Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium

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Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium
The Blatt
Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium
Location 1202 Bert Murphy Ave.
Omaha, Nebraska 68107
Broke ground 1947
Opened 1948
Owner City of Omaha
Surface Grass
Former names Omaha Municipal Stadium
Tenants
Omaha Cardinals (WL/AA) (1949 - 1959)
Omaha Dodgers (1961 - 1962)
Omaha Royals (AA/PCL) (1969 - present)
team known as Omaha Golden Spikes (1999 - 2001)
Omaha Flames (1996-1998)
Capacity
23,145
Dimensions
Left Field - 332 feet (102 m)
Left-Center - 375 feet (114 m)
Center Field - 408 feet (124 m)
Right-Center - 375 feet (114 m)
Right Field - 335 feet (102 m)

Fence Height

Left and Right Fields - 8 feet (2.5 m)
Center Field - 10 feet (3 m)

Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium is a baseball stadium in Omaha, Nebraska. It serves as the home of both the minor league Omaha Royals and the annual NCAA Division I College World Series.

Contents

Omaha Municipal Stadium was built in 1947, ready to host the single-A Omaha Cardinals for the 1948 season. The St. Louis Cardinals farm team was the first professional baseball team to call Omaha its home. During the next few years Rosenblatt would see several different teams play there. In 1969, the Kansas City Royals decided to move their triple-A franchise here, and it plays in Rosenblatt to the present day.

In 1964, the stadium was renamed to honor former Omaha mayor Johnny Rosenblatt, who was instrumental in bringing professional baseball as well as the College World Series to Omaha.

Seasons Team League Class MLB Affiliate
1949-1954 Omaha Cardinals Western A St. Louis Cardinals
1955-1959 Omaha Cardinals Amer.Assn. AAA St. Louis
1969-present Omaha Royals AA/PCL AAA Kansas City Royals

Team moved into PCL in 1998 after AA folded.

Team was temporarily renamed "Omaha Golden Spikes" during 1999-2001.

Since 1950, Omaha and Rosenblatt Stadium have become home to one of the unique championships in the US. No other town is as closely identified with one championship event as is Omaha with the College World Series. Every year, over 250 baseball teams around the country begin the season with the dream of playing in "The Blatt". 64 teams reach the NCAA Tournament, and the final eight left standing get to pack their bags for 10 days in Omaha. Rosenblatt Stadium, along with the entire city of Omaha, has become somewhat of a Mecca for college baseball.

After the initial contract between the NCAA and the City of Omaha, the parties quickly agreed to renew. Since then, the event has been held in Rosenblatt Stadium every year, and likely will remain there.

The City of Omaha has put tremendous resources into the stadium to accommodate teams and fans. In 2001 alone, more than $7 million was spent on the stadium. One of the main features was the addition of 10,000 new seats, bringing the total capacity to 23,145.

The series has grown so much over the last 20 years that this number is actually needed to fulfill the high demand for tickets. In 2004, 28,216 fans watched as Cal State Fullerton defeated South Carolina 5-3. In 2002 the mark of 5,000,000 spectators in the history of the CWS in Omaha was reached.

In 1999 one of its more renowned features was added to the stadium. In front of the main entrance, the local event organizers, College World Series of Omaha, Inc., placed the sculpture "Road to Omaha". Created by the local artist John Lajba, the sculpture shows three players celebrating by lifting one of their teammates in the air.

The success of the CWS has been tremendous; however, the high capacity leaves the Royals struggling to fill it for its regular season games. There has been discussion of building a separate venue for the Royals, which may also be shared by Creighton University and/or the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Efforts to Save Rosenblatt Stadium

During the summer of 2007 a grassroots organization, called the Committee to Save Rosenblatt, has begun proactive efforts to save Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium for the College World Series. In opposition of the demise of Rosenblatt, the group is getting petition signatures, placing billboards, holding rallies and has an informational website (www.SaveRosenblatt.com) where the petition can be signed as well. Also, the committee leaders have begun communications with Omaha Mayor, Mike Fahey and NCAA Director of baseball and football, Dennis Poppe in hopes to express the desires of many Rosenblatt/CWS fans.

The Committee and its many petition signers (over 14,000 as of October 1, 2007) believe that Rosenblatt Stadium should be retained and enhanced. They say that the CWS event and the City of Omaha will be better served by one of the current proposals that calls for a remodeled Rosenblatt and a modified area around the stadium.

Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium is one of the few stadiums that still uses live music instead of prerecorded music[1]. Lambert Bartak, an organist for the Royals, holds the distinction of being the only organist ever ejected during a game[2].

Prior to remodeling for the 2002 season, the foul lines were 332 and the power alleys were 360. Centerfield was 408 as it is today.

  1. ^ Bohls, Kirk (2004-06-22). This player at CWS knows all the scores. Cox News Service. Retrieved on 2006-06-19.
  2. ^ Associated Press (1988-05-29). Organist Hits Wrong Note. Retrieved on 2006-06-19.


Current ballparks in the Pacific Coast League
American Conference Pacific Conference
AT&T Bricktown BallparkAutoZone ParkDell Diamond
Herschel Greer StadiumIsotopes ParkPrincipal Park
Johnny Rosenblatt StadiumZephyr Field
Cashman FieldCheney StadiumChukchansi Park
Franklin Covey FieldPGE ParkRaley Field
Security Service FieldTucson Electric Park

Coordinates: 41°13′32.1″N, 95°55′53.2″W

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