List of Major League Baseball stadiums
![](/w/images/thumb/b/b0/Marlins_First_Pitch_at_Marlins_Park%2C_April_4%2C_2012.jpg/250px-Marlins_First_Pitch_at_Marlins_Park%2C_April_4%2C_2012.jpg)
The following is a list of Major League Baseball stadiums, sorted by capacity, their locations, their first year of usage and home teams.
The newest MLB stadium is Marlins Park in Miami, home of the Miami Marlins, which opened for the 2012 season. All except ten MLB stadiums (Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Dodger Stadium, Fenway Park, Kauffman Stadium, Marlins Park, Nationals Park, Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Turner Field, Wrigley Field, and Yankee Stadium being the exceptions) have sold the naming rights to their stadiums to corporations. Turner and Wrigley are named for the individuals and not the corporations; Kauffmann is named for Ewing Kauffman who brought baseball back to Kansas City; while Fenway is named for the neighborhood and realty company at the time of ownership. This list will decrease to nine when SunTrust Park opens in 2017 as Turner Field's replacement.
Contents
Legend
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Current stadiums
Seating capacity facts:
- Fenway Park capacity is 37,227 during day games
Future ballparks, proposed and sanctioned by MLB
Stadium | Estimated capacity | Location | Playing surface | Team | Estimated opening date |
Distance to center field |
Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SunTrust Park | 41,500 | Cumberland, Georgia | Grass | Atlanta Braves | 2017 | undetermined | Under construction[19] |
Former stadiums / ballparks
In addition to the current National (NL) and American (AL) leagues, Major League Baseball recognizes four short-lived other leagues as "major" for at least some portion of their histories; three of them played only in the 19th century, while a fourth played two years in the 1910s. These leagues are the American Association (AA), 1882–1891; the Union Association (UA), 1884; the Players' League (PL), 1890; and the Federal League (FL), 1914–1915. This list includes all ballparks that served as regular home fields for teams throughout all six circuits' histories as major leagues.
Although they arguably represented a top-flight quality of play at times, the 19th century National Association of Professional Base Ball Players (NA) and the various 20th century Negro leagues are not considered by MLB to have been "major leagues".
All playing fields are natural grass unless otherwise noted.
Notes
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See also
- List of Major League Baseball spring training stadiums
- List of U.S. baseball stadiums by capacity
- List of U.S. stadiums by capacity
- List of baseball parks by capacity
- List of current National Football League stadiums
- List of National Hockey League arenas
- List of Major League Soccer stadiums
- List of Major League Lacrosse stadiums
- List of National Basketball Association arenas
References
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Further reading
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Major League Baseball stadiums. |
- Ballparks. Munsey & Suppes
- Ballpark Digest. August Publications
- BallparkReviews.com. Brian Merzbach
- BallparkSavvy.com. Jake Cain
- Ballpark Tour
- Ballparks of Baseball—The Fields of Major League Baseball
- BaseballParks.com. Joe Mock. Grand Slam Enterprises, Inc.
- Clem's Baseball—Our National Pastime—& Its "Green Cathedrals". Andrew G. Clem
- eBaseball Parks
- Major League Ballparks. Google Maps
- Map of MLB Teams and Stadiums. Sport Map World
- Ultimate Ballpark Guide (by MLB division) (April 6, 2011). Fox Sports
- BallparkMagic (Target Field). Rick Prescott
- mlb/mlbfielddimensions/ (MLB Diamonds Pictures and Stats). Vegas Scouting
- Every Major League Baseball Stadium, Ranked. Buzzfeed
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