San Jose Municipal Stadium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
San Jose Municipal Stadium | |
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Muni Stadium | |
Location | 588 E. Alma Avenue
San Jose, California 95112 |
Broke ground | 1941 |
Opened | March 8, 1942 |
Closed | Open |
Demolished | N/A |
Owner | City of San Jose |
Operator | San Jose Giants |
Surface | Baby Bermuda Grass |
Construction cost | $80,000 USD; |
Architect | Works Progress Administration |
Former names | None |
Tenants | San Jose Giants (California League) (1988–present) San Jose Bees (California League) (1983–1987) San Jose Expos (California League) (1982) San Jose Missions (California League) (1979–1981) San Jose Missions (Pacific Coast League) (1977–1978) San Jose Bees (California League) (1962–1976) San Jose Pirates (California League) (1958) San Jose JoSox (California League) (1956–1957) San Jose Red Sox (California League) (1947–1955) San Jose Owls (California League) (1942) SJSU Spartans (NCAA WAC) (1970–present) |
Capacity | 2,900 (1942) 4,200 (current) |
Field dimensions | Left Field - 341 ft Left-Center Power Alley - 383 ft Center Field - 391 ft Right-Center Power Alley - 395 ft Right Field - 340 ft Backstop - 50 ft |
The San Jose Municipal Stadium, or Muni Stadium in common usage, is the home of the minor league baseball San Jose Giants, the Advanced A league affiliate of the San Francisco Giants located in San Jose, California. The Giants play in the northern division of the California League. The stadium is also home to the San Jose State University Spartans college baseball team for some regular season games (other regular season games are played across Alma Avenue at Blethen Field). The local high school baseball divisions also use Municipal Stadium as their championship field. The stadium also hosts concerts, weddings, dog shows, and many other local events. In the past Muni Stadium has been the home field for the San Jose Missions, the San Jose Bees, and the San Jose Expos.
[edit] Stadium history
San Jose Municipal was built in 1941-42 as a WPA project, at a cost of $80,000. It was one of the first stadiums to be built entirely of reinforced concrete. It opened in 1942. The first game featured the San Francisco Seals as the home team.
Fans sit very close to the field in four distinct seating areas. The first 7 rows of the main grandstand are numbered box seats. General admission seating is available in the upper rows of the main grandstand on straight backed benches. Down the left and right field lines are several bleachers that are accessible for general admission use. And finally there is table seating down the third base line as part of the famous "Turkey Mike's BBQ Area". The stadium has remained largely unchanged from its original configuration. However 3 extra rows of box seating were added in 1996 along with renovations to the bathroom facilities and clubhouse in 1994. In 1999 the dugouts were expanded toward the field.
Players sign autographs before every game, and the outfield walls are lined with adverts much like the stadiums of the 1920s and 30s were. There is one jumbotron screen over the scoreboard, just a simple scoreboard showing the basic game data like runs, strikes, balls, outs. The out of town scoreboard for other California League games is also hand hung. Fans are treated to all manner of games and entertainment between innings hosted by improvisation performers from ComedySportz San Jose. In-between inning activities include a tire toss, a child footrace around the bases and a fan favorite, "smash 4 cash", a competition where players attempt to smash the headlights of an old delivery truck to split $50 prize with a fan. Around July 4 every year, San Jose Municipal Stadium's fireworks show draws its largest attendance of the year, turning the foul line seating into standing room only.
In 1997 the bullpens moved from along the foul lines to the outfield. The visitor and home bullpens create artificial home run porches in left and right field respectively. In 2007 the outfield fence was replaced and moved in 10-20 feet in some areas and bullpens moved once again.
Many major league players over the years have called San Jose Municipal Stadium home including, George Brett, Rod Beck, Joe Nathan, Chad Zerbe, Ron Hassey, and Shawn Estes.
Municipal Stadium is located one block from Spartan Stadium, home to the SJSU football team. The area across Alma from Muni is also home to the San Jose State practice fields for soccer, baseball, and softball. Additionally part of Municipal Stadium's parking lot was converted into an indoor ice area named Logitech Ice at San Jose which was the practice venue for the San Jose Sharks NHL hockey team during the late 1990s.
During the 2005–2006 offseason a video board was added to the stadium along with a full sized souvenir shed on the third base side of the stadium. The San Jose Giants introduced their first mascot, Gigante, during this offseason.
[edit] External links
- San Jose Municipal Stadium View - Ball Parks of the Minor Leagues
- San Jose Giants
- San Jose State Spartans
Current ballparks in the California League | ||
Northern Division | Southern Division | |
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Banner Island Ballpark • John Thurman Field Sam Lynn Ballpark • San Jose Municipal Stadium Recreation Park |
Arrowhead Credit Union Park • Clear Channel Stadium The Epicenter • Lake Elsinore Diamond Stater Bros. Stadium |
WAC baseball parks |
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