Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Hohokam Stadium

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Operator
  
Oakland Athletics

Capacity
  
12,500

Team
  
Mesa Solar Sox

Architecture firm
  
Populous

Surface
  
Grass

Opened
  
February 1997

Phone
  
+1 480-644-4451

Renovated
  
2014

Hohokam Stadium

Full name
  
Hohokam Stadium, Dwight W. Patterson Field

Former names
  
Hohokam Park (1997–2013)

Location
  
1235 N. Center Street Mesa, Arizona 85201

Field size
  
Left Field: 340 feet (100 m) Center Field: 410 feet (120 m) Right Field: 350 feet (110 m)

Address
  
1235 N Center St, Mesa, AZ 85201, USA

Similar
  
Sloan Park, Tempe Diablo Stadium, Peoria Sports Complex, Goodyear Ballpark, Surprise Stadium

Covering mesa a s grand opening at hohokam stadium


Hohokam Stadium, also known as Dwight W. Patterson Field and formerly Hohokam Park (1997–2013), is a 10,500-seat baseball park located in Mesa, Arizona. The stadium, named for the Hohokam people who occupied the region from approximately AD 1 to the mid-15th century, was completed in January 1997 after the original Hohokam Stadium was demolished. In 2015, it became the spring training home of Major League Baseball's Oakland Athletics. The 2015 stadium and facility refresh for the Oakland A's was led by Populous, and Lloyd Civil & Sports Engineering provided the site civil and ball field design.

Contents

Hohokam Stadium has the largest scoreboard in the Cactus League, measuring 12 by 16 feet (3.7 by 4.9 m).

History

From 1997 to 2013, the stadium was the spring training home of the Chicago Cubs. In 1999, the Cubs drew 171,681 fans for its 15 home games, an average of 11,445 people per game. In 2007, the Cubs established a then Cactus League single-game attendance record of 12,906. In 2009, the Cubs established a then Major League Baseball and Cactus League single-season attendance record of 203,105 in 19 home games with an average per game attendance of 10,690—leading all MLB teams. Seven games had average attendance of over 13,000.

In 2002, the Arizona State University baseball team called Hohokam Park home while the on-campus Packard Stadium was being renovated.

The stadium hosted the 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2015 Western Athletic Conference Baseball Tournaments and will host the 2016 WAC Tournament.

Hohokam Stadium (1976–1996)

The original Hohokam Stadium was built in 1976 just east of the site of the current stadium. It was known as Hohokam Stadium from 1976 to 1995 and Hohokam Park in 1996. The stadium also became known as Dwight W. Patterson Field in 1991 with the name carrying over to the new stadium when it was built in 1997.

From 1977 to 1978, it was the spring training home of Major League Baseball's Oakland Athletics. From 1979 to 1996, the Chicago Cubs used the stadium as their spring training home until the stadium was demolished in 1996 and replaced with the current stadium in 1997. The Chicago Cubs continued using the stadium until the completion of Sloan Park for the 2014 spring training season. That same season, Oakland Athletics took over operations of Hohokam Stadium for their spring training activities, and continues to use it to this day.

References

Hohokam Stadium Wikipedia