Blog about my Ballparking Trips and reviews.
Showing posts with label Western Canadian Baseball League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western Canadian Baseball League. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2023

Elks Field

 Brooks Bombers, Western Canadian Baseball League

This is a very no-nonsense, amateur ballpark. For spectators, there isn't much of a gate, or a door.

Large metal posts make it difficult to get a clear shot of the field, but this is about as good as you'll do.




I've been around 10 games here, but didn't pay once. That's because I volunteered here. I got around 6 or 8 games of play by play, a few games doing the music and one doing the public address. I never really watched here, but this is about what I can tell you. The park is actually relatively new, opening in 2015. It's got a small metal seating bowl with a good sight lines. There is an elevated platform on the third base side where group functions occasionally take place. The atmosphere is very small town, as the park holds well under 500 people, usually only getting up to around 300. But, the people who go typically want to be there and season ticket holders make up the bulk of the support. The concession options here are slightly above what you'd expect for a place this small, with local beer on tap and mac and cheese bites available as well. The 2022 season was a step up for the Bombers, as they made their first playoff appearance and they'll be looking to build even more in '23. I will definitely make a point of swinging by here this summer when I'm in the area.

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Spitz Stadium

Lethbridge Bulls, Western Canadian Baseball League



There wasn't really an entrance towards home plate, but this was what it looked like.

The first live baseball I'd seen in about two years.

The socially distanced, limited crowd files out.


I actually got back on the road for a day trip in 2021, this ended up being my only game for that whole season. This park used to host minor leaguers from the Dodgers, Expos and Diamondbacks organizations for a little over 20 years, before the affiliated minors moved south. The Bulls, a collegiate summer league team, moved in the next year. The park had been renovated within the previous few years of my visit. The Bulls current league, the Western Canadian Baseball League, was playing a reduced schedule that season, with COVID restrictions still in effect, which meant only 5 teams for the summer. 

It was tough to rate very much, given the unique circumstances for the game. The park is old enough that Andre Dawson played here when in the Expos system, but renovations have kept it looking good. Concession was somewhat limited due to the smaller crowds, which also ended up limiting the atmosphere somewhat. I ended up volunteering in Brooks during this year's summer league season, but if I had the opportunity, I'd be willing to head back down to go here with a bigger crowd.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Seaman Stadium

Okotoks Dawgs, Western Canadian Baseball League


No Rating


The crowd files up the stairs about 30 minutes to game time.

Once you're inside, this appears to be a cut above your average summer league park.

The best shot I could get of the seating area. The press box behind home plate reminds me a lot of Orem.

I headed off for the 2 hour drive to Okotoks in August 2019, having finally decided to make a run down here. This is the best attended stadium in the 12 team Western Canadian loop, featuring summer league baseball in front of crowds that are usually in the hundreds(or under a hundred) except for here. This place reliably gets at least 2,500 a game. The town of Okotoks is only around 15 thousand, but being 20 minutes down the road from Canada's 4th largest city, Calgary, there's plenty of potential fans not far away. The team moved out here from Calgary after having to fight with the Vipers team there over home dates, eventually having to skip a season entirely. The joke ended up being on the Vipers though, as private donations, including from the Seaman family, whose name is on the park, financed this place and the fieldhouse immediately next door. It's a solid summer league set up and unlike a lot of teams in this league, they do attract some players from top Div I schools.

Even before I came here in person, I knew this was a nice park. I'd heard about crowds in excess of 5 thousand for holiday weekends, which here, would have meant fire code capacity. But when I got here, it was clear that this park could have for sure hosted a Rookie level team in the Pioneer League, never mind everything else that would have to happen. Our visit was in mid-July of 2019 for a midweek game against Medicine Hat.  There ended up being closer to 3,000 people here, which was steady, but not too busy to get anywhere. The concession items were all the usual staples, but there was nothing unique or distinctive either. The atmosphere was the best part of coming here, it wasn't overly enthusiastic, but people were generally into the game and if they weren't, they weren't into being overly noticeable either. 

I did not give the park a number rating, as I don't for summer league. Minor League contraction means that affiliated baseball is not coming here ever, which is too bad, as the park and the fan base could handle it. But, with the Pioneer League officially off on it's own now and the league's statement making reference to promoting baseball in the Western United States and Canada, it's not impossible that professional players could call this place home soon enough.