I’ll be honest. I didn’t get baseball. Not remotely. Growing up in the UK, it had always looked – from a safe cultural distance – like a sport that involved a lot of standing around in excellent trousers, punctuated occasionally by someone swinging dramatically and then jogging somewhere. My American colleague disagreed. Loudly. So loudly, in fact, that when I mentioned I was visiting Atlanta for a long weekend, she had Atlanta Braves tickets sorted before I’d finished the sentence.
I’m now going to tell you what happened next. Because three hours later, I walked out of Truist Park with a foam tomahawk I hadn’t technically purchased (someone in our section handed it to me during the seventh-inning stretch and I didn’t question it), and a completely revised opinion of what a live sports experience can be. The Braves won 6-0. I didn’t stop making noise for the last two innings. And I’ve spent the fortnight since explaining to increasingly impatient people why they need to watch a baseball game in person before they write it off.
Truist Park: The Stadium That Wins Before a Ball is Pitched
Truist Park opened in 2017, just outside Atlanta in Cumberland, Georgia. And it’s not the sort of ageing, slightly apologetic venue my imagination had assembled. It is – and I say this as someone who has been to quite a lot of sports venues across the UK and Europe – genuinely lovely. Modern without being soulless. Wide concourses you can actually walk through without performing an elaborate sideways dance with strangers. Views of the field from almost anywhere you happen to be standing. A food selection that extends meaningfully beyond hot dogs (though the hot dogs are – I did eat two of them – extremely good).
There’s a reason the Braves sell this as an experience rather than just a match. The approach to the stadium takes you through The Battery Atlanta – the entertainment district that surrounds Truist Park on three sides – and it’s genuinely buzzing from about two hours before first pitch. Restaurants, bars, pop-ups, merch stalls, street food. Can it feel a bit commercial? Slightly, yes. But is it a good time? Absolutely. I’d arrived thinking I was going to a game. I quickly realised I was going to an event. Grab Braves tickets here and plan for at least 90 minutes before first pitch to take it all in properly.

The atmosphere inside picks up in a way I wasn’t prepared for. The Tomahawk Chop – the Braves’ famous crowd chant, accompanied by a foam tomahawk and a rhythm that gets into your head and stays there for days – starts early. It’s collective and contagious and completely unlike the sort of polite English football applause I’m more familiar with. You don’t have to know what’s happening on the field to get caught up in it. That was somewhat the story of my entire evening. Check ticket options for your visit here.
The Game Itself: Slower Than Football, Better Than I Expected
Right. The pace. This is the thing people warn you about and they’re not wrong – baseball is slower than Premier League football. There are pauses. There is strategy that happens quietly between pitches that you probably won’t understand until you’ve watched several games (I’ve since watched several games online, which tells you something). But here’s the thing nobody warned me about: the pauses are part of it. They give you time to actually talk to the people you’re with. To eat your food at a normal speed. To watch what’s happening across the whole field rather than just tracking the ball.
And then a home run happens. The night we were there, the Braves hit three of them. Three. The first one – a ball that left the bat with a crack I felt in my chest – produced the kind of crowd noise that I genuinely wasn’t expecting from a sport I’d mentally filed as calm. The second one happened in the fourth inning and the entire section around us erupted in a way that had everyone on their feet before the ball had cleared the outfield fence. By the third, I was already celebrating before I’d fully registered what had happened.

The Braves are worth watching right now. They’re a team with proper history – founded in 1871, which makes them one of the oldest franchises in professional sport – and an identity that’s been refined across 155 years of playing. The 2021 World Series title is recent enough that the winning culture is still very much in the room when this team plays at home. Check the Braves schedule and book your game – home games sell quickly, particularly the summer ones.
- Stadium: Truist Park, Cumberland, Georgia (just outside Atlanta)
- Getting there: Cumberland Station (SunRail) or drive – parking packages available
- Arrive: 90 minutes before first pitch to enjoy The Battery Atlanta
- The Tomahawk Chop: They’ll give you a foam tomahawk. Use it.
- Best seats for a first-timer: Lower bowl sections closest to the infield
- Food tip: The stadium concessions are genuinely good – budget more than you think
- Season: MLB regular season runs April to September, playoffs October
The Honest Part: What Nobody Tells You
The food prices. Oh, the food prices. I’ve been to expensive sporting events. I’ve paid Wembley prices for a lukewarm pie. But US stadium pricing operates on a different scale – $15 beers, $12 pretzels, $22 for a pulled pork sandwich that is admittedly excellent but still. If you’re coming over from the UK expecting vaguely reasonable stadium food costs, recalibrate now. The food itself is legitimately good – notably better than anything you’ll get at a UK football ground – but budget for it properly and you won’t feel shocked at the end of the evening.
That’s genuinely my one complaint. Everything else – the atmosphere, the spectacle, the sheer physical joy of watching professional baseball played well at this level – exceeded what I came in expecting. Which, given I came in expecting to be bored, is admittedly a low bar. But I don’t think that’s what happened. I think I found a sport that I’d dismissed based on no actual evidence, and it turned out to be brilliant on its own terms. Check Braves home game availability if you’re planning an Atlanta trip – it’s worth building your visit around a game date. Book seats early for summer fixtures – they sell out faster than you’d expect.
My colleague was right. I’m not going to tell her that directly, but I am going to suggest we do it again when I’m back in Atlanta in the autumn. She will not be surprised.
