Holman Stadium (Vero Beach)

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Holman Stadium is a baseball stadium in Vero Beach, Florida, built in 1953 to accommodate spring training for the Dodgers as part of a complex called Dodgertown. In addition to the Dodgers' spring games, it is also the home of the Vero Beach Dodgers of the Florida State League. Official seating capacity is 6,500.

The Brooklyn Dodgers were one of the first major league baseball teams to conduct spring training, establishing their operations in Vero Beach in 1948. The team has continued the tradition since becoming the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1958. In recent decades, Arizona has established itself alongside Florida as the second major center for spring baseball, and the Dodgers are now the only western team that still conducts its spring training in Florida.

In 2001, the Dodgers seriously considered moving their spring operations to Arizona, but the city of Vero Beach persuaded them to stay by purchasing the Dodgertown complex from the team and leasing it back for $1 per year. In 2006, the Dodgers have again received offers from several Arizona cities, attempting to persuade them to move. If they did so, they would have to repay much of the money Vero Beach laid out to purchase the complex, but the Arizona offers may be lucrative enough to overcome this obstacle.

Holman is unique for its open-air dugouts that are literally dug out along the sides of the field. These may have been the inspiration for the dugouts in Johnny Hart's B.C. comic strip.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

Los Angeles Times, 19 April 2006, "Vero Would Be 'Heartbroken'" by Bill Shaikin

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