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Muzzy Field

Muzzy Field
Location Park Street and Muzzy Street, Bristol, Connecticut, USA
Coordinates 41°40′23″N 72°57′34″W / 41.673176°N 72.959459°W / 41.673176; -72.959459Coordinates: 41°40′23″N 72°57′34″W / 41.673176°N 72.959459°W / 41.673176; -72.959459
Capacity 4,900
Field size 339 ft. (LF), 359 ft. (Left center), 402 ft. (CF), 369 ft. (Deep right center), 330 ft. (Right center), 326 (RF)
Construction
Built 1939 (grandstand)
Renovated 2012-15
Tenants
Bristol Blues (FCBL) (2015-)
Bristol Collegiate Baseball Club (NECBL) (2010)
Bristol Nighthawks (NECBL) (1994-1995)
Bristol Red Sox (AA EL) (1972-1982)
Bristol Owls (Colonial League) (1949-1950)
Bristol Central High School, Bristol Eastern High School, Saint Paul Catholic High School baseball and football

Muzzy Field is a stadium in Bristol, Connecticut adjacent to Rockwell Park. It has been in use since 1912 for both baseball and football. The brick-faced grandstand, with a capacity of 4,900 people, was built in 1939. It features a ring of tall pine trees that line the outside of the outfield wall and the grandstand.

Muzzy Field hosts high school sports, primarily baseball and football. Three high schools use the field: Bristol Central High School, Bristol Eastern High School, and Saint Paul Catholic High School. Muzzy Field is the site of the football "Battle for the Bell" between Bristol Eastern and Bristol Central, held every Thanksgiving morning, with the winner claiming the bell for the following year.

In summer, Muzzy Field hosts collegiate baseball teams: since 2015, the Bristol Blues of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League; and formerly, the Bristol Collegiate Baseball Club (2010) and the Bristol Nighthawks (1994-1995), both of the New England Collegiate Baseball League.

Muzzy Field was the home of the Double-A Bristol Red Sox of the Eastern League from 1972 to 1982. Former Boston Red Sox stars Jim Rice, Fred Lynn, and Butch Hobson honed their skills with the "BriSox." The ballpark also housed the old Bristol Owls of the Class-B Colonial League in 1949 and 1950, as well as various amateur baseball teams, notably the Bristol En-Dees and the local American Legion team.


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