Stadium Name: | Camelback Ranch-Glendale |
Logo Image: | Camelback Ranch.PNG |
Location: | 10712 W. Camelback Road Phoenix, Arizona 85037[1] |
Coordinates: | 33.5142°N -112.2958°W |
Built: | 2008–2009 |
Opened: | March 1, 2009 |
Surface: | grass |
Architect: | HKS |
Builder: | Mortenson |
Construction Cost: | US$121 million [2] |
Seating Capacity: | 13,000: 10,000 seats, 3,000 berm (grass) seats. |
Record Attendance: | 13,583 March 27, 2010 Seattle Mariners vs. Los Angeles Dodgers |
Dimensions: | Left Field – 345feet Left-Center – 380feet Center Field – 410feet Right-Center – 380feet Right Field – 345feet |
Camelback Ranch–Glendale is a baseball complex located in Phoenix, Arizona and owned by the city of Glendale. It is operated by Camelback Spring Training LLC. It is the spring training home of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox. The main stadium holds 13,000 people.
Camelback Ranch replaced Holman Stadium in Vero Beach, Florida as the Dodgers' spring training home, and Tucson Electric Park in Tucson, Arizona as the White Sox spring training home.
The park is also home to the Arizona Complex League Dodgers, who moved to Camelback Ranch with the Major League team in 2009. The Arizona Complex League White Sox play there as of 2014, after the White Sox rejoined the Arizona rookie circuit.
The stadium name is derived from the longstanding name of the property it is built on.[3]
Roger Bossard, White Sox head groundskeeper, designed and put in all of the fields for the Dodgers and the White Sox. During the park's first year, Dodger fans noted and expressed their dismay at the absence of the Dodger Dog at the ballpark concession stands.[4] The following season, Dodger Dogs began to be sold at the ballpark.
Camelback Ranch opened on March 1, 2009 for the spring training home opener between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Chicago White Sox. The Dodgers took a 2–0 lead into the top of the ninth until the White Sox came back to defeat them 3–2. (Attendance: 11,280)
In 2015, the Dodgers drew 147,066 fans to their 15 spring training games at Camelback Ranch (an average of just over 9,804 per game), setting a new franchise spring training record.[5]
Prior to the 2018 Spring Training season, two separate roof panels were installed on the 1st base side to cover fans from the sun.