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Brooks Field (Wilmington)

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Full name
  
Bill Brooks Field

Capacity
  
3,000

Scoreboard
  
Yes

Opened
  
1989

Brooks Field (Wilmington)

Location
  
Regel Road, Wilmington, NC, USA

Record attendance
  
3,826(2014 vs #1 Virginia)

Field size
  
340 ft. (LF, RF) 380 ft. (CF)

Address
  
Riegel Rd, Wilmington, NC 28403, USA

Similar
  
Trask Coliseum, Robert and Mariam Hayes St, Walter C Latham Park, Doak Field, Hennon Stadium

Bill Brooks Field is a stadium in Wilmington, North Carolina on the campus of UNC-Wilmington. Brooks Field is the home of the UNC Wilmington Seahawks baseball team and has hosted the Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament a number of times (1989–90, 1993, 2004–11). The ballpark has a capacity of 3,000 people and first opened in 1989. In 2014 UNCW broke the 2009 record attendance of 3,608 (vs North Carolina) with an shattering 3,826 people (vs. #1 Virginia).

Contents

Name

The stadium is named after UNCW legend Bill Brooks. He started the athletic program when UNCW was a junior college and served past the school becoming a Division I program and joining the Colonial Athletic Association. Brooks served 40 years at the school, 27 as the baseball coach, with a career win-loss record of 574–292–5. His name, with the number 574, is on the wall in left field at Brooks Field.

Stadium design and features

Brooks Field is a symmetric park where it is 340 feet from home plate to the foul poles and is 380 feet to deep center field. Seating consists of a main set of seats that extends from roughly the third base line to the first base line. There are two sets of bleachers on each side of the main seating area. Very limited seating is also available beside the home bullpen. The stadium has one concession stand and a small team store behind the away dugout. A simple electronic scoreboard sits in right-center field.

History

The ballpark was home to the Southern League's Port City Roosters in 1995 and 1996 and the South Atlantic League's Wilmington Waves in 2001.

References

Brooks Field (Wilmington) Wikipedia