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Hank DeVincent Field is a baseball venue located on the campus of La Salle University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The field was home to the La Salle Explorers baseball team of the NCAA Division I Atlantic 10 Conference. [1] The field holds a capacity of 1,000 spectators. [2]
The La Salle Explorers baseball team is a currently dormant varsity intercollegiate athletic team of La Salle University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. [2] The team was a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference, which is part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division I.
The stadium's namesake is John A. McCarthy (1872–1939) who graduated from Central High School and the University of Pennsylvania.He began a law career, but at the age of thirty-four he exchanged it for a future in finance when he was appointed as a counsel in the receivership of the old Real Estate Trust Co. McCarthy went on to become President of the Philadelphia Sugar Co. and also an ...
The La Salle Explorers are the varsity sports teams from La Salle University in Philadelphia. The Explorers compete in NCAA Division I as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. The men's and women's basketball teams also participate in the Philadelphia Big 5. On June 3, 2019, Brian Baptiste was named director of athletics and recreation ...
Roy E. Lee Field at Simmons Baseball Complex: Edwardsville: IL: SIU Edwardsville: Ohio Valley: 1,500: 1972 (Renovated 2014) [34] Capaha Field: Cape Girardeau: MO: Southeast Missouri State: Ohio Valley: 2,000: Late 1920s/early 1930s (Renovated 2006) [35] USI Baseball Field Evansville [u] IN: Southern Indiana: Ohio Valley: 1,200: 1974 Bush ...
Braeden Black, baseball, Mount Saint Mary's University Jesiana Borreli, cheerleading, Bloomsburg University Katio Bosak, track and field, cross country, Slippery Rock University
The TruMark Financial Center, known as the Hayman Center until 2017, is the indoor athletic arena on La Salle University's campus. It is located directly across a walkway from the St. Francis and St. Edwards residence complex. The building was opened in February 1998 from a very large donation from Harry Blake Hayman I.
The mound on the new turf field is movable, which allows the 160,000-square-foot playing field to be used for softball, youth baseball and up to two soccer fields at a time.