Fenway Park, TD Garden allowed to host fans at 12 percent of capacity
Gov. Charlie Baker on Thursday gave the green light for the first step in allowing fans to return to Fenway Park and TD Garden.
In a press conference, Baker gave approval for the reopening of large venues in Massachusetts that accommodate more than 5,000 people on March 22, at 12 percent of normal capacity.
Such venues include Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox, and TD Garden, where the Boston Bruins and Boston Celtics have been playing without fans since their seasons began. Venues would need to submit a reopening plan to the state Department of Public Health, Baker said, and continue employ common-sense guidelines to protect fans’ health.
The list would also include Gillette Stadium, where the New England Patriots played in front of empty seats for the entire 2020 season.
Boston follows New York, which reopened select venues in the state at 10 percent capacity earlier this year. The Buffalo Bills were the first to welcome back fans in January for their home playoff games, and New York City recently began allowing the New York Knicks and New York Rangers to each admit 2,000 fans per home game to Madison Square Garden.
The news comes at the perfect time for the Red Sox, who are scheduled to host the Baltimore Orioles for Opening Day on April 1. The team did not immediately announce its reopening plans, but officials have hinted for months that continued safety precautions such as mask-wearing and touchless payments may remain in some capacity for the foreseeable future.
It was not immediately known precisely at what percentage of capacity Baker’s new rules would cap attendance. The Tennessee Titans, one of the first pro teams to readmit fans during the COVID-19 pandemic, opened Nissan Stadium at 10 percent capacity last fall before gradually increasing to 21 percent — the CDC-mandated maximum — by November.