IronPigs Offer Valentine's Pork-O-Grams From $125, Including Pork Racer Visit
Lehigh Valley IronPigs launched Valentine's Pork-O-Grams for $125 that pair mascot visits with merchandise and roses, a local play for fan engagement and preseason revenue.

The Lehigh Valley IronPigs rolled out a Valentine’s package that mixes mascot theater with merchandise and date-night flair, offering a fresh way for Triple-A fans to bring hometown baseball charm to February celebrations. For $125, buyers receive a visit from one of the team’s Pork Racers - options include Chris P. Bacon, Barbie-Q, Diggity, or Hambone - plus a dozen roses from a local florist, an IronPigs plush, an adjustable team cap, two IronPigs ticket vouchers, and a $10 Clubhouse Store gift card. For $135, customers can add boxed chocolates. Deliveries are scheduled for February 12 or February 13 and are limited to Lehigh and Northampton counties or within a 15-mile radius of Coca-Cola Park.
This promotion functions on multiple levels. At its simplest it is a novelty gift: a costumed mascot riding into living rooms and workplaces offers a theatrical moment that minor-league clubs have long leveraged to build emotional attachment and family-friendly memories. The inclusion of roses, chocolates, and a plush ties the sport to traditional Valentine’s rituals, while the ticket vouchers and store credit nudge recipients back toward the ballpark, converting a one-off purchase into future attendance and retail spending.
From a business perspective, the package is a compact revenue and marketing engine. The $125 base price reflects a premium experiential bundle rather than a commodity item; it bundles physical merchandise, floral retail, and an in-person mascot appearance into a turnkey product. That approach mirrors a growing trend in minor-league operations: monetizing team personality and in-stadium assets offsite, creating micro-events that support local vendors and elevate the team’s community presence during the baseball off-season.
Culturally, the Pork-O-Grams lean into Pennsylvania’s playfulness around pork themes while keeping the focus local. Limited delivery geography keeps dollars in the IronPigs’ immediate market and directs promotional energy toward core fans who can easily redeem ticket vouchers at Coca-Cola Park. It also underscores how mascots and minor-league franchises act as community institutions, providing shared rituals that reach beyond games to birthdays, school visits, and holiday moments.

Operationally, scheduling mascot visits on two days, managing floral partners, and capping deliveries simplifies logistics but will likely leave out long-distance fans and those who wanted alternate dates. For fans who value novelty and live in the delivery zone, the Pork-O-Gram is a high-touch way to celebrate Valentine’s Day and keep the IronPigs top of mind as the season approaches.
For readers, the offer is a reminder that Triple-A clubs are as much about entertainment and local commerce as on-field product. Expect more experiential packages this spring as teams look to monetize mascots, merchandise, and moments that drive both attendance and community goodwill.
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