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Goss Stadium at Coleman Field

Goss Stadium at Coleman Field
Goss scoreboard.jpg
New scoreboard in October 2006
Former names Coleman Field
Location 430 SW Langton Place
Oregon State University
Corvallis, Oregon, U.S.
Coordinates 44°33′48″N 123°16′39″W / 44.5632°N 123.2776°W / 44.5632; -123.2776Coordinates: 44°33′48″N 123°16′39″W / 44.5632°N 123.2776°W / 44.5632; -123.2776
Owner Oregon State University
Operator Oregon State University
Capacity 3,315
Record attendance 3,602 (NCAA Corvallis Super Regional 2013, Oregon State vs. Kansas State, June 9, 2013)
Field size Left: 330 ft (101 m)
L. Center: 365 ft (111 m)
Center: 400 ft (122 m)
R. Center: 365 ft (111 m)
Right: 330 ft (101 m)
Surface Infield
FieldTurf (2007–present)
Grass (1907–2006)
Outfield
FieldTurf (2015)
Grass (1907–2014)
Construction
Opened

1907 (1907) (field)

1999 (1999) (stadium)
Renovated 1999, 2009, 2015
Expanded May 2008
February 2015
Construction cost $2.3 million
(1999 renovation)
$3 million
(2015 renovation)
Tenants

Oregon State Beavers - (NCAA)
(1907-present)

Corvallis Knights - (WCL)
(2007-present)
Website
OSU Beavers baseball

1907 (1907) (field)

Oregon State Beavers - (NCAA)
(1907-present)

Goss Stadium at Coleman Field is a college baseball stadium in Corvallis, Oregon, on the campus of Oregon State University. It is home to the Oregon State Beavers of the Pac-12 conference. At the end of the 2014 season, Oregon State had posted an all-time record of 1,134–474–1 (.705) record at Goss Stadium at Coleman Field.

The field was established in 1907, with the first game being played on April 12, 1907. The field was later named "Ralph Coleman Field," after long-time Beavers baseball coach Ralph Coleman, who stepped down following the 1966 season after 35 seasons as the team's head coach.

The Scott Halbrook Memorial Scoreboard was added to Ralph Coleman Field in 1986 in memory of the 1981 freshman outfielder, who died in a freak accident just three days prior to his first season with the Beavers. The scoreboard remained in use until its replacement in 2006.

In the late fall of 1998, after many years of talks regarding upgrading the bleachers, concession stands, and the press box, a major remodel was undertaken thanks in large part to a $2.3 million donation by John and Eline Goss. Completed before the start of the 1999 season, the addition of the all new stadium put to rest the idea that the Beavers may not be able to continue to play at their longtime home. With the field right in the middle of campus, there had been discussion of the land being turned over to academic uses. The first official game at Goss Stadium at Coleman field was played March 12, 1999.

Lights were added to the stadium in 2002, allowing the Beavers to play their first night game at home on April 27, a 4–1 victory over the 4th ranked Stanford Cardinals.

In the summer of 2006, after the Beavers' first national championship win, a state-of-the-art scoreboard was installed, replacing the Scott Halbrook Memorial Scoreboard. This scoreboard feature the first video replay screen in the conference. The natural grass (and dirt) infield was replaced with FieldTurf in late 2006, in time for the 2007 season. The pitcher's mound and home plate area were the only portions that remained dirt. The basepaths and "skin" portion are FieldTurf, colored dark orange. The home plate area at Goss Stadium was later covered with FieldTurf, leaving only the pitcher's mound with dirt.


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