ADVERTISE! | Ballpark Digest | The Baseball Directory | NWLfan | College Baseball Digest | Ballpark Digest Tickets
Spring Training Online | Arena Digest | Football Stadium Digest | August Publications

Search | League Histories | Bookshelf | Forums | Endangered Ballparks | Ballparks of the Past | About | Newsletter | Contact

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

Chase Field - Buy Arizona Diamondbacks tickets for Chase Field at TickCo.com!

Enjoy Arizona Diamondbacks Tickets for home games at Chase Field

Do you want to advance your career? Study at an Arizona campus or look into earning one of the many available online college degrees. You can even earn a nursing degree, so start working toward a better future today.

Recent Visits


Al Lang Field, Tampa Bay Rays
St. Pete's Al Lang Field has been in the news a lot lately, but for the wrong reasons: the Tampa Bay Rays will train there one last time in 2008 before shifting spring operations to Charlotte County in 2009, and the old ballpark is slated to be torn down to make way for a new waterfront home of the Rays. Now, Al Lang Field isn't the same venue it was in the 1940s and 1950s when it was a landmark in spring training, but it's still a great place to catch a spring-training game. We hope the Rays catch the spirit of the original Al Lang in their designs for a new ballpark, For the rest of us, a trip to Al Lang Field will be a mandatory event in Spring Training 2008.


Trustmark Park, Mississippi Braves
There's nothing wrong with Trustmark Park, the home of the Mississippi Braves (Class AA; Southern League). The wraparound concourse, luxury boxes, big scoreboard and varied concessions are all standard issue for a new minor-league ballpark these days. So why aren't we more excited about the two-year-old ballpark? Because there's nothing unique about it: except for a few Southern menu items at the concessions, there's nothing to link the ballpark to its surroundings. At a Mississippi Braves game, you could be watching a game anywhere -- and going local is one of the great joys of the minor leagues. Dustin Mattison reports.


Alliance Bank Stadium, Syracuse Chiefs
The biggest news at Alliance Bank Stadium, the home of the Syracuse Chiefs (Class AAA; International League): the current artificial turf will be replaced by real grass. That's good news for Syracuse baseball fans in terms of aesthetics, as well as players who need to field on an old, sometimes unpredictable surface. Otherwise, Alliance Bank Stadium is a perfectly serviceable ballpark: the Chiefs front office does things the old-fashioned way (i.e., not much in terms of between-innings shenanigans), but the ballpark is a comfortable place to watch a game, and the food is pretty good. Steve Kapsinow reports.

Features

2008 Ballparks
Billings
Forest City, N.C..
Lehigh Valley
Springdale, Ark.
Southern Maryland
Washington, D.C.

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

Pensacola, Fla.
University of North
  Carolina
University of South
  Carolina
Winston-Salem

2010 Ballparks
Minnesota Twins

2012 Ballparks
Oakland Athletics
Tampa Bay Rays

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

The Fine Print
Obligatory legal information: This site is copyright 1998-2007 Kevin Reichard/August Publications. All rights reserved. My wife is a lawyer, so she will come and chop off your hand in a legal fashion if you rip off this site in any form. All logos are the property of their respective owners.
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!
Archives
2007
Nov. 12-18
Nov. 5-11
Oct. 29-Nov. 4
Oct. 22-28
Oct. 15-21
Oct. 8-14
Oct. 1-7
Sept. 24-30
Sept. 17-23
Sept. 10-16
Sept. 2-8
Aug. 26-Sept. 1
Aug. 19-25
Aug. 12-18
Aug. 5-11
July 29-Aug. 4
July 22-28
July 15-21
July 8-14
July 1-7
June 24-30
June 17-23
June 10-19
June 3-9
May 27-June 2
May 20-26
May 13-19
May 6-12
April 30-May 5
April 23-29
April 16-22
April 9-15
April 2-8
March 26-April 1
March 19-25
March 12-18
March 5-11
Feb. 26-March 4
Feb. 19-25
Feb. 12-18
Feb. 5-11
Jan. 29-Feb. 4
Jan. 22-28
Jan. 15-21
Jan. 8-14
Jan. 1-7

2006
2005
2004
2003
2002

Chase Field / Arizona Diamondbacks

(click on the image for a larger photo)
 
Year Opened 1998
Capacity 49,075
Architect Ellerbe Becket
Dimensions 328L, 402C, 335R
Playing Surface Grass
Last Visit 2005
Web Site mlb.com
Online Broadcasts Yes
Online Ticket Sales Yes
Phone 602/514-8400, 888/777-4664
Ticket Prices (2005) Clubhouse, $78; Dugout, $61; Field Box, $49; Diamond Level Infield; $40; Diamond Level Outfield, $30; Lower Level Between Bases, $29.50; Lower Level Between Bases and Foul Pole, $23; Upper Level Lower Rows Between Bases, $20; Bullpen, $18; Upper Level Lower Rows Between Bases and Foul Pole, $15.50; Upper Level Between Bases; $14.50; Outfield Bleachers, $12.50; Upper Level Foul Line, $10.50; Upper Level Deep Foul Line, $6.
League National League
Parking Numerous ramps that are close but expensive.
Address/Directions 401 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix. If you're looking at a downtown Phoenix map, the BOB is bounded by 7th Street to the east, 4th Street to the west, Jefferson Street to the north and the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks to the south. Two freeways ring downtown Phoenix, and both provide access: exit I-10 at 7th Street and turn south, or exit I-17 at 7th Street and turn north. In addition, there's alternate routes provided by freeway signs, which bring you to the ballpark via Washington Street (which runs parallel to Jefferson Street). The Diamondbacks advise against using the 7th Street exit on busy nights.
Written by: Kevin Reichard
Rating

There is simply no escaping an air-conditioned existence if you spend any time in Phoenix in the summer: the desert atmosphere so welcome for spring training in March becomes rather tiresome by the beginning of June, when it’s just too damn hot to be outside.

At the end of the day, air conditioning is perhaps America’s greatest contribution to the world. And air conditioning makes Chase Field an oasis. Yes, we know the real Phoenix natives aren’t afraid of being outside in the hot summertime, but that doesn’t mean they’re willing to spend three hours outside on an August evening, either. Major-league baseball couldn’t exist in Phoenix without an air-conditioned ballpark like Chase Field – which is good news for the rest of us.


(click on the image for a larger photo)

Chase Field is built for comfort, not flashiness, engineered by the kind of folks who sought to solve a slew of problems and then didn’t have the energy left to address issues like ornamentation. In other words, Chase Field feels like it was designed by engineers, not architects. Not that this is a bad thing: it took a lot of engineering to solve the many challenges of bringing major-league baseball to the Valley of the Sun.

Chase Field features a retractable roof, air conditioning, and a grass playing field, the first such combo in major-league history. (The original Astrodome design sported natural grass under a translucent roof, but the experiment was a huge failure when not enough sunlight pierced the roof. Hence Astroturf.) The air-conditioning system provides 8,000 tones of cooling, and it takes about four hours to cool down the stands and concourses (the playing area is not cooled) from 110 degrees to 72 degrees.

That’s not the only engineering feat at the ballpark. Growing decent grass in Arizona in the summertime is hard enough, especially when it’s partially shaded much of the time. Even when opening the roof during the day to allow in sunshine, it took a few months for the grounds crew to come up with the right grass – in this case, a blend of Bull’s Eye Bermuda, Kentucky blue grass, and rye grass – to withstand the scorching sun and the extremes between hot days and cool nights. (Sections of turf that don’t get enough sun get their own special treatment when incandescent growth lights are used.) Since then, Seattle and Houston have successfully combined a retractable roof with natural grass.

Speaking of the roof: Despite the scale, the 9-million-pound roof is a fairly simple mechanism. Two halves – made up of three trusses – are opened or closed by four miles of cable pulled by two 200-horsepower motors. It takes only four minutes to open or close the roof (because the roof is so light, it costs the team only $2 in electricity to open or close it), and the Diamondbacks do it in style: they hold a countdown to the opening of the roof, performed to special theme music. (Alas, the roof remains closed for most of the season; if you want to see it open be sure to head to Phoenix in April or May.) Technically, the roof doesn’t seal: one side fits on top of the other, and there’s enough of a gap to allow air to flow through. (There’s also enough space to allow rain to fall through, which happens from time to time.) During the day it’s not uncommon to see only half of the roof opened to allow sunlight on the field but not in the stands. The Diamondbacks control sole authority on whether the roof will be opened (at other ballparks, such as Rogers Centre, the umpires and opposing managers are notified when a roof is to be opened and closed, with the umpires able to overrule the decision if a protest is lodged by the opposing manager), and they usually map out several days in advance whether the roof will be opened. (You can check the team’s Web site at www.mlb.com for the roof-opening status or call 602/379-7663). On hot nights the roof is not opened; in the past Diamondbacks pitchers (especially Randy Johnson) were vociferous in their belief the roof should be closed for almost every game. When the roof opens, six large screens in left field open as well. While you never feel like you’re at an outdoor event at Chase Field, you can get a decent approximation of it when the roof and windows are open.


(click on the image for a larger photo)

In many ways Chase Field plays against type. It sits 1,100 feet above sea level – not nearly a mile high like Coors Field, and just a smidgen higher than Turner Field (which sits a surprising 1,050 feet above sea level) – but it plays nothing like Coors Field when it comes to the long ball. Phoenix is square in the desert, but there’s really nothing approaching a Western or Southwestern motif in the ballpark. Most of the ballpark is understated, to say the least, but in center field there’s a pool designed for groups of 35 or more; when the ballpark was built the Diamondbacks were mocked for the pool, but now it’s become a signature item for the ballpark.

In fact, the whole ballpark is a little bland, though not fatally so. As we’ve pointed out, it’s built for comfort, not for flash. The exterior is your standard retro brick and steel, which really is out of place in the Valley of the Sun no matter how much the team and the ballpark designers say it fits into the old warehouse area of Phoenix. (One old warehouse was incorporated into the façade of the south side of the ballpark.) When you think of Phoenix architecture, you think of these wonderful, low-slung buildings designed to fit within the desert environment, shaded and cool. You think of the Biltmore, you think of Taliesin West, you think modern (as in the spiffed-up exterior of next-door America West Arena), you think of the Heard Museum, you think of the Wild West. You don’t think ballpark retro.

It’s doubtful Chase Field will ever be considered a classic ballpark: it’s a little plain, with an emphasis on function over form. But it’s a comfortable ballpark and well worth a visit if you’re visiting the Phoenix area.

Concessions
You can't throw a dead cat in the BOB without hitting a concession stand of some sort. The food is expensive, even by major-league standards -- the Oscar Meyer quarter-pound Diamondbacks Dogs are a whopping $4.75, for instance -- and most baseball fans won't be overwhelmed with the selection of the standard stadium fare. Other smaller stands ringing the concourse offer fresh snacks (vegetables and cheese trays) and grilled-to-order sausages and brats. For a change of pace check out the concession stands near sections 130 and 325, where a "Visiting Team Special" -- such as a Dodger Dog -- is added to the menu for each series.

If ballpark food doesn't grab you, there are third-party vendors who have opened up shop at the BOB: McDonald's (home of the $3 Big Mac), Desert Ice, Blimpie's, Little Caesar's, Garcia's (a local Mexican eatery) and Ben & Jerry's.

The beer flows freely at the BOB. On draft at most concession stands is MGD, Miller Lite or Bud Light ($4 for a small beer, $7 for a large), while a few stands also serve Fat Tire beer, a microbrewed beer from Fort Collins, Colorado (of all places). There are many other beer stands where you can find Budweiser, Coors or Sonora (brewed by a Phoenix microbrewery) beers on tap. The same beer stands also have a wide selection of bottled beers ($4.75 for bottles, $8 for "bombers"), including Rolling Rock, Sam Adams, Corona, Fat Tire, Beck's, Beck's Dark, Heineken and Foster's. Other alcoholic beverages are served at the BOB as well, including wine, mixed drinks, and slush cocktails (frozen margaritas, strawberry daiquiris).

There are two restaurants within the ballpark. The Arizona Baseball Club Restaurant is a white-table-linen buffet, with seats overlooking the action in right field. It’s open only to suiteholders or those holding club-level seats. During our visit, the spread was pretty luxurious (you could spend quite a few innings sampling the fare), and the price is right: $27.95. The Friday’s Front Row Sports Grill is located in the left-field corner; no table linens there, and the food is not quite as upscale.

For the Kids
A visit to the play area beyond the center-field scoreboard is mandatory for families. There, your children will be tired out by a miniature diamond where they can run around to their joy’s content, as well as peruse the home of Baxter, the genial mascot of the Diamondbacks. Baxter’s Den features family pictures of Baxter, as well as descriptions of his family and history with the team. Yeah, it’s a little hokey, but the kids love Baxter, and he regularly drops by his den during the fourth and fifth innings. The Peter Piper Playhouse also features interactive video games, a batting cage, and skeet ball.

Parking
Parking is not a problem near the ballpark. There are 30,000 parking spaces within blocks of the airport, and you can easily find something for $10 or less. There is a 1,500-car ramp attached to the ballpark on Fourth Street (a skyway connects the ramp with the suite level of Chase Field), as well as a lot directly south of the ramp; parking at either is $8. The Civic Plaza East Garage (across the street from the ballpark, on Washington and 5th Street) is one of the spendier downtown lots at $8, but it allows you park your car in the shade, as does the attached garage located on the south side of the ballpark. Otherwise, there are a slew of surface lots to the west of the ballpark, along Jackson Street.

History
Since the turn of the century there were several attempts to seed professional baseball in the Sourthwest, such as the Class C Arizona-Mexico League, but none really succeeded on a consistent basis. 
The first truly successful pro baseball in the Phoenix area came in 1958, when the Giants moved their AAA Minneapolis Millers franchise to Phoenix -- a move that came when the Giants moved to San Francisco. The Phoenix Giants played at the old Municipal Stadium, which sat at the outskirts of Phoenix.

That location proved to be the downfall of the P-Gees, as the Giants moved the franchise to Tacoma after concluding that Municipal Stadium was too far out of town to attract enough fans. In response, the city of Phoenix built a new Municipal Stadium, ostensibly to attract the Giants back to town for spring training. It worked -- and it also caused the Giants to bring the AAA team back to Phoenix. 

The team was known as the Phoenix Giants until 1986, when the team was renamed the Phoenix Firebirds. The franchise was moved when the Diamondbacks came to town.

Ballpark Digest Newsletter


Want to receive news from Ballpark Digest in your inbox? You can sign up here!

Contribute

Want to show your appreciation for Ballpark Digest? Then consider a voluntary subscription or donation for the expenses of running the site. All the funds collected from donations will go directly back to improving Ballpark Digest. Read more here.

Big News of the Week

Here are the biggest ballpark stories of the last seven days.

Dodgers say they'll keep split squad in Vero Beach next spring

In memoriam: Joe Nuxhall

Sixty-year Tucson tradition in danger

Rays: New ballpark could pump $1 billion into local economy

Omaha ballpark panel picks architects to evaluate sites

Ballpark Visit: Al Lang Field

Reading Phillies unveil new logo, uniforms

Team touts new survey as proof Fremont wants A's

Nats to open new ballpark March 29

This week's podcast: Devil be gone!

Red Sox, A's to open season in Japan

Sale of Swing of Quad Cities approved

Miller Park may get upgrades

Reds likely to remain in Florida for training

Appeal filed in Charlotte land-swap case

Mandalay promised new ballpark in SWB?

In memoriam: Matt Minker

New name for Grasshoppers home: NewBridge Bank Park

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
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
Great Lakes Loons
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

St. Cloud River Bats
St. Louis Cardinals
St. Paul Saints
Staten Island Yankees
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
Dow Diamond
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
Richmond County Bank
 
Ballpark at St. George
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
Spartanburg Crickets
Spartanburg Stingers

St. Joseph Saints
Wichita Wranglers