Stadium Name: | McCormick Field |
Location: | 30 Buchanan Place Asheville, North Carolina, 28801 |
Coordinates: | 35.5872°N -82.5492°W |
Broke Ground: | 1923 |
Opened: | April 3, 1924 |
Renovated: | 1959, 1992 |
Owner: | City of Asheville |
Operator: | DeWine Seeds Silver Dollar Baseball, LLC. |
Surface: | Natural Grass |
Construction Cost: | $200,000 ($ in dollars) |
Architect: | Bowers, Ellis, and Watson[1] |
General Contractor: | Leader Construction |
Tenants: | Asheville Tourists (SAL/High-A East) (1924–present) UNC Asheville Bulldogs (BSC) Big South Tournament (2009) Asheville Blues (NSL) (1940s) |
Seating Capacity: | 4,000 |
Dimensions: | Left Field: 326feet Left-Center: 370feet Center Field: 373feet Right-Center: 320feet Right Field: 297feet |
Lewis McCormick Field is a baseball stadium in Asheville, North Carolina. It is the home field of the Asheville Tourists team of Minor League Baseball. As befits the hilly city of Asheville, the ballpark sits on a section of level ground partway up one of the city's hills, providing a picturesque atmosphere.[2] It is the third-oldest ballpark in Minor League Baseball.
The ballpark was built in 1924 and was named after Asheville resident Lewis McCormick. Lights were installed for nighttime play prior to the 1930 season. Since then, it has been home to the various incarnations of the Asheville Tourists team, and also served as home field for the Asheville Blues of the Negro Southern League during the 1940s.[3] In 1956, a quarter-mile racetrack was built around it, which held three NASCAR races[4] (including a NASCAR Cup race in 1958)[5] until the facility was renovated in 1959, and then rebuilt in concrete between the 1991 and 1992 seasons, replacing the largely wood structure which had developed a leaky roof. The 1992 ballpark kept a similar layout to the original McCormick Field. The facility included new expanded restrooms and larger concession stands. New clubhouses were built and lights erected as player and field enhancements. The height of the fence behind the cozy right field area, which was in the vicinity of just 300feet away from home plate, was more than tripled, as it now stands 36feet tall (nearly the same height as Fenway Park's "Green Monster").[6]
It is one of the oldest Minor League Baseball stadiums still in regular use; as of the 2021 season, only Jackie Robinson Ballpark and LECOM Park, both in Florida, are older, dating to 1914 and 1923, respectively.[7]
The ballpark served as one of the settings for the 1988 film Bull Durham.[8]
The venue hosted the 2009 Big South Conference baseball tournament, won by Coastal Carolina.[9]
Farther up the hill, behind the left field area, is Asheville Memorial Stadium, a football and soccer facility. Its bleacher seating structure is visible from McCormick Field. It was used as the Asheville High School football field until the current, on-campus field was constructed in 1980, as a practice field, in 82, as the main football field, with the addition of sufficient bleachers.