Record crowd watches Dodgers v Red Sox exhibition
By Bernie Woodall
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Baseball fans came out in record numbers to watch the Los Angeles Dodgers play the Boston Red Sox in an exhibition game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Saturday.
Some 115,300 paid to see World Series champion Boston beat Los Angeles 7-4 at the stadium where the Dodgers played from 1958 to 1961. The attendance beat the previous one-game record set at the same stadium in 1959 of 93,103.
The record crowd showed fans still have not lost their passion for the game despite an off-season dominated by drug scandals involving some of the biggest names in baseball including Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds.
Edina Hernandez of Colton, California, said she had been coming to Dodgers games since 1974 and was not put off by the issue of drug use in the game.
"Steroids, that's the players' problem. I'm here for the game I love," she said.
Hernandez and her husband David said they also came for the novelty of seeing the Dodgers play their first game at the Coliseum since Dodger Stadium opened in 1962.
The game was held at the Coliseum as part of a season-long celebration of the Dodgers move from Brooklyn in 1958.
With the 2008 season set to start in earnest for the majority of Major League Baseball's 30 teams on Monday, Commissioner Bud Selig said earlier this week attendance figures were expected to top 80 million. Continued...






