Greenville Drive Baseball Outing for Two or Four. Four Options Available.
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- Class A Red Sox affiliate
- Great family outing
- Ballpark inspired by Fenway
- Meet mascot Reedy Rip’It
Much like the New Deal, free refills, and ownership of the moon, baseball helped make America the great nation it is today. Salute our national pastime with today’s GrouponLive deal to a Greenville Drive baseball game against the Rome Braves at Fluor Field. Seating is available in the reserved-seat section. Choose from the following options:
• For $25, you get two tickets, two T-shirts, two sodas, and two hot dogs at the game on Sunday, August 14, at 4 p.m. (a $57 total value).
• For $25, you get two tickets, two T-shirts, two sodas, and two hot dogs at the game on Tuesday, August 16, at 7 p.m. (a $57 total value).
• For $50, you get four tickets, four T-shirts, four sodas, and four hot dogs at the game on Sunday, August 14, at 4 p.m. (a $114 total value).
• For $50, you get four tickets, four T-shirts, four sodas, and four hot dogs at the game on Tuesday, August 16, at 7 p.m. (a $114 total value).
A Class A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox and former home of such heavyweight hurlers as Clay Buchholz and Daniel Bard, the Greenville Drive continue to tear up the South Atlantic League with a steady stream of fastballs and miraculous outfield dives. Families can enjoy a final hurrah before schools pull their students back from summer’s warm embrace, cheering on the Drive as they prepare to launch into the upper echelon of the Southern Division standings.
Modeled after Boston’s Fenway Park—from the Green Monster in left field to the centuries-old smell of British tea wafting in from the harbor—Fluor Field greets jewelry enthusiasts with its emerald grasses and pristine diamond. All ticketholders will receive a free T-shirt to show friends and family as they make their way up into the stands, along with vouchers for hot dogs and sodas from the concession stands lining the field. Amphibious mascot Reedy Rip’It will have his webbed fingers ready to sign autographs for kids to stuff in their lockers on the first day of school, along with any home-run balls they can bribe him to catch with his sticky tongue.