Charles Schwab Field Omaha

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Charles Schwab Field Omaha
"The Chuck"
Charles Schwab Field Omaha logo.png
TD Ameritrade Park Omaha1.jpg
The field in July 2012 when it was still called TD Ameritrade Park Omaha.
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Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Location within Nebraska
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Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Charles Schwab Field Omaha (the United States)
Former namesTD Ameritrade Park Omaha (2011–2022)
Location1200 Mike Fahey Street
Omaha, Nebraska,
Coordinates 41°16′01″N95°55′55″W / 41.267°N 95.932°W / 41.267; -95.932
Owner City of Omaha
OperatorMetropolitan Entertainment and Convention Authority
Capacity 24,505 (expandable to 35,000)
Record attendance28,846   (June 18, 2015)
(LSU vs. TCU) [1]
Field sizeLeft Line – 335 ft (102 m)
Left Center – 375 ft (114 m)
Center Field – 408 ft (124 m)
Right Center – 375 ft (114 m)
Right Line – 335 ft (102 m) [1]
Surface Kentucky Bluegrass
Scoreboard34x54=$5.29 million (281 trillion colors)
Construction
Broke groundJanuary 21, 2009 [2]
OpenedApril 18, 2011 (Open House)
Construction costUS$131 million
($170 million in 2022 dollars [3] )
Architect HDR Inc.
DLR Group
Populous
General contractor Kiewit Corporation
Main contractorsNemaha Sports - Field Contractor/Construction
Tenants
Men's College World Series (NCAA) (2011–present)
Creighton Bluejays (NCAA) (2011−present)
Omaha Nighthawks (UFL) (2011−2012)
Omaha Mammoths (FXFL) (2014)
Website
http://www.charlesschwabfieldomaha.com/

Charles Schwab Field Omaha [4] (formerly TD Ameritrade Park Omaha) is a baseball park in Omaha, Nebraska. Opened in 2011, the stadium serves as a replacement for historic Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium.

Contents

Charles Schwab Field has a seating capacity of 24,000, with the ability to expand to 35,000 spectators. [5] The ballpark was expected to cost US$128 million [6] to construct and is located near the CHI Health Center Omaha. The park turned a profit of $5.6 million in its first year of operation, easily covering its debt payments. [7]

It is the home field of the Creighton University Bluejays baseball team, and the host venue of the Men's College World Series (MCWS)—the final rounds of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The MCWS [lower-alpha 1] has been held in Omaha since 1950, and will continue to be hosted there through at least 2035. The Big Ten Conference has also held its baseball tournament at the venue, first in 2014 and 2016, and from 2018 onwards. Attempts were made to bring a professional baseball team to the field, but legal troubles prevented this. [8] The local International League franchise, the Omaha Storm Chasers (formerly Royals), opted for a smaller capacity venue at the new Werner Park, west of Papillion. In 2021, Charles Schwab announced it would be retaining the naming rights to the park following their acquisition of TD Ameritrade in 2020; the TD Ameritrade Park Omaha was subsequently renamed the Charles Schwab Field Omaha.

History

Steel structure being added; March 2010 Wiki photos 079d.jpg
Steel structure being added; March 2010

Groundbreaking for TD Ameritrade Park occurred January 21, 2009. [6] It was announced on June 8, 2009, that TD Ameritrade, a company based in Omaha, will carry the naming rights for the new stadium. [9] The official announcement came from TD Ameritrade's Chief Executive Officer Fred Tomczyk on June 10, 2009. [10]

On April 15, 2010, it was announced that the Omaha Nighthawks, the local franchise in the United Football League, would play their first season in Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium and then move to TD Ameritrade for 2011 and beyond. The football gridiron was laid along a line extending from home plate down the first base line into right field. [11] The United Football League suspended all play midway though its 2012 season and then dissolved afterwards, marking the end of professional football at TD Ameritrade Park.

In December 2010, it was announced that Omaha would host a six-day multi-genre music festival in July called Red Sky Music Festival. Concerts were to be held all day in the parking lots of CenturyLink Center and TD Ameritrade Park. Each night there was to be a main concert held inside TD Ameritrade Park and CenturyLink Center. The festival lasted just two years, 2011 and 2012. [12]

The original Hammond organ from Rosenblatt Stadium has been restored and is used during games at Charles Schwab Field, although musician Lambert Bartak (retired after the 2010 CWS, died in 2013) would not be the organist. [13]

On February 9, 2013, the ballpark hosted outdoor ice hockey at the "Mutual of Omaha Battles on Ice." The first game featured the junior Omaha Lancers and the Lincoln Stars of the USHL. The second game was a collegiate matchup between the Nebraska–Omaha Mavericks (now branded as the Omaha Mavericks) and the University of North Dakota, both then of the WCHA. [lower-alpha 2]

In May 2014, it was announced that a franchise in the new Fall Experimental Football League, called the Omaha Mammoths, would play their home games at TD Ameritrade Park beginning in October. [14] The Mammoths would only play one shortened season in Omaha.

In 2014 and 2016, TD Ameritrade Park hosted the Big Ten Conference's baseball championship. A four-year contract was soon reached to hold the tournament there from 2018 through 2022. [15]

On June 21, 2018, Major League Baseball announced that a regular season game between the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers would be played at TD Ameritrade Park on June 13, 2019, ahead of the 2019 College World Series. [16] The Royals won the MLB in Omaha game 7–3 with 25,454 people in attendance. [17] [18]

First game

MVC Tournament; May 2011 MVC Tournament at TD Ameritrade Park.jpg
MVC Tournament; May 2011

The first regular season college baseball game was played on April 19, 2011, between the Nebraska Cornhuskers and host Creighton Bluejays. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown out by TD Ameritrade CEO Fred Tomczyk. It was a game of many firsts for the park including first balk and first hamster races. The Cornhuskers won 2–1 in front of a paid attendance of just over 22,000 (a sellout) and a scanned attendance of just over 18,000, making it the most attended game of the collegiate regular season. [19]

During its first season, the Missouri Valley Conference baseball tournament was held at the ballpark in late May, the third time Creighton had hosted the event. [20]

First Men's College World Series

TD Ameritrade Park hosted its first MCWS (then branded simply as CWS) in June 2011. Participants were South Carolina Gamecocks, Florida Gators, Vanderbilt Commodores, Virginia Cavaliers, North Carolina Tar Heels, California Golden Bears, Texas A&M Aggies, and Texas Longhorns.

Before the opening game of the CWS between Vanderbilt and North Carolina on Saturday, June 18, the ceremonial first pitch was delivered by former President George W. Bush. Omaha Little Leaguer Henry Slagle had the honor of handing the ball to President Bush as his Memorial Park Little League team greeted the former president on the field. Before the pitch, his father, former President George H. W. Bush, who played for Yale in the first CWS in 1947, delivered a video message christening the new facility. Omaha's own Gene Klosner sang the stadium's first CWS national anthem prior to the game. Attendance for the first game was set at 22,745, standing room only, fans. The first CWS pitch at the new park was thrown by UNC's Patrick Johnson to Vanderbilt's Tony Kemp at exactly 1:11 PM Central Daylight Time. Vanderbilt's Connor Harrell hit the first CWS home run in the park in the sixth inning of the game, a two-run blast over the left field wall, as the Commodores went on to beat North Carolina 7–3.

The first CWS finals in the new ballpark began on Monday, June 27, at 7 PM between the South Carolina Gamecocks and their SEC Eastern Division Rivals, the Florida Gators, in front of 25,851 fans.

Other worthy notes about the park's first CWS were the Southeastern Conference's Eastern Division South Carolina, Florida and Vanderbilt completing a podium clean sweep, and the 2011 CWS All-Tournament Team being comprised completely of players from the SEC East.

This was also the first year in which the new BBCOR Composite baseball bat (Batted Ball Coefficient of Restitution) standard was ushered-in. Meant to reduce the speed of the ball off the bat while lessening the potential for injury to players, particularly pitchers. The new bat also proved to negate the long ball which has caused critics to claim that the new park is too large for the toned-down bats and makes the exciting home run ball a thing of the past in the CWS. Also, pitchers were held to a strict 25 second clock between pitches for the first time in the history of the College World Series. The pitch clock was instituted in an effort to shorten the games. In 2011, the average total session (game) time was 3:10 with the longest game at 4:25, the shortest at 2:38, the Championship game at 3:21 and only one of the 14 sessions took over four hours to complete.

Attendance

Entrance; May 2011 Enterance to TD Ameritrade Park.jpg
Entrance; May 2011

College World Series

The 2011 CWS, the first played at TD Ameritrade Park, consisted of 14 sessions with a total attendance of 321,684 for an average session attendance of 22,977. The 2011 total was both the highest since 2005 and 2,294 spectators more than the 2010 per-game average of 20,683. [21] [22]

In 2022, the first year in which the word "Men's" was added to the CWS branding, Ole Miss took home the Men's College World Series title after sweeping Oklahoma in the finals. The ballpark saw new records set for attendance as the 2022 MCWS set a new attendance record with 366,105 fans over 15 games in Omaha. That past the record of 361,711 fans set in 2021. Sunday's final saw 25,972 fans, which was 1,467 over stadium capacity and the biggest crowd in a MCWS finals game since 2017. [23]

The attendance record for the MCWS was broken again, for the third consecutive year, in 2023 as the event drew a total of 392,646 fans, an average of 24,559 per game. Both of those numbers are the best in the 73 year history of the event. This was in large part due to good weather (only one game had a weather delay) and the eventual champion, the LSU Tigers, playing in eight of the sixteen games. The total attendance in Omaha for CWS events has surpassed 11 million now, and stands at 11,719,319. [24]

Charles Schwab Field is becoming well known for its lack of home runs leading to the idea that teams must play small ball to win. [25] Nevertheless, KJ Harrison from Oregon State hit a grand slam—the first ever in the ballpark during the MCWS—to deep left-center field in June 2017, during a 13–1 win over Louisiana State University. The first grand slam in Charles Schwab Field was hit by Creighton in a game against Utah Valley. [26]

Creighton

In 2013, Creighton ranked tenth among Division I baseball programs in attendance, averaging 4,041 per game. [27]

Omaha Nighthawks

The Omaha Nighthawks competed in TD Ameritrade Park in the former United Football League. The highest attendance for a Nighthawks game at TD Ameritrade Park was 17,697, for the October 15, 2011 game against the Las Vegas Locomotives. The lowest attendance, almost exactly a year later on October 17, 2012, was 2,234, with the Locomotives also the opponent. [28]

Big Ten Conference tournament

The first Big Ten Conference baseball tournament to be played at TD Ameritrade Park was held in 2014. The championship game of that tournament was attended by 19,965 spectators, which remains a record for single-day attendance at an NCAA conference tournament game. [29] The Indiana Hoosiers defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 8–4, to claim the Big Ten title. The tournament was once again hosted at TD Ameritrade Park in 2016. Beginning in 2018, the Big Ten Conference arranged for TD Ameritrade Park to host its tournament every season until 2022. [30]

Over 17,000 spectators filled TD Ameritrade to witness Ohio State defeat Nebraska and claim the 2019 Big Ten Tournament championship B1GBaseballChampionshipGame2019.jpg
Over 17,000 spectators filled TD Ameritrade to witness Ohio State defeat Nebraska and claim the 2019 Big Ten Tournament championship

See also

Footnotes

  1. The event's official name has been "NCAA Men's College World Series" since no later than 2008. However, the NCAA did not consistently use the word "Men's" in the event branding until 2022.
  2. Both Omaha and North Dakota now play in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">College World Series</span> Annual college baseball tournament held in Omaha, Nebraska

The College World Series (CWS), officially the NCAA Men's College World Series (MCWS), is a baseball tournament held each June in Omaha, Nebraska. The MCWS is the culmination of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Baseball Championship tournament—featuring 64 teams in the first round—which determines the NCAA Division I college baseball champion. The eight participating teams are split into two, four-team, double-elimination brackets, with the winners of each bracket playing in a best-of-three championship series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium</span> Defunct baseball park in Omaha, Nebraska

Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium was a baseball stadium in Omaha, Nebraska, the former home to the annual NCAA Division I College World Series and the minor league Omaha Royals, now known as the Omaha Storm Chasers. Rosenblatt Stadium was the largest minor league baseball stadium in the United States until its demolition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Creighton Bluejays</span> Intercollegiate athletics teams of Creighton University

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">TD Ameritrade</span> American online broker

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lambert Bartak</span> Baseball stadium organist (1919–2013)

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Morrison Stadium</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball</span> NCAA Division I college baseball team

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Creighton Bluejays baseball</span> Baseball team representing Creighton University

The Creighton Bluejays baseball team represents the Creighton University in NCAA Division I college baseball. Creighton competes as a member of the Big East Conference and plays its home games at Charles Schwab Field Omaha. Creighton's baseball team played its first Big East season in 2014. They are coached by Ed Servais.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Werner Park</span> Baseball park in Omaha, United States

Werner Park is a minor league ballpark located just west of Papillion, Nebraska, a suburb in Sarpy County southwest of Omaha. Opened in 2011, it is owned by Sarpy County. It is the home of the Omaha Storm Chasers and USL League One professional soccer club Union Omaha. The Omaha Mavericks of the University of Nebraska Omaha also use the stadium for some home college baseball games.

The 2011 NCAA Division I baseball tournament began on Friday, June 3, 2011 as part of the 2011 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64 team double elimination tournament concluded with the 2011 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, on June 29, 2011.

The 2013 NCAA Division I baseball tournament began on Friday, May 31, 2013, as part of the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64 team double elimination tournament concluded with the 2013 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which began on June 15 and ended with the final round on June 25. The UCLA Bruins swept the Mississippi State Bulldogs in a best-of-three series to win the NCAA National Championship, the university's first in baseball and the 109th national title in all sports.

The 2017 NCAA Division I baseball tournament began on June 1, 2017, as part of the 2017 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64-team, double-elimination tournament concluded with the 2017 College World Series (CWS) in Omaha, Nebraska. The CWS started on June 17 and ended on June 27.

The 2019 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was a tournament of 64-teams to determine the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I national champion for the 2019 season. The 73rd annual edition of the tournament began on May 31, 2019, and concluded with the 2019 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which started on June 15 and ended on June 26.

The 2021 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was the 74th edition of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The 64-team tournament began on Friday, June 4, 2021, as part of the 2021 NCAA Division I baseball season and concluded with the 2021 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which started on June 19 and ended on June 30. Mississippi State defeated Vanderbilt in the best-of-three final series to win their first national championship in program history.

The 2021 College World Series was the final stage of the 2021 NCAA Division I baseball tournament held from June 19–30 at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha. This marked the 74th edition of the College World Series and 71st time the event is being held in Omaha, Nebraska, after the 2020 tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

The 2022 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was the 75th edition of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The 64-team tournament began on Friday, June 3 as part of the 2022 NCAA Division I baseball season and concluded with the 2022 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which started on June 17 and ended on June 27. Ole Miss swept Oklahoma to win their first national championship in program history.

References

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