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List of baseball parks in Louisville, Kentucky. Louisville Slugger Field. Cardinal Stadium. Parkway Field. This is a list of venues used for professional and college baseball in Louisville, Kentucky. The information is a compilation of the information contained in the references listed. Louisville Baseball Park.
Louisville City FC ( USLC) 2015–2019. Louisville Slugger Field is a baseball stadium in Louisville, Kentucky. The baseball-specific stadium opened in 2000 with a seating capacity of 13,131. It is currently home to the professional baseball team, the Louisville Bats, Triple-A affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds. From 2015 to 2019, it was also ...
Renovated. 2013. Construction cost. $8,500,000 USD. Tenants. Louisville Cardinals. Jim Patterson Stadium is a baseball stadium in Louisville, Kentucky. It is the home field of the University of Louisville Cardinals college baseball team. Since opening in 2005, Jim Patterson Stadium has hosted nine NCAA regionals and six NCAA Super Regionals.
1958 Final Four. Kentucky 61, Temple 60 (national semifinal) Seattle 73, Kansas State 51 (national semifinal) Temple 67, Kansas State 57 (national third place) Kentucky 84, Seattle 72 (national championship) Inside Freedom Hall. 1959 Final Four. West Virginia 94, Louisville 79 (national semifinal)
Sports in Louisville, Kentucky include amateur and professional sports in baseball, football, basketball, horse racing, horse shows, ice hockey, soccer and lacrosse. The city of Louisville and the Louisville metropolitan area have a sporting history from the mid-19th century to the present day. Louisville Slugger Field, where the Louisville ...
July 7, 2024 at 9:48 AM. With the 2024 U.S. Olympic Track and Field trials completed, here are some athletes from Kentucky you can watch in the Paris Olympics: Alexis Holmes, University of ...
Louisville Cardinals baseball (NCAA) 1998–2004. Cardinal Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium in Louisville, Kentucky. It was on the grounds of the Kentucky Exposition Center, and was called Fairgrounds Stadium when it first opened for an NFL exhibition football game between the Baltimore Colts and Philadelphia Eagles on September 9, 1956. [1]
Louisville Cardinals ( NCAA) (1909–1912, 1920–1922) Eclipse Park was the name of three successive baseball grounds in Louisville, Kentucky in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. They were the home of the Louisville baseball team first known as the Louisville Eclipse and later as the Louisville Colonels . The unusual name for these ...