Swayze Field

Oxford-University Stadium
Swayze Field
Location Oxford, Mississippi
Opened March 27, 1948
(expanded 2003, 2009)
Owner University of Mississippi
Operator University of Mississippi
Surface Grass
Construction cost $3.75 million (Original cost)
Capacity 8,500 (6,100 seats)
Field dimensions Left Field: 330 ft (101 m)
Alleys: 365 ft (110 m)
Center Field: 390 ft (119 m)
Right Field: 330 ft (101 m)
Tenants
Ole Miss Rebels (NCAA) (1988-Present)

Oxford-University Stadium at Swayze Field is the home of the University of Mississippi Rebels college baseball team and is located in Oxford, Mississippi. It is named in honor of Tom Swayze, a former Ole Miss baseball player and coach. Tom Swayze was a 3 year letterman and over 21 years of coaching he achieved a record of 361-201-2. He also was at the helm of the team for four SEC Championships and three College World Series appearances. The last College World Series appearance by the U of Mississippi occurred in 1972 and their last SEC Championship was in 2009.

The $3.75 million stadium opened on February 19, 1989 with a double header sweep of Cumberland University. The actual stadium sits on city property off-campus and was built by the City of Oxford, using cigarette and hotel taxes to pay for it.

Contents

Features

Right Field Terrace

The hill beyond the right field wall was equipped with a seating area in 1993 that sits comfortably between the field and eight tennis courts. This has historically been a section for students. Since the 2000 season the area has undergone many improvements. What began as a gathering place for about one hundred students has grown into an area of about 1,000 students per game during conference season, and on big weekends between 3,000 and 4,000 students. Students routinely show up 2 or 3 hours before game time to wait on the first pitch. In the past few years, the students have started making t-shirts including ones that say: "Ole Miss - The best collegiate baseball atmosphere in America." Because of this atmosphere news crews from different college sports channels routinely show up to the right field student section.

Right Field Traditions

1.) One of the main right field traditions involves the players themselves. After warmups are completed each inning, the outfielders throw the baseball into the right field student section, where students write messages and then throw the ball back to the outfielders for the next inning.
2.) Beer showers after walk off home runs and walk off hits
3.) Screaming at opposing outfielders.

Left Field Terrace

For many years there was nothing but trees and a parking lot beyond the left field wall. In 2006, the left field area, known as Oakes Pavilion, was renovated with a new scoreboard equipped with a large video board and the seating areas were upgraded with grills, picnic tables, and a play area for children. The left field area can hold around 2,500 fans and has become one of the more popular areas of the field.[1] It's mainly reserved for the families and non-students.

Stadium Amenities

Swayze Field is equipped with AAA lighting that is of higher quality than most minor league ballparks. Below the stands are coach's offices, locker rooms, player's lounge, press area, and a workout area for the pitchers. Along the first base line is a 6,800-square-foot (630 m2) hitting complex. In 2006 a large video board was added that supplies fans with replays during the game.

Expansion

In April 2007, Ole Miss announced that their baseball stadium would undergo an $18.5 million expansion. The expansion was mostly completed in time for the 2009 baseball season. The expansion resulted in an increase of the overall number of seats to just over 6,000 and a total capacity exceeding 8,500.[2][3][4][5] On June 6, 2009, an Ole Miss record 10,323 were present to watch the Super Regional game vs the University of Virginia (UVA won 4-3).

Attendance

In 2011, the Rebels ranked 2nd in Division I college baseball in attendance, averaging 8,156 per home game.[6]

References

  1. ^ Ole Miss Sports Official Website
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
  4. ^ [3]
  5. ^ [4]
  6. ^ Tami Cutler. "2011 Division I Baseball Attendance". Archived from the original on 12-20-11. http://www.webcitation.org/644cLUIuP. Retrieved December 20, 2011.