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Haymarket Park

Haymarket Park
Haymarket park.JPG
Location Lincoln, Nebraska
Capacity 8,500
Field size Left Field - 335 ft
Left Center - 403 ft
Center Field - 395 ft
Right Center - 400 ft
Right Field - 325 ft
Surface Kentucky Bluegrass
Construction
Broke ground April 12, 2000
Opened June 1, 2001
Construction cost $29.53 million (includes Bowlin Stadium)
($39.9 million in 2016 dollars)
Architect Stan Meradith, DLR Group
Tenants
Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball (2002-present)
Lincoln Saltdogs (2001-present)
Bowlin Stadium
Location Lincoln, Nebraska
Capacity 2,500
Field size Left Field - 200 ft
Center Field - 220 ft
Right Field - 195 ft
Surface Kentucky Bluegrass
Construction
Construction cost $29.53 million (includes Hawks Field)
Architect Stan Meradith, DLR Group
Tenants
Nebraska Cornhuskers softball (2002-present)

Coordinates: 40°49′22″N 96°42′50″W / 40.82279°N 96.71391°W / 40.82279; -96.71391

Haymarket Park is a baseball and softball complex in Lincoln, Nebraska. It is half a mile west of the campus of the University of Nebraska in downtown Lincoln. It is named because of its location in Lincoln's historic Haymarket District.

Haymarket Park is the home field of the Lincoln Saltdogs and the Nebraska Cornhuskers. It seats about 4,500 people; an additional 4,000 people can sit on berms along the outfield walls. In 2013, the Cornhuskers ranked 19th in among Division I baseball programs in attendance, averaging 2,864 per game.

Hawks Field is named for one of the primary donor families that contributed to the construction of the baseball stadium. It has a playground down the right field line. Hawks field is the first collegiate venue to use the SubAir system, which can heat and cool the field year round. For the Saltdogs, it's been selected as the "Best Playing Field" in each of its 13 years of existence (Northern League award, 2001-2005; American Association award, 2006-2013). In November 2007, Hawks Field won the Baseball Field of the Year Award in the College/University division by the Sports Turf Managers Association (STMA) for the second time. The field earned its first honor in 2003 and is the only college park in the country to be a two-time winner.

In 2012, college baseball writer Eric Sorenson ranked the field as the fourth best big game atmosphere in Division I baseball.


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