Stockton Ballpark | |
Location | 404 West Fremont Street United States |
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Coordinates | 37°57′17.48″N 121°17′52.64″W / 37.9548556°N 121.2979556°WCoordinates: 37°57′17.48″N 121°17′52.64″W / 37.9548556°N 121.2979556°W |
Owner | |
Operator | SMG |
Capacity | 5,200 (baseball) |
Field size |
Left Field: 300 feet (91 m) Center Field: 399 feet (122 m) Right Field: 326 feet (99 m) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | April 17, 2004 |
Opened | April 28, 2005 |
Construction cost |
$22 Million ($27 million in 2016 dollars) |
Architect | HKS, Inc. |
Project manager | McCuskey Group |
Services engineer | Frank M. Booth, Inc. |
General contractor | Swinerton Builders |
Tenants | |
(CL) (2005–present) |
Banner Island Ballpark is a baseball stadium located in , which seats 5,200 people with 4,200 fixed seats. It is the home field of the , a minor league affiliate of the Oakland Athletics in the Class A California League.
The $22 million Banner Island Ballpark opened with a baseball game on April 28, 2005, during which the Stockton Ports defeated the San Jose Giants, 7–4, in front of a sellout crowd of 5,287 fans. The ballpark is a part of a revitalization project for the Downtown Stockton waterfront. It was built concurrently with the and will be integrated with a waterfront park.
The Banner Island area is also the purported home of a previous Stockton baseball team that played in the late 1800s. Local residents claim that the team was the inspiration for the Mudville Nine in "Casey at the Bat", a poem by Ernest Thayer. Before moving to the ballpark, the Stockton Ports were known as the Mudville Nine during the 2000 and 2001 seasons.
The name "Banner Island Ballpark" is actually an unofficial name that is used among fans and the administration of the Stockton Ports. The City of Stockton owns the naming rights of the ballpark and until the rights are sold the stadium is officially known as Stockton Ballpark.
The ballpark gets its unofficial name from the area in which it is located, Banner Island. This was once an island in the San Joaquin River delta, noted during the Civil War for the huge "Stars and Stripes" posted by a Union supporter. In time the island was connected to the mainland through land fill and only the southern shore remains. Despite the fact the area is no longer an island, the Banner Island name has stuck.