Cleveland Cavaliers) is looked upon as the beginning of the revitalization of downtown Cleveland. The field seats 43,368 people, providing a much cozier feeling than the cavernous Municipal Coliseum. The seats at Jacobs Field are among the most comfortable in the game, with more leg room thanks to wider aisles. In addition, better elevation between rows means clear and unobstructed sight lines to the field. A truly unique feature at Jacobs Field is the angled seating sections. Located just beyond the dugouts in both the lower and upper decks, the seats are angled 8 to 12 degrees, offering fans who sit in these sections a view of the middle of the diamond minus the crick in the neck.


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