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#3
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
The deepest park seems to be Red Rock Stadium (a minor league park). Center field is a whopping 450ft and the side walls are 340-370ft.
The deepest MLB park seems to be Minute Maid with a 435 center wall. But the right and left field walls are extremely short so its easy to hit homers there. Wrigley Field has the longest side walls (355-400-353)
Shortest is tougher to judge because most small stadiums have a short wall and then a long wall.
Fenway is the shortest MLB stadium. The left field wall is only 310 (although the wall is one of the tallest in baseball) and the right field wall near the foul pole is only 302ft.
Yankee Stadium was confirmed by the devs to be the easiest stadium to get homers in. Coors is easy to hit homers, despite the walls, because of the altitude. Oriole Park is pretty small (333-410-318).Last edited by takki; 05-17-2015, 05:53 PM.Comment
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#4
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
if you're a decent hitter fenway is cheese doubles off the green monster like its a routine popupComment
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#5
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
I play 90% of my home games at Fenway but that's mostly bc I'm a Red Sox fan. I don't mind hitting the wall scraping doubles or triples when someone doesn't play the ball right but that can go both ways sometimes.Comment
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#6
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
Main street park. I hit seven homers last night at that park. Right center is like 340 or something ridiculous.Comment
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#7
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
I think the porch is programmed to suppress offense. The walls are far, but I think it also suppresses all hits in general.
The old Marlins park is massive.Comment
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#8
Re: Stadiums
Re: Stadiums
I've been playing in Oak Street Park. I think it's great for hitters. The dimensions down the line are short and there's almost no foul territory. Ballpark DimensionsComment

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