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Coors Field

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3.51
(108 votes)
Coors Field

Location:
2001 Blake Street
Denver, Colorado 80204

Arena type: Baseball-only

Surface: Grass

Owner(s): Denver Metropolitan Baseball Stadium District

Tenant(s): Colorado Rockies (1995-)

Broke ground: October 16, 1992

Opened: April 26, 1995

Cost: $300 million

Capacity: 50,200

Dimensions:

  • Left Field - 347 ft / 106 m
  • Left-Center - 390 ft / 119 m
  • Center Field - 415 ft / 126.5 m
  • Right-Center - 375 ft / 114 m
  • Right Field - 350 ft / 107 m

All-Star Games:
1998

 

Coors Field, located in Denver, Colorado, is the home field of the National League's Colorado Rockies. It is named for the Coors Brewing Company of Golden, Colorado, which purchased the naming rights to the park prior to its completion in 1995. The Rockies played their first two seasons, 1993 and 1994, in Mile High Stadium before moving to Coors Field, two blocks from Union Station in Denver's Lower Downtown (or LoDo) neighborhood. The park includes 63 luxury suites and 4,500 club seats.

[edit] Reputation as a home run-friendly park

Coors Field once had a reputation as a home run-friendly park that at one point, arguably, equaled Chicago's venerable Wrigley Field, and earned it the nickname "Coors Canaveral" among critics [1] (a reference to Cape Canaveral, from where NASA launches spacecraft). Before the introduction in 2002 of a large humidor used for baseball storage, Denver's dry air tended to dry out baseballs, which made the balls harder and caused them to travel farther.[2]

Stadium designers knew beforehand that Coors Field would give up a disproportionate number of home runs because of its high elevation and dry air, and acted accordingly by placing the outfield fences at an unsually far distance from home plate; thus creating one of the largest outfields in baseball today. With the introduction of the humidor Coors Field has fallen into the middle of the pack in terms of home run prevalence.

[edit] Development and construction

Coors Field was the first new stadium added in a six year period in which Denver's sports venues were upgraded, along with Pepsi Center and INVESCO Field at Mile High. It was also the first baseball-only National League Park since Dodger Stadium was built in 1962.

As with the other new venues, Coors Field was constructed with accessibility in mind. It sits near Interstate 25 and has direct access to the 20th Street and Park Avenue exits. Nearby Union Station also provides light rail access.

Coors Field was originally planned to be somewhat smaller, seating only 43,800. However, after the Rockies drew almost 4.5 million people in their first season—the most in baseball history—plans were altered during construction, and new seats in the left field upper deck were added. The centerfield bleacher section has its own informal name: "the Rockpile."

During construction, workers discovered a number of dinosaur fossils throughout the grounds. Because of this, "Jurassic Park" was one of the first names to be considered for the stadium. This later led to the selection of a dinosaur as the Rockies' mascot, "Dinger."

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Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Coors_Field"

This page was last modified 16:29, 21 November 2007. Content is available under the GFDL.

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