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Padres give brutal comments to Dodgers fans taking over Petco Park: ‘Freaking crazy’

NY Post Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Joe Musgrove estimated that 90% of attendees at a Padres-Dodgers game at Petco Park were Dodgers fans.
90 % · Dodgers fans
Joe Musgrove, Padres pitcher
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Citation-ready fact
Joe Musgrove stated that he believes the main reason many Dodgers fans attend Padres home games is that Padres season ticket holders sell their tickets to Dodgers fans.
Joe Musgrove, Padres pitcher and season ticket holder
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The Padres ranked second in average fan attendance this season with 41,423 per game.
41423 · average fan attendance
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The Dodgers ranked first in average fan attendance this season with 50,872 per game.
50872 · average fan attendance
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Samad Taylor stated that regardless of which team’s fans attend, a game brings in 40,000 fans.
40000 · fans in the stadium
Samad Taylor, Padres outfielder
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Citation-ready fact
Walker Buehler described the Dodgers fan takeover at Petco Park as 'freaking crazy' and noted it was more extreme than previous instances at Angel Stadium and Chase Field.
Walker Buehler, Former Dodgers pitcher
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It’s well known that the Los Angeles Dodgers have some of the most loyal fans in baseball.

But it appears that even players of the San Diego Padres are acknowledging the loyalty of the Dodgers “die-hards” after this weekend’s series loss.

According to Jeff Sanders of The San Diego Tribune, multiple Padres players were aware of the color blue bleeding through the stands at Petco Park, as the atmosphere felt more like a home game for the Dodgers instead of the Padres.

According to Sanders’ report, Padres pitcher and El Cajon native, Joe Musgrove, said Saturday night’s game “was out of control,” and he felt like it was 90% Dodgers fans in attendance.

While Musgrove plays for the team, he’s also a season ticket holder and believes the reason why so many Dodgers fans show up when the team comes to town is that other season ticket holders are selling tickets to the fans.

“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,” Musgrove told Sanders. “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.

A very #Dodgers-centric crowd tonight at Petco Park. Loud boo’s for Machado; heavy cheers for LA. pic.twitter.com/OVTW21nFrL

Since the 2020s arrived, the Dodgers and Padres have turned into one of the best rivalries in baseball, as both teams have been World Series contenders every year, having met each other three times over the last six seasons in the playoffs, all while being 124 miles apart from Petco Park to Dodger Stadium.

California is nicknamed “The Sunshine State,” meaning it’s sunny all year round. The state currently holds five different professional baseball teams in the Dodgers, Padres, San Francisco Giants, Anaheim Angels, and the Oakland Athletics, who are in the middle of moving to Las Vegas.

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Excluding the Athletics, who play in a Minor League Baseball stadium at Sutter Health Park, four of those five teams rank within the top 15 for average fan attendance this season. Three of them are within the top 10. The Padres rank second (with 41,423), while the Dodgers rank first (with 50,872).

With last weekend’s series taking place during the peak of summer break, a week before Fourth of July, and in a place where it’s sunny most of the year, and only a two-hour drive between LA and SD, it makes sense why fans spend most of their summer watching baseball.

Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam told Sanders that if he lived in Los Angeles, he, too, would make the trip down.

Former Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler, who threw the final pitch of Game 5 of the 2024 World Series, told Sanders he’s seen the Los Angeles fan base take over opposing teams’ stadiums before, like Petco Park, Angel Stadium and Chase Field in Phoenix, Ariz., but said, “This weekend was freaking crazy.

Before the series began this week, Padres outfielder Samad Taylor said he viewed the rivalry as “just another day of baseball,” and followed up by saying that whether it’s the Padres fans or Dodgers fans attending the game, it’s another 40,000 fans in the stadium.

Samad Taylor spoke about being teammates with Ty France after coming up through the ranks with him, how he feels about facing the Dodgers and if the Padres are beginning to click at the right time: pic.twitter.com/knEIYJrxGl

Both Musgrove and 2024 All-Star and Silver Slugger winner Jackson Merrill told Sanders that when the Padres and Dodgers play each other, they just hear “noise” from the fan base.

“I mean, the atmosphere is the same still. I don’t think there’s a lot of players that really feel the boos or hear the cheers,” Musgrove told Sanders. “It’s more just noise, you know. So, whether it’s our fans or their fans, if it’s noisy, it’s all the same.”

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