Do gin and tonics belong at the ballgame?

Now you can enjoy a cocktail while you watch baseball at historic Fenway Park. Sacrilege?

Beer and baseball have long gone hand-in-hand, but now Boston's Fenway Park is enraging traditionalists by selling cocktails.
(Image credit: CC BY: Kent Goldman)

Massachusetts has long taken a puritanical stance toward alcohol; the state did not allow liquor stores to sell booze on Sundays until 2004. But this week, Bay State authorities gave the Boston Red Sox the green light to serve up mixed drinks throughout Fenway Park, baseball's oldest stadium, as opposed to merely in premium-priced sections. (Perhaps a stiff cocktail will distract fans from the team's wretched 0-5 start to the season.) While other ballparks have already enacted a similar policy, the prospect of hard liquor at one of the sport's sanctuaries has rekindled a familiar debate: Do mixed drinks and baseball really mix?

It's part of the modern game: People who don't want mixed drinks at the park are being overly nostalgic, says The House That Dewey Built. They still have a "Norman Rockwell image" of a baseball game: "Wooden stadiums, wool uniforms," and "very few minorities" in the stands. These same misguided traditionalists who complained when stadiums widened their menus beyond hot dogs. "God forbid the unwashed masses get their hands on a watered-down Tom Collins."

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