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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

 

Tucson Electric Park / Tucson Sidewinders


Year Built 1998
Capacity 11,500
Dimensions 340L, 405C, 340R
Last Visit May 1999
Web Site www.tucsonsidewinders.com
Online Broadcasts Yes
Online Ticket Sales Yes
Phone 520/434-1021
League Pacific Coast League
Level AAA
Affiliation Arizona Diamondbacks
Ticket Prices Box and club seats, $8; general admission, $5 
Parking $2; ample in an adjoining parking lot
Address/Directions 2500 E. Ajo Way, Tucson. Tucson Electric Park is south of downtown Tucson, a stone's throw away from I-10. If you're coming from the north, take the Ajo Way exit (which is also marked as the Kino Parkway exit) and head east, following the signs.
Rating

More Tucson Electric Park / Tucson Sidewinders news here ----->


Description
There are many ghosts bouncing around Tucson Electric Park. There is the ghost of the Chicago White Sox, which plays spring-training games here. There's the ghost of the Arizona Diamondbacks, which also plays spring-training games here and the parent team of the Sidewinders. There are White Sox and Diamondbacks logos everywhere, the Sidewinders souvenir program is filled with information about the Diamondbacks (like game schedules, promotions, bus trips to the BOB originating from Tucson and television schedules) and at times it seems that the Sidewinders are an afterthought.

Which, in a way, they really are. Tourism dollars are why Tucson Electric Park was built, and tourists don't head for the city in a big way to see the Sidewinders (or the Toros before them) -- they head to spring training to see the White Sox and Diamondbacks. The Sidewinders are the lucky beneficiaries of spring-training dollars.

As are you, if you decide to take in a game here. If you're in the area, a visit to Tucson Electric Park is definitely recommended, because it's a gem of a minor-league ballpark, an example of a modern minor-league park done right. After parking in the adjoining parking lot, you enter TEP at ground level and look down to the action from a concourse level. The main grandstand area features theater-style seats, while there's two levels of bleachers down each line.

The outfield area is noteworthy in that there's not a single bleacher seat; instead, the designers wisely put in grassy areas on both sides of a concession area in dead-center field. It's a great area for families to throw down a blanket -- the kids can run around and play catch, while the adults get a great view of the action. The bullpens are in front of the center-field concession stand, and you can look down at them from the outfield grass. A sidewalk rings the entire playing field, so you can wander throughout the stadium through the course of a game.

If you go, spring for a grandstand seat or sit out in the outfield grass. Don't mess with the metal grandstands unless you must. There are club seats on the second level of the grandstand, but these are quite a ways from the action and are not recommended.
History
Tucson fielded teams in the old Arizona-Mexico League and Arizona-Texas League, which operated at Class C and Class D levels in their histories, respectively. Those teams played at Hi Corbett Field, which was built in 1937 to house the Tuscon Lizards, a member of the Class D Arizona-Texas League. The final team at the Class C level was the Tucson Cowboys, which shut down after the 1958 season.

The current Tucson franchise can trace its roots back to 1969, when the Tucson Toros became part of the Pacific Coast League as an affiliate of the Chicago White Sox. Tucson had gone without minor-league baseball since 1958, although the city had been hosting spring training in the meantime.

was It served as the home of the Toros through 1997, as the team went through several affiliations (Oakland A's, Texas Rangers, Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers) before moving into TEP in 1998 as the Tucson Sidewinders.
Concession Highlights
Two concession stands behind the main concourse serves standard ballpark fare -- hot dogs, hamburgers, nachos, pop, and beer (Bud, Bud Light, MGD, Heineken, Leinenkugel Red, and Dos Equis). The center-field concession stand was closed during my early-season visit, but it's open when larger crowds are on hand.

The real action is in the freestanding concession stands in back of the seats. Here, you can find fresh lemonade, roasted corn and excellent Mexican food.
Smoking
You can smoke in the outer concourse or outfield grass.
For the Kids
There's a children's play area in back of first base.
Parking
Parking in the adjoining lot costs $2. You can park for free across Ajo Way in a city-owned lot, but you'll have quite a hike to the ticket gates.
Before the Game
You're square in the middle of the desert while in Tucson, and if you come from a less exotic clime -- as I do -- you should check out the desert's unique ecosystem. A good place to do so is the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, located 14 miles west of Tucson on Speedway. This museum houses 1,300 different kinds of plants and 300 species of animals. If looking at how humans have exploited the land is more to your liking, check out the Asarco Mineral Discovery Center, located 15 miles south of downtown Tucson at I-19 and Pima Mine Road, built around a open-pit copper mine. If you're into kitsch, Biosphere 2 is 30 miles north of Tucson on Hwy. 77.
Where to Stay
TEP is relatively close to both downtown Tucson and the airport. Most of the larger chains are represented in both locations. Be warned that there's nothing in walking distance of the ballpark, so a car rental will be necessary for a visit.

More Tucson Electric Park / Tucson Sidewinders news here ----->