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Turchin Stadium

Greer Field at Turchin Stadium
TurchinStadium.jpg
Location Ben Weiner Drive
New Orleans, LA 70118
Coordinates 29°56′47″N 90°06′56″W / 29.94640°N 90.11568°W / 29.94640; -90.11568Coordinates: 29°56′47″N 90°06′56″W / 29.94640°N 90.11568°W / 29.94640; -90.11568
Owner Tulane University
Operator Tulane University
Capacity 5,000
Record attendance 5,215
(April 26, 2016, vs. LSU)
Field size Foul Lines: 325 feet (99 m)
Center Field: 400 feet (122 m)
Power Alleys: 370 feet (113 m)
Outfield fence height: 8 feet (2 m)
Center Field fence height: 12 feet (4 m)
Surface FieldTurf
Construction
Broke ground 1990
Opened March 11, 1991 (1991-03-11)
Renovated 2005–2007
Construction cost $12 million
$10.5 million (renovation)
Tenants
Tulane Green Wave (NCAA) 1990–present

Greer Field at Turchin Stadium is a baseball stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the on-campus home the Tulane University Green Wave college baseball team. The stadium was named for Robert Turchin, a World War II veteran and 1943 graduate of Tulane, and his wife, Lillian Turchin, who headed the drive in 1990 to build it. In 2008, at the official reopening, "Greer Field" was added to the name in honor of Phil Greer, chair of the Board of Tulane.

The team has won over 75% of its games in Turchin since its opening. In 2013, the Green Wave ranked 31st among Division I baseball programs attendance, averaging 2,080 per home game.

Since 2011, Turchin has hosted the Louisiana High School Athletic Association Class 5A (top classification) state tournament.

The stadium was in the midst of significant renovations following the 2005 season, but Hurricane Katrina nearly destroyed the facility, forcing the project to start over. Tulane had hoped to move into the renovated Turchin for the 2006 season but played the entire 2006 season at Zephyr Field in nearby Metairie. It was scheduled to be completed in April 2007, but heavy rain during the winter of 2007 pushed back the opening to the 2008 season. Turchin hosted the Conference USA baseball tournament that season. As the University spent $1.5 million before Katrina and was projected to spend $7.5 million after, the final renovation cost was estimated to be about $9 million, but by the end of construction the entirely new stadium had cost $10.5 million to build.

Shortly after construction commenced, the Tulane University Athletics Department "expanded the scope" of the Tulane Athletics Brick Campaign. This mode of fundraising, in which fans could buy commemorative bricks to be placed at the entry of the new stadium, generated unexpected levels of interest, warranting the expansion.


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