Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lindborg-Cregg Memorial Field is a baseball park in the Western United States, located in Missoula, Montana. With a seating capacity of 2,200 people, it is the home of the Missoula Mavericks, an American Legion team. [1] It was also home to the minor league Missoula Osprey for five seasons, prior to the opening of Ogren Park at Allegiance Field ...
The field dimensions are 309 feet (94 m) down the left field line, 398 feet (121 m) to center field, and 287 feet (87 m) down the right field line, which includes a 27-foot-high (8.2 m) wall. Just south of the Clark Fork River , the natural grass field is aligned northeast (home plate to second base) at an approximate elevation of 3,200 feet ...
The club was known as the Missoula Osprey from 1999 through the 2019 season. Previously, the franchise played in Lethbridge , Alberta , as the Lethbridge Black Diamonds . Missoula has had baseball since the early 1900s, with previous team names being the Highlanders and the Timberjacks.
This is for players of the Missoula Osprey minor league baseball team, who played in the Pioneer League from 1999 to 2019. Pages in category "Missoula Osprey players" ...
During the 2016 season, he hit .291 with 20 home runs and 61 RBIs in the first half, [11] and was a finalist for the last All Star spot in the All-Star Final Vote. [12] After struggling in the second half, in which he hit .197 (46-for-234), Lamb finished the season with a .249 average, 29 home runs, 91 RBIs, and nine triples.
Dornblaser Field is the name of two outdoor athletic stadiums in the western United States, located in Missoula, Montana. Both were former home fields of the University of Montana Grizzlies football teams and were named for Paul Dornblaser, a captain of the football team in 1912 who was killed in World War I .
Missoula (baseball) Missoula Osprey; Missoula Timberjacks; P. Philipsburg Burgers This page was last edited on 16 November 2024, at 23:00 (UTC). Text is available ...
The Timberjacks were preceded by Missoula teams in the Montana State League (1892, 1905, 1925) and Union Association (1911–1913). [1] Missoula first began minor league play as charter members of the 1892 Montana State League. The 1892 Montana State League was six–team Class B league. The league played a split season.