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When June turns to July, the Twins head to Detroit and Miami for yet another lengthy road trip. While no one knows if the Tigers and Marlins will be up to the challenge, the Twins need to be if they want to finish the first half of the season strong. What awaits them in these cities?

Image courtesy of Mark Brown/Getty Images

Detroit Tigers - June 27-29
Comerica Park - Capacity 41,083
2024 Attendance: 1,858,295 (Averaged 23,824, ranked 11th out of AL parks, 24th overall MLB)

The Twins split a mid-April four-game series at Comerica in early 2024, and actually came away winning the road series in July two games to one. 2024 was an outlier to the prior seasons, but generally all of the road trips to Detroit have been close contests. Since the Twins began playing their road games at Comerica Park in 2000, they've played 220 games. The Twins have won 109 of them while the Tigers have held serve with 111 wins. Far from being hostile, but far from being friendly, the expansive Comerica dimensions and atmosphere have proven to be a literal wash for Twins clubs looking to make hay in the standings. 2025 looks like it will bring more of the same middling results on the road.

When Comerica Park opened, it attempted to replace a jewel box ballpark icon in Tiger Stadium. How did they do it? Well, for starters, they built a bunch of giant Tiger statues. Then, they made the dimensions of the outfield astronomical in nature. The walls were so far back that they realized they messed up and brought them back in starting in 2003. Players’ stats continue to take a hit from the dimensions, and the walls were brought in yet again prior to the 2023 season.

Located just a few blocks from the Detroit River/Canadian Border, Comerica Park sits in the downtown district, with plenty of entertainment and eatery options. There is a Motown Museum, the Corner Ballpark (a recreation of Tiger Stadium), the Detroit Institute of Arts, and the Henry Ford Museum just down the road. In-stadium attractions for traveling fans include a carousel, Ferris Wheel, and the Tigers Hall of Fame.

After the Twins leave Detroit, they have to journey 1385 miles to the heart of Miami to face the Marlins.


Miami Marlins - July 1-3
loanDepot Park
- Capacity 37,442
2024 Attendance: 1,087,453 (Averaged 13,425 - ranked 15th out of 15 NL teams, 29th overall MLB)

The Twins began 2023 with a sweep of the Royals, and they carried the momentum right into loanDepot Park with a resounding 11-1 victory and a 4-0 start to the season. Then, Sandy Alcantara pitched a complete game shutout to spoil Kenta Maeda's return, and the perfect season and winning road vibes ended all at once. The Twins ultimately lost that series two games to one. In eight games at Marlins Park/loanDepot Park, the Twins are 3-5. The first games Minnesota played in Miami were in 2007 at Dolphin Stadium, and they came away winning two out of three in that series, making them 5-6 overall in South Beach.

The stadium's first season of use was in 2012 (Marlins Park), and it was renamed loanDepot Park in 2021. It has a retractable roof so the games are guaranteed to occur regardless of weather, which is a must for anyone making that long of a trip to catch a ballgame! The in-stadium nightclub may have closed, and the neighborhood around LoanDepot looks more like a residential zone, but the ballpark itself is beautiful inside and outside. The best part? A visiting fan can usually get 30-dollar prime area seating. I mean, it's all for sale... and no one's buying. Twins fans rejoice, but the stadium employees and Marlins players aren't too impressed. The World Basic Classic proved that both the stadium and the community can get excited when the product on the field is competitive, but Marlins ownership isn't too keen on that being the goal.

This "communidad 305" thing looks interesting. BYOInstruments? Soccer atmosphere? The fun probably can still occur if your team has a strong representation in the stands. Their bobblehead museum contains 400 of the old owner Jeffrey Loria's collection, but its almost hidden behind an outfield stairwell, so you might have to explore to find it.

LoanDepot Park sits in the southern part of the city, just west of Biscayne Bay. If the roof is open, sightlines from the back of the first-base line is the place to be. If closed... go party and play instruments, I guess! At 85 degrees and sunny, it's hard to complain. Let's hope the Twins can muster up some victories in South Beach, because they have a ten-game, three-team homestand to endure against the Rays, Cubs, and Pirates afterward before the All-Star Break.

How do you think the Twins will fare on this road trip? Can Minnesota tame the Tigers? Or will the sub-.500 results of the past in these cities carry on forward to 2025?


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