Author

Christopher Boan is the lead writer at BetArizona.com after covering sports and sports betting in Arizona for more than seven years, including stops at ArizonaSports.com, the Tucson Weekly and the Green Valley News.
At BetArizona.com, we were interested in seeing how much it costs on average for Arizona Diamondbacksâ season ticket holders to see a win at a home game. Using Baseball-Reference.com and Statista data, we found the average cost per home win between the 2022-2024 seasons. We also ranked all MLB teams based on most affordable to most expensive tickets to see a win.
Avg. Home Ticket $ for 81 Games | Avg. Cost/Home Win | MLB Standing |
$1,936.98
| $45.73 | 1st place |
Across the 30-team MLB, no one produced a better value for season ticketholders than the Dâbacks, who averaged $45.73 per home win the last three seasons, mostly thanks to going 89-73 overall and 44-37 (.543) at Chase Field just last season.
Despite missing out on the playoffs in the Senior Circuit by a slim margin in 2024, Arizona returns to the diamonds of âThe Showâ in 2025 with solid odds of going a step (or more) further, with a preseason win total over/under of 86.5 on DraftKings AZ.
While the Dâbacks win total over/under is 86.5, Arizonaâs odds other than that on DraftKings Sportsbook are all over the yard, with +600 odds of winning the NL West (ranking second behind the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers, at -500), while moat other Arizona betting apps gives the Dâbacks -130 odds of making the postseason again this fall.
That figure puts Torey Lovulloâs squad fifth in the 15-team NL, behind the Dodgers (-2500), Atlanta Braves (-400), Philadelphia Phillies (-265) and New York Mets (-250), illustrating the new hope thatâs alive in the Valley when it comes to professional baseball ahead of the 2025 season.
USA Today photo by Joe Rondone.
Author
Christopher Boan is the lead writer at BetArizona.com after covering sports and sports betting in Arizona for more than seven years, including stops at ArizonaSports.com, the Tucson Weekly and the Green Valley News.
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