The Braves played their final game at Turner Field on Sunday after 20 years at the ballpark. They’ll move to SunTrust Park in suburban Cobb County starting next season, marking the end of baseball in downtown Atlanta.

Sunday was an occasion to say goodbye to the ballpark that hosted a bulk of the Braves’ dominant run atop the NL East. As part of the festivities, they hosted former Braves greats like Chipper Jones, Greg Maddux, John Smoltz and Tom Glavine. Jimmy Carter and Hank Aaron were in attendance, but Ted Turner — for whom the stadium was named after — was not there.

And the Braves have no idea why.

Former Braves owner Turner was invited to be a part of the festivities, but he declined the invitation and didn’t give the Braves a reason.

Turner’s fondness of downtown Atlanta may have played a role, via ajc.com:

We still don’t know why Ted chose not to attend the Ted’s closing, but it’s a matter of record that he has long been a supporter of downtown Atlanta. He once had a penthouse atop CNN Center. When Hawks’ executives considered vacating the Omni and building a new arena along Georgia 400, he vetoed it, saying he wanted to be able to walk to games. Sure enough, Philips Arena sits where the Omni did. (TBS sold the Hawks, the NHL Thrashers and Philips to the Atlanta Spirit in 2004.)

The Braves’ new stadium in Cobb County is located some 13 miles north of Turner Field, which is much further than it sounds with Atlanta traffic.