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Camelback Ranch–Glendale is a baseball complex located in Phoenix, Arizona, and owned by the city of Glendale. It is operated by Camelback Spring Training LLC. It is the spring training home of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox. The main stadium holds 13,000 people.
Sloan Park is an American baseball park in Mesa, Arizona, that opened in 2014. The primary operator is the Chicago Cubs and the ballpark serves as their spring training home and is also the home of the Arizona League Cubs of the Arizona League and the Mesa Solar Sox of the Arizona Fall League. Sloan Park was built and paid for by residents of ...
Fitch Park is a baseball park complex and training facility located in Mesa, Arizona. [2] It is the spring training workout facility for Major League Baseball's Athletics.It is also the year-round home for the Athletics' minor league training and player development operations, the home ballpark of the Arizona League Athletics, and the spring training home for the Athletics' minor league ...
Arizona Diamondbacks (2011–present) Colorado Rockies (2011–present) Salt River Fields at Talking Stick [21] 11,000 Surprise: Kansas City Royals (2003–present) Texas Rangers (2003–present) Surprise Stadium [22] 10,500 Tempe: Los Angeles Angels (1993–present) Tempe Diablo Stadium [23] 9,785 Seattle Pilots/Milwaukee Brewers (1969–72)
It is one of six facilities to host Arizona Fall League games. The capacity of Peoria Stadium is approximately 12,000. During spring training, it is the home stadium of both the San Diego Padres and the Seattle Mariners, who play in the spring training Cactus League. Both teams are leased to hold spring training there until 2034. [3]
In the inaugural spring-training season at the park, the Arizona Diamondbacks enjoyed a record-breaking 189,737 spectators at 17 spring-training games, with an average of 11,161 spectators per game, up more than 90% from 2010. [12]
for Spring training City Capacity (at closing) Occupants Status Al López Field: 1955 1988 Tampa, Florida: Chicago White Sox (1957–59) Cincinnati Reds (1960–87) Demolished (became Raymond James Stadium) Alex Box Stadium (a.k.a. LSU Varsity Baseball Field) 1938 2008 Baton Rouge, Louisiana: 7,760 New York Giants (1938–1939) Demolished
First teams played at the field in 1937. Hi Corbett Field was originally called Randolph Municipal Baseball Park. [1] In 1951, it was renamed in honor of Hiram "Hi" Stevens Corbett (1886–1967), [1] a former Arizona state senator who was instrumental in bringing spring training to Tucson, specifically by convincing Bill Veeck to bring the Cleveland Indians to Tucson in 1947.