Northern California didn’t exactly ease into summer. It came out swinging.
In the space of about three weeks, the Sacramento area and nearby Santa Clara packed in a run of firsts, big arrivals and one-off sports moments that pulled in more than 410,000 spectators across roughly two dozen events from June 21 through Wednesday, according to The Sacramento Bee’s tally of official attendance figures and crowd estimates.
The stretch included the World Cup’s Bay Area stop, the X Games’ Sacramento debut, the A’s first visit from the two-time reigning World Series champion Dodgers at Sutter Health Park, and a Kings draft night that turned into a preview of the team’s future. Through all of it, the crowds kept showing up.
The loudest early burst came on June 23 at Golden 1 Center, where about 3,000 fans gathered to watch the NBA draft on the arena’s big screen. When Commissioner Adam Silver called Arkansas guard Darius Acuff Jr. with the No. 7 overall pick, the place erupted.
That reaction has only grown louder since. The Kings signed and introduced their three draft picks - Acuff, forward Alex Karaban at No. 29 and guard Emannuel Sharp at No. 45 - and then got a first look at Acuff and Sharp during the California Classic from July 4-6.
Acuff played in two of the three exhibition games and delivered right away, setting up the game-winning basket in a 79-76 win over the Brooklyn Nets before scoring 22 points, including two clutch 3s, in a 95-89 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. A Kings spokesperson said more than 30,000 fans attended the three California Classic games.
A few days earlier, Sacramento had already gotten its first taste of the X Games. The event ran from June 26-28 at Cal Expo and marked not just the series’ Sacramento debut, but the first stop of the Moonpay X Games League, a new format built around a $500,000 prize pot for a winning team.
Cal Expo was turned into a full-on X Games site, with BMX, skateboard and motocross athletes competing in 18 events. The park course included a ramp styled after Sacramento’s Tower Bridge, the State Fair site’s sky ride carried guests around the grounds, and Davis native Nyjah Huston reached the podium at 31.
X Games officials said 52,851 fans attended over the three days.
Then came the A’s home stand, and the crowds were heavy even when the baseball wasn’t always kind to the home team. From June 29 through July 5, the A’s hosted three games against the Dodgers and three against the Marlins at Sutter Health Park.
Los Angeles brought the kind of draw that fills seats anywhere, and all three Dodgers games were sellouts with most of the crowd pulling for the visitors. The A’s were beaten badly in the first two games, then finished the series with a 7-1 win - their only victory of the home stand.
Miami followed with another three-game set, and the A’s were swept again. Sunday’s finale was the most dramatic of the bunch, with the A’s nearly clawing all the way back in a 9-8 loss after starter Eury Perez threw seven perfect innings before leaving with Miami ahead 8-0. Saturday’s game, which included postgame fireworks for the July 4 holiday, was the only sellout of that series.
According to the team, attendance for the six games was 12,394 on June 29, 12,387 on June 30, 12,592 on July 1, 10,312 on July 3, 12,523 on July 4 and 8,686 on July 5.
The biggest international stage of all was just a couple of hours down the road in Santa Clara, where Levi’s Stadium - listed as San Francisco Bay Area Stadium for the event - hosted six World Cup matches. Three of those games fell within this summer stretch, including the United States’ historic win over Bosnia-Herzegovina in the knockout Round of 32 on July 1.
FIFA said all six matches were sellouts and that 99.6% of stadium capacity was used across the event. About 206,025 fans attended the final three games after the calendar turned to summer.
The World Cup also spilled back into Sacramento in a big way. Sacramento Republic FC hosted free downtown watch parties for U.S. and Mexican matches, and Republic FC president and general manager Tim Holt told The Sacramento Bee those gatherings drew about 45,000 total attendees. The watch party for the Americans’ Round of 16 loss to Belgium drew 3,500 to Sacramento Memorial Auditorium, according to previous Bee reporting.
Even with all that soccer energy in the air, Republic FC’s Wednesday win over Rhode Island FC drew 8,436 fans, a smaller crowd than the club usually gets for a typical home match.
Put it all together, and Northern California’s summer sports surge breaks down like this: World Cup in Santa Clara, 206,025; A’s six-game home stand, 68,903; X Games, 52,851; Republic FC World Cup watch parties, about 45,000; California Classic and Kings draft watch party, about 33,000; Republic FC vs. Rhode Island FC, 8,436.
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