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Kentucky Proud Park is a baseball stadium in Lexington, Kentucky. It is the home field of the University of Kentucky Wildcats college baseball team. The stadium opened in 2018, with the Wildcats playing their first season there in 2019. It has 2,500 fixed seats, with grass berm seating adding an additional 1,500-plus to the total capacity.
Cliff Hagan Stadium or better known to Kentucky Wildcat baseball fans as "The Cliff" is on the southwest side of the university's campus, two blocks away from Kroger Field. Since its opening in 1969, the University of Kentucky Baseball called this place home for just under 50 years. The Wildcats then opened a $49 million baseball stadium called ...
The Wildcats played their home games on campus at Cliff Hagan Stadium from 1969 through 2018.On October 21, 2016, Kentucky announced plans to build a new stadium, with fixed seating for 2,400, additional grass berm seating for a permanent capacity of 4,000, and the capability to add temporary seating to raise capacity to as much as 7,000.
Saturday night’s 10-0 smackdown of the proud baseball Beavers of Oregon State put the Kentucky Wildcats one victory away from history.. By now, you know what kind of history we’re talking about.
Kentucky baseball is headed to the College World Series for the first time in program history.. The No. 2 seed Wildcats finished a sweep of No. 15 seed Oregon State with a 3-2 win in front of a ...
It would be close to impossible to quantify the total impact of Kentucky baseball’s first College World Series appearance, but it does have at least one tangible reward.. UK coach Nick Mingione ...
Kroger Field. / 38.02278°N 84.50528°W / 38.02278; -84.50528. Kroger Field, also known as Commonwealth Stadium, is a stadium in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, located on the campus of the University of Kentucky that primarily serves as the home field for the Kentucky Wildcats football team. The stadium is located at the corner of ...
A $49 million ballpark and a sellout for NCAA super regional home games are a long way from the UK program’s often-spare past. Ex-UK coach Keith Madison marvels at what Kentucky baseball is becoming