This article is about the Furman University baseball venue.
For the Elon University baseball venue, see
Walter C. Latham Park.
Latham Baseball Stadium |
---|
Full name |
John T. and Gloria Latham Baseball Stadium |
---|
Former names |
Furman Baseball Stadium (1956-2008) |
---|
Location |
1612 Duncan Chapel Road, Greenville, SC, USA |
---|
Coordinates |
34°55′17″N 82°26′33″W / 34.921472°N 82.44256°W / 34.921472; -82.44256Coordinates: 34°55′17″N 82°26′33″W / 34.921472°N 82.44256°W / 34.921472; -82.44256 |
---|
Built |
1956 |
---|
Opened |
March 20, 1956 |
---|
Renovated |
1998, 2001 |
---|
Owner |
Furman University |
---|
Surface |
Natural grass |
---|
Scoreboard |
Electronic |
---|
Capacity |
2,000 |
---|
Field dimensions |
330 ft. (LF), 350 ft. (LCF), 393 (CF), 371 ft. (RCF), 330 ft. (RF) |
---|
Tenants |
---|
Furman University Paladins college baseball (Southern Conference) (1956-present) |
Latham Baseball Stadium is a baseball venue located in Greenville, South Carolina, USA. It is home to the Furman Paladins college baseball team. The venue opened in 1956 and has a capacity of 2,000 spectators.[1]
Naming
The stadium is named after Tommy Latham and his family. Latham was an All-Conference baseball player at Furman. The venue was renamed and dedicated to him and his family in May 2008 prior to a conference game against Davidson, with the park's full name becoming John T. and Gloria Latham Baseball Stadium (John and Gloria Latham are the parents of the Paladin baseball player Tommy). The Latham family made a contribution of $1 million for the park to be renamed.[2] Prior to the renaming, the field had been known as Furman Baseball Stadium since its construction in 1956.[1]
Features
In 1997, the field's seating areas were renovated, with 300 permanent stadium seats being added behind home plate. In 2001, lights were added to the facility, allowing night games to be played for the first time. The first night game was played on April 13, 2001, against UNC Greensboro. In 2006, batting cage was added to the facility; it is located down the left field line. The stadium also features a press box, scoreboard, and expanded dugouts.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Latham Baseball Stadium, URL accessed December 11, 2010. Archived 12-11-2010
- ↑ Furman To Dedicate Latham Baseball Stadium This Saturday at ncaa.com, URL accessed December 11, 2010. Archived 12-11-2010