Chukchansi Park

Baseball stadium in Fresno, California; home of the Fresno Grizzlies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chukchansi Parkmap

Chukchansi Park, formerly known as Grizzlies Stadium, is a city-owned baseball stadium located in Fresno, California, United States, completed in 2002 as the home for Minor League Baseball's Fresno Grizzlies. The first game was May 1, 2002. Located in downtown Fresno, it was designed to be an anchor in the rehabilitation of the area, as other commercial development is planned in the Central Business District Loop. The ballpark is also used for music concerts, motocross events, and high school football.

Quick Facts Former names, Address ...
Chukchansi Park
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Chukchansi Park
Location within California
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Chukchansi Park
Chukchansi Park (the United States)
Former namesGrizzlies Stadium (20022006)
Address1800 Tulare Street
Fresno, California
United States
Coordinates36.7321°N 119.7905°W / 36.7321; -119.7905
Public transit Fresno Fresno Area Express (FAX)
OwnerCity of Fresno
OperatorFresno Sports Management, LLC.[1]
Executive suites33
Capacity10,650
Record attendance21,097 (April 22, 2023, Marca MP, Peso Pluma, Edgardo Nuñez y mas)
Field sizeLeft field: 324 ft (99 m)
Center field: 402 ft (123 m)
Right field: 335 ft (102 m)
SurfaceGrass
ScoreboardCost: $2,000,000
2,000 sq ft (190 m2)
Construction
Broke groundAugust 8, 2000[2]
Opened1 May 2002 (2002-05-01)
Construction cost$46 million
($80.4 million in 2024 dollars[3])
ArchitectPopulous
Project managerHuber, Hunt & Nichols[1]
Structural engineerAdvanced Structural Design, Inc.[4]
Services engineerBredson & Associates, Inc.[5]
General contractorMauldin-Dorfmeier[1]
Tenants
Fresno Grizzlies (PCL/Low-A West/CL) 2002–present
Fresno FC (USLC) 2018–2019
Fresno FC U-23 (USL2) 2006–2018
Fresno FC Ladies (WPSL) 2015–2018
Website
fresnogrizzlies.com
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History

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Perspective

Upon the 1998 arrival of the Grizzlies minor league baseball team in Fresno, a group of developers proposed building a stadium in downtown Fresno as a permanent home for the club.[6] There was extensive debate over how much money the City of Fresno would contribute to the project. Ultimately the stadium was built entirely with public money and then leased back to the owners of the Grizzlies for 30 years at $1.5 million per year.[7]

The stadium was designed by Populous, the firm responsible for many of today's sports stadiums like Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Petco Park, Comerica Park and Oracle Park in San Francisco. The $46 million facility seats 10,650, with left field dimensions of 324 ft (99 m); center field, 400 ft (120 m); and right field, 335 ft (102 m). The ballpark features 600 club seats and 32 luxury suites[8]

In September 2006, Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino, affiliated with the Chukchansi tribe, announced it would be the premier corporate sponsor for Grizzlies Stadium, in a 15-year, US$16 million deal.

In August 2011, the stadium served as a filming location for Parental Guidance. During the game, Billy Crystal threw out the first pitch in character and later appeared on the Grizzlies radio broadcast for an inning.[9][10][11]

One of the stadium's most popular events is an annual "taco truck throwdown" where food trucks compete for best taco according to the event's judges. Based on the event, the team designed and wore taco-oriented jerseys.[12]

Attendance records

The stadium's attendance record was set on July 10, 2015 when Chukchansi Park hosted an exhibition soccer game between Mexican soccer clubs Chivas and Atlas, in front of 16,824 fans.[13] The stadium's second attendance record was set on June 27, 2012 when Chukchansi Park hosted an exhibition soccer game between Mexican soccer clubs América and Chiapas of the Primera División, in front of a crowd of 16,125 fans;[14] breaking the previous record set on March 26, 2008 when the Grizzlies played their parent club, the San Francisco Giants, in an exhibition game in front of 14,084 fans.[15]

On March 27, 2015, Liga MX teams Cruz Azul and León faced off an international friendly match in front of a crowd of 15,087 spectators, the third largest crowd recorded at Chukchansi Park.[16]

On May 11, 2012, the Grizzlies fell to the Iowa Cubs in front of 14,023 fans, which is the largest regular season crowd in franchise history.[17]

Boxing events

See also

References

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