Search results
- Philip Sledge
- Kevin Costner Was The Initial Choice For Ray Kinsella But The Producers Were Told It Wouldn’t Work. It is hard to imagine anyone taking on the role of Ray Kinsella than Kevin Costner, and director Phil Alden Robinson and producers Lawrence and Charles Gordon knew that from the very beginning.
- The Fog During Shoeless Joe Jackson’s First Visit Wasn’t A Special Effect. The scene in which Shoeless Joe Jackson (Ray Liotta) first appears in Field of Dreams is one of the most beautifully shot in the entire movie, and after the film was released, producer Charles Gordon received all sorts of calls asking who created the foggy effect that added a dreamlike quality to the scene.
- Ray Liotta Actually Hit The Comebacker That Nearly Wiped out Kevin Costner. To prepare for the role of one of the most fearsome hitters of in baseball history, Ray Liotta underwent extensive training ahead of the filming of Field of Dreams, and even though his batting stance wasn’t historically accurate (Shoeless Joe batted left-handed, Liotta batted right-handed), he actually developed a nice swing and presence at the plate.
- Kevin Costner Is A Great Athlete And Even Hit The Famed ‘Green Monster’ At Fenway Park During Filming. There are multiple Kevin Costner movies where he either plays an aged and rugged professional baseball player or down-on-his-luck yet talented golfer, but this isn’t a case where an actor is only pretending to be an athlete.
- What Is Center field?
- What Was The Longest Centerfield Fence in MLB History?
- What Is The Second Longest Centerfield Fence in MLB History?
- What Is The Longest Current Centerfield Fence?
- Who Has Hit Home Runs Over Centerfield at The Polo Grounds?
Center field is the middle area of the outfield and is almost always the deepest part of a Major League baseball stadium. Outfield dimensions are usually shortest down the right field and left field foul lines, and they get longer toward the center of the field. There have been exceptions in some irregularly shaped stadiums, but hitting a ball over...
The Polo Grounds was the home of the New York Giants before they moved out of New York City and headed west to San Francisco after the 1957 season. The Giants played in the Polo Grounds from 1891 through 1957 but it was most notable for its horseshoe shape design. When the horseshoe-shaped stadium opened, it had a distance of 500 feet from home pla...
Yankee Stadium was baseball's first super stadium. After the Yankees acquired Babe Ruth from the Red Sox, the team decided to build its own stadium instead of sharing the Polo Grounds with the Giants. When Yankee Stadium opened in 1923, it had a gargantuan distance of 490 feet to center field. That distance was soon reduced to 461 feet and it remai...
When the Tigers moved into Comerica Park in 2000, it actually wasn't the longest ballpark in baseball. That title went to the Astros Minute Maid Park, which at the time featured a 436 foot long distance to dead center. However when Houston removed the hill in their outfield, it reduced the CF distance to 406 feet. Comerica Park, and its distance of...
Four players hit the ball over the fence in dead center field at the Polo Grounds. According to Baseball Almanac, Negro League slugger Luke Easter did it in 1948, Joe Adcock of the Milwaukee Braves accomplished the feat in 1953, Lou Brock of the Chicago Cubs did it in 1962 and Hank Aaron of the Braves also blasted the ball out in center field in 19...
Aug 5, 2021 · Baseball America magazine has ranked "Field of Dreams" as the second-best baseball movie ever made, behind only "Bull Durham." And the movie ranks No. 6 of all time on the American Film Institute ...
- Kyle Munson
- Iowa Columnist
- Dan Gartland
- Citizens Bank Park (Phillies) Measurements, in feet (L-R, dead center in bold): 329, 374, 409, 401, 369, 330. Philly has an outfield feature unlike any other park in baseball: a centerfield wall that’s dramatically shorter than the rest of the fences.
- Petco Park (Padres) Measurements, in feet (L-R, dead center in bold): 334, 357, 390, 396, 391, 382, 322. Petco Park has something no other stadium in baseball has.
- Globe Life Field (Rangers) Measurements, in feet (L-R, dead center in bold): 329, 372, 407, 374, 326. At first glance, there’s nothing noteworthy about the outfield at the new Rangers ballpark.
- Chase Field (Diamondbacks) Measurements, in feet (L-R, dead center in bold): 330, 374, 413, 407, 413, 374, 334. Oh, your team’s park has a high fence near one of the foul poles?
- Baker Bowl in Philadelphia | 1904-1938. ODDITY: Towering right field wall. The original wooden Baker Bowl, destroyed in an 1895 fire, was rebuilt with steel and brick.
- Forbes Field in Pittsburgh | 1909-1970. ODDITY: "Greenberg Gardens" and left-center field, which was 457 feet from home plate—one of the longer distances in MLB history.
- Polo Grounds in New York | 1911-1963. In the decisive Game 6 of the 1923 World Series, the Yankees beat the Giants at the Polo Grounds. ODDITY: Deep in center field (403 to 505 feet) but shallow and home run-friendly down the lines (276 feet in left and only 258 feet in right).
- Tiger Stadium in Detroit | 1912-1999. Tiger Stadium had many quirks, including a flagpole in center field, a few feet from the outfield wall. ODDITY: A right field seating area jutted 10 feet over the field and became the landing area for many home runs.
Jul 23, 2024 · Coors Field has the deepest outfield walls in MLB at 415 feet. Fenway Park's outfield walls are the closest at 390 feet. One of the most interesting differences between Major League Baseball and other professional sports is that in MLB, teams get to choose how their home field will be shaped. While there always has to be 90 feet between the ...
People also ask
Which baseball field has the deepest outfield walls?
Which MLB stadium has the farthest outfield wall?
How deep is a true center field?
What is the longest field in baseball?
Who blasted the ball out in center field?
What is the longest cf field in baseball?
100005739 [7] Wrigley Field / ˈrɪɡli / is a ballpark on the North Side of Chicago, Illinois. It is the home ballpark of Major League Baseball 's Chicago Cubs, one of the city's two MLB franchises. It first opened in 1914 as Weeghman Park for Charles Weeghman 's Chicago Whales of the Federal League, which folded after the 1915 baseball season ...