Kokernot Field

Kokernot Field
Location

E Hendryx Dr & Fighting Buck Ave

Alpine, Texas 79830
Coordinates 30°22′23″N 103°39′52″W / 30.3730°N 103.6645°WCoordinates: 30°22′23″N 103°39′52″W / 30.3730°N 103.6645°W
Operator Alpine Independent School District
Capacity Baseball: 1,400
Field size Left - 330'
Center - 415'
Right - 330'
Construction
Opened 1947
Construction cost $1.25 million
Tenants
Alpine Cowboys (?) (19471958)
NAIA World Series (1957–1959)
Alpine Cowboys (SL) (19591961)
Sul Ross State Lobos (NCAA) (19??1968,1984present)
Big Bend Cowboys (CBL) (20092010)
Alpine Cowboys (PL) (2011present)

Kokernot Field is a baseball stadium in Alpine, Texas, USA. The field has been called "the Yankee Stadium of Texas" by Texas Monthly magazine.[1] An estimated 6,000 attended a 1951 exhibition featuring Satchel Paige's St. Louis Browns versus the Chicago White Sox. Future major leaguers Norm Cash and Gaylord Perry also played on Kokernot Field.[2]

The stadium was constructed in 1947 by Big Bend rancher Herbert Lee Kokernot Jr. for his semi-professional baseball team. Red clay for the infield was hauled in by boxcar from Georgia. Native stone quarried from the Kokernot Ranch was used to construct the outfield wall and grandstand. The Kokernot Ranch "06" brand was incorporated into numerous decorations throughout the stadium along with intricate ironwork of baseballs complete with painted threads.

The stadium was built to seat 1,400 people. Lighting was installed in 1958. Ownership of the field was turned over to the Alpine Independent School District in 1968 after Sul Ross discontinued their baseball program and semi-professional play ceased in Alpine after the 1961 season. Sul Ross' baseball program was revived in 1983, and a new independent league professional team was formed in 2009, so the field is currently home to the Sul Ross State University Lobos and the Alpine Cowboys of the Pecos League through lease arrangements.

The Big Bend Cowboys doubleheader on 17 May 2009 was the first professional baseball played at Kokernot Field in 48 years.[3]

See also

References

  1. Mackay, Jordan (March 1999). "The Best of Small-Town Texas: Sports". Texas Monthly. Retrieved 24 October 2010.
  2. Stout, DJ (2010). The Amazing Tale of Mr. Herbert and His Fabulous Alpine Cowboys Baseball Club. University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-72334-2.
  3. Silverstein, Jake (October 2010). "King of Diamonds". Texas Monthly. pp. 122–139. Retrieved 18 November 2010.

External links