Ballpark Digest
Home
Ballparks 
Links
Search
League Histories
Bookshelf
Forums
The Directory
Endangered
 
Ballparks
Ballparks of
 
the Past
Archives
About
Newsletter
Contact

"Ballparks should be happy places." -- Bill Veeck

 
Features

2008 Ballparks
Billings
Lehigh Valley
Madison, Wis.
  (renovations)
Springdale, Ark.
Southern Maryland
Washington, D.C.

2009 Ballparks
Charlotte County, Fla.
Columbus, Ohio
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Glendale, Az.
Goodyear, Az.
Kansas City
 
(renovations)
LSU
New York Mets
New York Yankees

Pensacola, Fla.
University of South
  Carolina
Winston-Salem

2010 Ballparks
Minnesota Twins

2012 Ballparks
Oakland Athletics

Ballparks of the Past
Colt Stadium
Crosley Field
Durham Athletic
  
Park
Ebbets Field
Griffith Stadium
Huntington Avenue
  
Grounds
Jack Russell
Jarry Park
L.A. Coliseum
Metropolitan
 
Stadium

Muehlebach Field
Municipal Stadium
 
(Kansas City)

Sicks' Stadium
Tinker Field
War Memorial
 
(Greensboro)

Photo Galleries
Piedmont League

Book Excerpts
The Last Good Season

2007 Attendance
  By average
  By team
  Affiliated - average
  Affiliated - league
  Affiliated - total
  Indy - average
  Indy - total

  MLB - total
  MLB - average

2006 Attendance
  By average
  By team
  Affiliated - average
  Affiliated - league
  Affiliated - total
  Indy - average
  Indy - total

2005 Attendance
  By average
  By team

2004 Attendance
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall

2003 Attendance
  MLB attendance
  By league
  League overview
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall

2002 Attendance
  By league
  By average
  By team
  Indy by team
  Indy by league
  Combined overall



Ballpark Visits

Current (by team)
Albuquerque Isotopes
Alexandria Beetles
Arizona Diamondbacks
Arizona State Sun Devils
Arkansas Travelers
Asheboro Copperheads
Asheville Tourists
Atlanta Braves
Baltimore Orioles
Beloit Snappers
Billings Mustangs
Boston Red Sox
Brainerd Blue Thunder
Brevard County
  
Manatees
Bridgeport Bluefish
Brooklyn Cyclones
Burlington Royals
Camden Riversharks
Cedar Rapids Kernels
Charlotte Knights
Chicago Cubs
Chicago White Sox
Cincinnati Reds
Clearwater Threshers
Cleveland Indians
Colorado Rockies
Columbus Clippers
Dayton Dragons
Daytona Cubs
Detroit Tigers
DuBois County Bombers
Duluth Huskies
Dunedin Blue Jays
Durham Bulls
Eau Claire Express
ECU Pirates
Fargo-Moorhead
  
RedHawks
Florida Marlins
Fort Myers Miracle
Fort Wayne Wizards
Fresno Grizzlies
Gateway Grizzlies
Great Falls White Sox
Green Bay Bullfrogs
Greenville Drive
Helena Brewers
Houston Astros
Idaho Falls Chukars
Indianapolis Indians
Iowa Cubs
Jacksonville Suns
Joliet JackHammers
Jupiter Hammerheads
Kane County Cougars
Kannapolis Intimidators
Kansas City Royals
Lakeland Tigers
Lansing Lugnuts
Las Vegas 51s
La Crosse Loggers
Leesburg Lightning
Los Angeles Angels
   
of Anaheim
Los Angeles Dodgers
Louisville Bats
Madison Mallards
Mankato MoonDogs
Memphis Redbirds
Milwaukee Brewers
Minnesota Gophers
Minnesota Twins
Mississippi Braves
Nashville Sounds
NC State Wolfpack
New Britain Rock Cats
New York Mets
New York Yankees
North Shore Spirit
Oakland Athletics
Omaha Royals
Oneonta Tigers
Palm Beach Cardinals
Pawtucket Red Sox
Peoria Chiefs
Philadelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
Portland Beavers
River City Rascals
Rochester Honkers
Round Rock Express
Sacramento River Cats
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
Sarasota Reds
Schaumburg Flyers
Seattle Mariners
Sioux City Explorers
Sioux Falls Canaries
Southwest Michigan
   Devil Rays

Spartanburg Crickets
Spartanburg Stingers
St. Cloud River Bats
St. Louis Cardinals
St. Paul Saints
Stockton Ports
Swing of the Quad
  
Cities
Syracuse Chiefs
Tacoma Rainiers
Tampa Bay Rays
Tampa Yankees
Texas Rangers
Thomasville Hi-Toms
Toledo Mud Hens
Toronto Blue Jays
Traverse City Beach
  
Bums
USC Upstate Trojans
Vancouver Canadians
Vero Beach Dodgers
Washington Nationals
Waterloo Bucks
Winnipeg Goldeyes
Winston-Salem
  
Warthogs

Wisconsin Timber
  
Rattlers

Wisconsin Woodchucks
Wofford Terriers

Current (by ballpark)
Alexian Field
Alliance Bank Stadium
Angel Stadium
Athletic Park
AT&T Park
AutoZone Park
Ballpark at Harbor Yard
Banner Island Ballpark
Baseball Grounds of
  
Jacksonville
Bright House
  
Networks Field
Burlington Athletic

   Stadium
Busch Stadium
C.O. Brown Stadium
Campbell's Field
CanWest Global Park
Carson Park
Cashman Field
Centene Stadium
Chase Field
Cheney Stadium
Chukchansi Park
Citizens Bank Park
Clark-LeClair Stadium
Comerica Park
Cooper Stadium
Coors Field
Copeland Park
Cracker Jack Stadium
Damaschke Field
Dell Diamond
Dickey-Stephens Park
Doak Field at Dail Park
Dodger Stadium
Dolphins Stadium
Duncan Park Stadium
Durham Bulls
  
Athletic Park
Ed Smith Stadium
Elfstrom Stadium
Ernie Shore Field
Fenway Park
Fieldcrest Cannon
  
Stadium
Fifth Third Field
   (Dayton)
Fifth Third Field
   (Toledo)
Finch Field
Fox Cities Stadium
Franklin Rogers Park
Fraser Field
GCS Ballpark
Great American Ball Park
Greer Stadium
Hammond Stadium
Harley Park
Holman Stadium
Isotopes Park
Jackie Robinson Ballpark
Jacobs Field
Joannes Stadium
Joe Faber Field
John O'Donnell
  
Stadium
Joker Marchant
  
Stadium
Kauffman Stadium
Keyspan Park
Kindrick Field
Knights Stadium
Knology Park
Knute Nelson
  
Memorial Field
Lawrence-Dumont
  
Stadium
League Stadium
Legends Field
Lewis and Clark Park
Louisville Slugger Field
Mayo Field
McAfee Coliseum
McCormick Field
McCoy Stadium
McCrary Park
Melaleuca Field Memorial Stadium
Metrodome
Midway Stadium
Miller Park
Mills Field
Minute Maid Park
Nat Bailey Stadium
New Britain Stadium
Newman Outdoor
  
Stadium
O'Brien Field
Oldsmobile Park
Oriole Park at
  
Camden Yards
Packard Stadium
Petco Park
PGE Park
PNC Park
Pohlman Field
Principal Park
Raley Field
Rangers Ballpark in
  
Arlington
Riverfront Stadium
Roger Dean Stadium
Rogers Centre
Rosenblatt Stadium
Russell C. King Field

SBC Park
Shea Stadium
Siebert Field
Silver Cross Field
Sioux Falls Stadium
Space Coast Stadium
T.R. Hughes Ballpark
Tropicana Field
Trustmark Park
Tucson Electric Park
Turner Field
U.S. Cellular Field
Veterans Memorial
  
Stadium
Victory Field
Wade Stadium
Warner Park
West End Field
Wrigley Field

Wuerfel Park
Yale Field
Yankee Stadium

Spring Training
Ballparks
Al Lang Field
Bright House
  
Networks Field
Champion Stadium
Ed Smith Stadium
Hammond Stadium
HoHoKam Park
Holman Stadium
Joker Marchant
  
Stadium
Knology Park
Legends Field
Roger Dean Stadium
Scottsdale Stadium
Space Coast Stadium
Tucson Electric Park

College Ballparks
Arizona State Sun Devils
East Carolina
   
University Pirates
North Carolina Central
    University
North Carolina State
   
Wolfpack
North Dakota State
  
Bison
St. Scholastica Saints
University of Minnesota
   Golden Gophers
University of New

   Mexico Lobos
University of Northern
   Iowa Panthers
USC Upstate Trojans

Wofford Terriers

Ballparks sorted by ratings

Archives
Butte Copper Kings
Clearwater Phillies
Cobb Field
Dick Putz Field
Duluth-Superior Dukes
Greensboro Bats
  
(War Memorial)
Helena Brewers
Lindborg-Cregg Field
Madison Black Wolf
Milwaukee Brewers
  
(County Stadium)
Olympic Stadium
Orlando Rays
Phil Welch Stadium
RFK Stadium
Ray Winder Field
Rockford Reds

St. Joseph Saints
Wichita Wranglers

 
Broadcasts
Virtually every MiLB team now streams broadcasts over the Internet, which makes it easy to follow your favorite team when you're on the road. In addition, you can catch MLB game broadcasts at MLB.com or via XM Radio. More on Internet radio and TV broadcasts here!
 
Your Ballpark Guide

 

Jackie Robinson Ballpark / Daytona Cubs


Year Built 1930
Capacity 4,000
Dimensions 317L, 400C, 325R
Last Visit August 2003
Web Site www.daytonacubs.com
Online Broadcasts Yes
Online Ticket Sales Yes
Phone 386/257-3172
League Florida State League
Affiliation Chicago Cubs
Ticket Prices VIP Seats, $7; General Admission, $5
Parking There is adequate parking on the street next to the ballpark and in the parking lot beyond the outfield wall.
Address/Directions 105 E. Orange Av., Daytona Beach, Florida. The ballpark is in the heart of downtown Daytona Beach. If you're coming in on I-95, take the east Hwy. 92 exit and hang a right on Beach Street just before you hit the water; the ballpark is a block away on the left. If you're coming in on Hwy. 1, head east on Orange Avenue; the ballpark is two blocks on your left.
Rating

Description

A statue of Jackie Robinson marks the entrance to the ballpark.

You don't get any more Floridian than Jackie Robinson Ballpark, home of the Daytona Cubs of the Florida State League. Much of Florida's baseball history intersects on this small island outside of downtown Daytona Beach, while one of the most important events in baseball history took place there as well.

For those reasons alone Jackie Robinson Ballpark would be worth a visit. But a ballpark cannot totally be a museum, and it would be unfair to the folks who run the Daytona Cubs to judge the ballpark wholly on its history. When evaluated as a working ballpark in 2003, Jackie Robinson Ballpark succeeds: it's a comfortable, cozy place to watch a Class A game. It may not be as large as the new breed of Class A ballparks found in the Midwest and Sally league, and it's not as new as the newer ballparks in the Florida State League that also serve as spring-training facilities, but Jackie Robinson has atmosphere and location -- two things are increasingly rare in Class A parks.

Jackie Robinson Ballpark is located on a small island between downtown Daytona Beach and the oceanfront. You want scenic? A city marina sits to the southeast of the ballpark (which serves as a great backdrop to those fans sitting in the left-field seats), while the waterfront and downtown sits to the southwest of the ballpark (serving as a great backdrop for those sitting on the first-base side, especially after twilight when downtown lights up). During our visit, the waterfront location was particularly advantageous: it was a particularly warm August night (even by Florida standards), but by the third inning a sweet cool breeze was wafting off the water and through the stadium. All in all, it made for a gorgeous evening.

Despite the ballpark's age, much of the seating down the first-base line is newer. The box seats feature wider-than-normal seats.

There's been a ballpark at this location since 1914, when the first stadium was called Daytona City Island Ballpark, with the Daytona Beach Islanders joining the Florida State League in 1920. It wasn't much of a ballpark, consisting mainly of wooden bleachers, but the stadium was upgraded when Islanders became a constant presence in the FSL. Since then, there has been FSL teams in Daytona off and on, with the Daytona Cubs part of the league since 1993. Much of today's ballpark configuration dates back to the 1920s, when a grandstand and press box was constructed (replacing the original wooden bleachers), two covered sections of grandstands, one uncovered set of bleachers and a segregated section were added, and the road circling the ballpark was first built. (The segregated area was built to comply with Florida's Jim Crow seating law.) However, much of this was replaced in 1951 when the ballpark was updated, but these enhancements were blown away in 1960 by Hurricane Donna. At that time the city debated whether to completely tear down the ballpark due to the extensive damage, but the city commissioners voted to restore the park, and by 1962 new grandstands and press box were added, additions that survive to this day. Additional clubhouses and bleachers were added in 1972 and 1973 when the Montreal Expos used the stadium for spring training, and the current grandstand roof dates back to 1999, replaced when Hurricane Floyd tore some sections off the old roof. All of this makes dating the opening of the present-day park somewhat problematic: the Cubs use both 1917 and 1930 as dates when the park opened while the National Trust for Historic Preservation uses 1915, but the more accurate dating for the current stadium might be 1962.

City Island Ballpark in 1951.

Daytona officials and team owners have been working to stress the historic part of the ballpark, which could end up leading to some changes to the park in the future. The history is significant: It was at this ballpark that Jackie Robinson actually broke the color line in baseball when he played in a spring-training exhibition as a member of the Montreal Royales of the International League in March 1946, his first stop before joining the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1946 the Dodgers and the Royales were turned away from several previously scheduled spring-training exhibitions when word got out that Robinson was to take the field for the Royales: In Sanford, the police chief threatened to stop the game if Robinson did not leave the field; in Jacksonville, the stadium was padlocked shut on game day, and in nearby DeLand the scheduled day game was called off on account of faulty electrical lighting. However, Robinson and the Royales were allowed to take the field in Daytona, and the following season Robinson broke the color line at the major-league level. The city named the ballpark after Robinson in 1988, and the stadium was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in November 1988.

To commemorate the occasion, the Cubs and the city are planning a set of 12 historical exhibit panels for display at the ballpark. These panels will highlight the groundbreaking game as well as Robinson's historical importance. At one time there was a larger initiative to restore the ballpark back to how it appeared when Robinson first played there (to the tune of $19.7 million), but these efforts have stalled, and city officials have moved to replace the stadium manager with Ripken Baseball to oversee the renovation and develop an adjoining youth baseball facility.

If you go to an evening game, be careful where you sit. The most comfortable seats are in the restored grandstand section; the VIP seats are wider than your average box seat (space that came in handy when holding a seven-month-old daughter, as I was), but you'll spend the first four innings or so fighting off the sun. You'll want to sit in the more uncomfortable third-base bleachers at the start of the game: even though they are not shaded, you'll have your back to the sun and if you're sitting in the front box seats you'll be in the shade after an inning or so.

Concessions

There's one main concession stand behind the third-base bleachers; food and pop is sold on one side and beer is sold on the other.

The hot dogs at Jackie Robinson Ballpark are simply outstanding and are almost worth the trip on their own. The Cubs serve Red Hot Chicago hot dogs, and every Wednesday night the Cubs sell them for $1. Otherwise, the concessions were pretty ordinary, and the beer (MGD, Lite) was fairly spendy -- $3.50 for a 16-ouncer.

If you're sitting in the VIP seats, an attendant will serve you concessions in your seats. If you're not, you can buy a Sno-Kone from one of the entertaining young men wandering through the stadium.

Where to Stay

Just down Hwy. 1 (also marked as Ridgewood Avenue) from the ballpark is the Days Inn Daytona Beach (544 S. Ridgewood Av.) .

However, the ballpark is also less than a mile away from the famous Daytona Beach (yes, the real beach, complete with sand and thongs galore), and there are a number of hotels near the waterfront, including Key West Village (1901 S. Atlantic Av.) and the Ocean Villa Capri (828 N. Atlantic Av.)

There are also a number of hotels west of the ballpark, including Courtyard by Marriott (1605 Richard Petty Blvd.).

The point here: there are a ton of hotel rooms at Daytona Beach, and many of them are located within two miles of the ballpark.

For the Kids

A supervised kids' play area is located behind the first-base bleachers.

Before / After the Game

Of course, a stop at the world-famous Daytona Beach is mandatory. Or, rather, the Daytona beaches: the city sits next to 23 miles of white-sand beaches that be accessed at various points from the city. At low tide the beaches are 500 feet wide, and you can actually drive on the beach on a marked 18-mile stretch. (If you get off this trail and park your vehicle, watch out for the tide.) It was at Daytona that I saw my first thong bikini some 20 or so years ago, so it obviously holds a warm spot on my heart.

After the game, head down to Aunt Catfish's (4009 Halifax Dr., Port Orange; 904/761-2744) for one of the best catfish meals you'll find anywhere. (From the ballpark, go to Ridgewood Av./Hwy. 1, turn south, and go down four miles until you reach the Hwy. A1A/Dunlawton Av. intersection. Aunt Catfish's is on the left.) Though there is a lot of seafood and rubs on the menu, the house specialty is catfish. The sampler plate with catfish broiled, Carolina-style and baked is a good choice for those unacquainted with this Southern specialty.

More Pictures

Part of the restoration process at Jackie Robinson Ballpark included work on the grandstand, including new seats and a spiffed-up press box.

The view from the first row of the VIP seats.

If you get bored during the game, you can head to the shuffleboard courts next to the stadium.