Joe Musgrove Couldn't Hide His Frustration Over Petco Park Crowd

Despite the long-standing rivalry, Padres pitcher Joe Musgrove laments the overwhelming presence of Dodgers fans at Petco Park, calling on local supporters to reclaim their home turf.

Joe Musgrove didn’t mince words after the Padres watched another home series slip away to the Dodgers at Petco Park.

San Diego dropped two of three over the weekend, with the Padres again taking the opener before losing the next two - the same pattern they followed last month. The damage was especially rough over the final two games, when the Dodgers outscored the Padres 19-5 and pushed their lead in the National League West to 10 games.

The two clubs will meet again this coming weekend, and this time the series shifts to Dodger Stadium for four games. But for Musgrove, the more immediate issue was what the crowd looked like in San Diego.

The Padres starter said the Dodgers presence in the building felt extreme.

“[It] was out of control," Musgrove said to the San Diego Union-Tribune. "It was like the most I’ve ever seen Dodger fans in our stadium - 90% Dodgers fans.”

He pointed to ticket sales as part of the reason.

“I think it’s our season-ticket holders selling the tickets,” Musgrove said. “I’m not going to tell somebody that can make a lot of money or get some of their money back by selling tickets not to, but I think that’s the main reason. It seems like all of our fans that show up for every other series of the year and fill it out seem to sell their tickets when these series come around.”

The Dodgers have long been known for traveling well, and Petco Park’s location makes the trip even easier for fans coming down the freeway. This weekend, though, Musgrove said the balance felt tilted far more than usual.

“It’s just how it is, man. They’re so close.

They got a lot of Dodger fans down here in San Diego already, and I know they’re always looking to fill out our stadium," Musgrove said. "I think partially because the atmosphere is awesome.

It’s a great ballpark, good food, a fun place to watch a game, but also it’s close enough to [LA] to try to trump the Padre fans and fill it out with their fans.”

That kind of turnout has become part of the backdrop whenever these teams meet, but it was especially noticeable this weekend as the rivalry played out in a building that sounded more like Dodger Stadium than home turf for San Diego.

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