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MINOR LEAGUE

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MEMORABLE MOMENTS AT TROPICANA FIELD

Wade Boggs' 3,000 hit on August 7, 1999.

Franchise 34 homeruns by
Jose Canseco in 1999.

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View from left field. View from down the third base grandstand. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo View from the upper deck. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo View from left field. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo View from right field. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo Picture: Anthony LorenzoTropicana Field
St. Petersburg, FL

Nearly a decade after its completion Tampa Bay finally was awarded a baseball team to play at Tropicana Field in 1998. Wanting to attract a major league baseball team to the area, construction began on a dome stadium in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area on November 22, 1986. A dome stadium was chosen because of the rain that the area receives throughout the year. Originally named the Florida Suncoast Dome, the stadium opened on March 3, 1990. Once the stadium opened officials began trying to lure several teams (San Francisco, Chicago, and Seattle) to the area. However this was unsuccessful. Although the stadium did not have a baseball team it was used for basketball, hockey and many other events. Finally in 1995 Major League Baseball awarded the area a franchise. The team called the Tampa Bay Rays would begin playing at the dome in 1998. Although the stadium had originally been built for baseball, the organization decided to renovate the stadium to make it more like a ballpark. It was the last stadium built with a dome and looks similar to a cookie cutter stadium. The stadium was closed for 17 months while it was renovated. In 1996 the stadium was renamed Tropicana Field after Tropicana Juice purchased the naming rights. Part of the $85 million renovations included wider concourses, installation of Astroturf, clubhouses, dugouts, additional luxury suites, restrooms, elevators, escalators and administrative offices. The seating capacity was reduced from 48,000 to 45,000.

The Tampa Bay Rays played their first game on March 31, 1998 when fans filled Tropicana Field to see professional baseball for the first time. Fans enter the main entrance of Tropicana Field through a giant rotunda reminiscent of Brooklyn's Ebbets Field. Once inside the stadium, visitors find themselves in a place called Centerfield Street. Here are a microbrewery, a cigar bar, a wine cellar and various entertainment venues. Once fans enter the field area, they view a sea of blue seats. The lower level of seats extend from right center field to homeplate and around to left center field. The upper level of seats extend down the base lines. An area of seats above the lower level in left field is a place called the Beach. This is a section with beach decor and tropical foliage. Tropicana Field's outfield wall has many nooks and crannies that provides interesting plays off the wall. Beyond the centerfield wall is the Batter’s Eye Restaurant. The main scoreboard is located beyond the right centerfield seats. After the 1999 season, the Astroturf was removed and replaced by Field Turf, a plastic grass. In November 2007, news of a new ballpark for the Tampa Bay Rays became public. If constructed, the new Rays Ballpark would be built in downtown St. Petersburg.

 
 

Tropicana Field Facts, Information & Pictures

  • Tenant: Tampa Bay Rays
  • Capacity: 43,772
  • Surface: Fieldturf
  • Cost: $138 Million (original) $85 Million (renovations)
  • Opened: March 31, 1998 (MLB)
  • Dimensions: 315-L, 404-C, 322-R
  • Architect: DLR Group Sports
  • Owner: City of St. Petersburg
  • Former Name(s): Suncoast Dome (1986-'93), Thunderdome (1993-'97)
  • Naming Rights: Tropicana Juice, $1.5 million through 2019

Tropican Field in 1998. Submitted by Dan Davis. View from the first base grandstand. View from the "Beach" Tropicana sign. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo Looking toward left field. Picture: Anthony Lorenzo
 Click to Enlarge Pictures/Some Pictures Courtesy of Anthony Lorenzo

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Tropicana Field and the Tampa Bay Rays By the Numbers

  Total Attendance MLB Rank Average Attendance per Game MLB Rank Team Wins Average Ticket Price MLB Rank
2007 1,389,106 29 17,149 29 66 17.23 23
2006 1,369,031 29 16,902 29 61 17.09 24
2005 1,124,189 30 13,879 30 67 13.70 30
2004 1,257,011 29 15,741 29 70 16.82 26
2003 1,058,695 29 13,070 29 63 14.49 26

Attendance Figures 1890-2007

 

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