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Progress Energy Park

Al Lang Stadium
Rowdies Soccer Config 2015.jpg
Al Lang Stadium in 2015
Former names Florida Power Park, Progress Energy Park
Location 180 2nd Avenue SE
St. Petersburg, Florida 33701
Coordinates 27°46′05″N 82°37′59″W / 27.7681°N 82.6331°W / 27.7681; -82.6331Coordinates: 27°46′05″N 82°37′59″W / 27.7681°N 82.6331°W / 27.7681; -82.6331
Owner City of St. Petersburg
Operator Big 3 Entertainment
Capacity 7,227
Field size 110 x 75yd
Surface Grass
Construction
Opened 1947
Renovated 1976, 1996, 2015
Construction cost $300,000 (original)
Tenants
New York Yankees (MLB) (spring training) (1947–1950, 1952–1961)
St. Louis Cardinals (MLB) (spring training) (1947–1997)
St. Petersburg Saints (FIL/FSL) (1947–1965)
New York Giants (MLB) (spring training) (1951)
New York Mets (MLB) (spring training) (1962–1987)
St. Petersburg Pelicans (SPBA) (1989–1990)
St. Petersburg Cardinals (FSL) (1965–1997)
Baltimore Orioles (MLB) (spring training) (1991–1995)
St. Petersburg Devil Rays (FSL) (1998–2000)
Tampa Bay Devil Rays/Rays (MLB) (spring training) (1998–2008)
Tampa Bay Rowdies (USL) (2011–present)
Tampa Bay Rowdies U23 (PDL) (2017–present; some games)

Al Lang Stadium is a 7,500-seat sports stadium in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida that is the current home pitch of the Tampa Bay Rowdies of the United Soccer League (USL). It was built in 1947 and was used almost exclusively as a baseball park for over 60 years. Al Lang Stadium was reconstructed in 1976, and was renovated again before the Tampa Bay Devil Rays began using it as their first spring training venue in 1998. The Devil Rays / Rays were the last of a long series of Major League Baseball clubs to conduct spring training and host an affiliated minor league team at Al Lang Stadium. Before the Rays, tenants included the New York Yankees, St. Louis Cardinals, New York Mets, and the Baltimore Orioles, amongst others. The stadium hosted its last spring training game in 2008 and was the site of occasional amateur and exhibition baseball for the next several years.

The Tampa Bay Rowdies became the primary tenant in 2011, and Al Lang Stadium was incrementally modified for use as a soccer venue for the next several off-seasons. Since October 2014, an agreement between the club and the city of St. Petersburg has made the stadium a soccer-only facility, and the Rowdies' ownership conducted an extensive renovation in early 2015. In 2016, Rowdies' majority owner Bill Edwards proposed greatly expanding the stadium's capacity to 18,000 seats as part of a bid to move his club into Major League Soccer. In May 2017, a local referendum passed authorizing the city of St. Petersburg to negotiate a long-term lease with the team to help make the project possible.

Al Lang Stadium is named in honor of Al Lang, a former mayor of St. Petersburg who was instrumental in bringing minor league and spring training baseball to the city in the early 20th century.


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Wikipedia

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