Haha yeah but most of the season it's sunny and beautiful and has a great view of anything but baseball. This was the article. Attendance there is nothing special but I guess they never struggle.
Win or lose, people have long shown up to Coors Field in great numbers. Some are diehard fans. Some are transplants or out-of-towners supporting visiting teams. Many are simply here for the vibes. One recent evening, Rockies fan Ryan Mack stood on the rooftop terrace, clad in a Trevor Story jersey, overlooking a glorious ballpark.
“How can you beat this?” Mack said, raising his right arm toward the sky. “Sunshine and baseball. You can’t beat it.”
So far, at least, the fans are still coming, enjoying the mountain setting that is an inescapable fact of the Rockies’ existence. Reminders adorn T-shirts in the team store. Baseball with an altitude. The Rockies’ chief quirk both aids the franchise’s greatest strength — that remarkably consistent attendance — and creates its tragic flaw, the difficulty of pitching and performing in the mountain air. If Wrigley Field exists as a timeless neighborhood bar, Coors Field thrives as a tranquil biergarten. The Rockies rank 19th in attendance with an average of more than 25,000 tickets sold per home game; that steady crowd supports business — and business as usual —regardless of whether the product on the field is stellar or atrocious.