Padres games are what we are all about right now on sandiegoticketfinder.com. The third team the Padres will be hosting at Petco Park is the Arizona Diamondbacks. A relatively new team, the D-backs have really shown their stuff in the MLB. This sould be a good match-up of skills.
If you want tickets to any of the three games here are some places to look. AIW Tickets has great seats available already starting at $29.
Also these sites are worth checking out too.
If you still can’t find what you’re looking for you can go to TicketsNow or StubHub to see what they have.
Here’s a couple facts about the San Diego Padres from Wiki:
* In his first home game as the Padres’ new owner in 1974, Ray Kroc grabbed the public address system microphone and apologized to fans for the poor performance of the team, saying, “I’ve never seen such stupid ballplaying in my life.” At the same time, a streaker raced across the field, eluding security personnel. Kroc shouted, “Throw him in jail!” Coincidentally, 1974 would be the first season that the Padres would not finish in the National League West cellar (finishing fifth), and brought the promise of an owner who would make the necessary changes to the organization.
* Between games of a doubleheader with the Cincinnati Reds on July 25, 1990, Roseanne series star Roseanne Arnold delivered a screeching rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner, immediately after which she grabbed her crotch and spat on the ground. She was intending to parody those actions of ballplayers which are often caught on camera, but she picked the wrong time to do it, as it appeared to many that she was commenting on the flag and/or the anthem. Had it not been for those gestures, her performance likely would have been written off as simply a poor choice of singer on the ballclub’s part, and probably soon forgotten. As it was, her little act drew boos and catcalls from fans and then criticism from players (most notably Tony Gwynn) and even outside quarters, including then-President George Herbert Walker Bush, a former Yale University first baseman and the father of then-Texas Rangers owner and current President George W. Bush.