In terms of ambience, is the baseball stadium preferable to a football stadium because of the intimacy?
Renzulli: It depends upon whom you ask. In a baseball stadium, we can get you closer to the action, especially in the corners. But we have to maintain a passage on those corners of about 20 feet. We have to have that space because of things that have to move in an emergency. We take the rink to as close as we can to the fans in a baseball stadium. In a football stadium, it’s a little bit different. When you want to use all of the seats, you have to center it on the field. In Wrigley, you worked the ivy into the ambience. Will you be working the Green Monster left field wall into the ambience for the Fenway game? A: Absolutely. It’s bigger than life. Whether we tried or not, it’s there. As we go into a stadium, we remember we are there for a reason: There is a lot of history in the ballparks that we went into last year and we are going into this year. And even going back to Ralph Wilson Stadium … as we go into cities we try to pull together a look that gives fans a feel for the ballpark