The pandemic may still be lingering when it comes to attending live sporting events, but it may not be till 2023 before Major League Baseball will know whether the trend of fewer fans at the ballparks continues.
With the 2022 regular season coming to an end on Wednesday, the league saw total attendance of 64,556,636. When throwing out the 2020 season that saw no fans in attendance, and last year when the season started with nearly all ballparks under capacity restrictions, 2022 will mark the lowest attended season since 1997 when paid attendance was 63,168,689.
When comparing 2019’s figure of 68,494,752, the last season before the pandemic, the league saw attendance drop -5.7% marking the largest single-season drop since 2009 of -6.6% (72,267,544 in 2008 compared to 67,859,176 in ’09).
Major League Baseball has seen attendance drop nine straight seasons when taking 2020 out of the mix. Since the last increase (+1.97% from 2011 to 2012) league attendance has dropped -14%.
The league is taking the approach that compared to the years since the pandemic arrived, with pockets still affected by the virus, they take the view that attendance is 94% of where they should be. Compared to 2021, when ballparks were largely constrained to no more than 20% of capacity, attendance jumped by +42.3% in 2022. All but two clubs, the Rangers and Reds, saw attendance increase from 2021, a relief to clubs’ bottom line after two years of significant losses.
Each season MLB deals with weather-related postponements and not all games are made up. This creates the need for average attendance per game. The following breaks out the last four seasons:
- 2022 – Avg: 26,483; 2,405 Dates
- 2021 – Avg: 18,901*; 2,397 Dates
- 2020 – N/A
- 2019 – Avg: 28,339; 2,417 Dates
* Ballparks started the season under pandemic capacity restrictions
In another concerning sign, just nine of the 30 clubs (Braves, Orioles, White Sox, Tigers, Mets, Padres, Mariners, Marlins, and Blue Jays) saw attendance increases from 2019, the last year before the pandemic.
The Toronto Blue Jays lead the way with a whopping +52% increase (1,750,144 in 2019 compared to 2,653,830 in 2022). They are followed by the Mariners who are making their first playoff appearance in 21 years with an increase of +28% (2,287,267 compared to 1,791,109 in 2019), Padres with +25% (2,987,470 compared to 2,396,399 in ’19), and White Sox up +22% (2,009,359 compared to 1,649,775 in 2019).
On losses, 14 clubs saw double-digit drops in attendance compared to 2019. Of those, no club saw a larger drop than the Oakland A’s who have alienated fans by trading away key talent while also seeing the league’s owners allow the club to once again collect revenue sharing. The A’s, who continue to work toward trying to secure a new ballpark, saw attendance drop below 1 million to 787,902, a -53% drop from 1,670,734 in 2019. Clubs to drop more than 20% from 2019 included the Diamondbacks and Guardians (-25%), Reds (-23%), and Twins (-22%).
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/maurybrown/2022/10/06/mlb-attendance-for-2022-down-nearly-5-from-2019-last-year-before-the-pandemic/