The Nat, Nat Bailey Stadium | |
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Former names | Capilano Stadium (1951–1978) Nat Bailey Stadium (1978–2010) |
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Location | 4601 Ontario Street Vancouver, British Columbia V5V 3H4 |
Owner | City of Vancouver |
Operator | City of Vancouver |
Capacity | 6,013 |
Field size | Left field – 320 ft (98 m) Centre field – 395 ft (120 m) Right field – 320 ft (98 m) Backstop – 30 ft (9 m) Outfield fence – 6 ft (2 m) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1951 |
Opened | July 15, 1951 |
Construction cost |
C$550,000 ($5.05 million in 2016 dollars) |
Architect | William Aitken |
Tenants | |
Vancouver Mounties (PCL) (1956–1969) Vancouver Canadians (PCL) (1978–1999) Vancouver Canadians (NWL) (2000–present) UBC Thunderbirds (NAIA) (2000–present) |
Scotiabank Field at Nat Bailey Stadium (known as "The Nat" and commonly by its previous name Nat Bailey Stadium) is home to the Vancouver Canadians of the Northwest League in the summer and the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds in the spring.
Originally built in 1951 as Capilano Stadium, it was renamed Nat Bailey Stadium in 1978 to honour the work of Vancouver restaurateur Nat Bailey and his tireless effort to promote baseball in Vancouver.
Nat Bailey Stadium is located on the eastern side of scenic Queen Elizabeth Park in the Riley Park-Little Mountain neighbourhood of Vancouver.
The stadium was first home to the Vancouver Capilanos in the early 1950s and later attracted the Oakland Oaks, who became the Vancouver Mounties of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League, from 1956 to 1962, and 1965 through 1969. The PCL returned to Vancouver in 1978 with the Vancouver Canadians, owned by Harry Ornest. He purchased most of the primary assets of Sick's Stadium in Seattle and shipped them north for use at Nat Bailey. The Canadians stayed in Vancouver through the 1999 season, then relocated south to Sacramento, California. The following season, a second incarnation of the Canadians began playing in the short-season Class A Northwest League.
The stadium's capacity is 6,013. However, there have been over 7,000 fans in attendance at games held on Canada Day. Over 7,800 fans squeezed into the park for Game 4 of the 1994 Pacific Coast League Championship Series between the Canadians and the Albuquerque Dukes.