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 | Kauffman Stadium 1 Royal Way Kansas City, MO 64129
The Kauffman Stadium is the home of the Kansas City Royals MLB franchise team. The building has hosted major conventions, religious convocations, elaborate trade shows and exhibitions and touring entertainment acts as varied as rock concerts, supercross, motocross races and monster truck rallies. | The stadium opened on April 10, 1973 and hosted the All-Star Game the same year. Nolan Ryan pitched the first no-hitter of his career there on May 15, 1973. Since then, two other no-hitters have been thrown in Kauffman Stadium, both by Royals pitchers. Jim Colborn against the Texas Rangers on May 14, 1977, and Bret Saberhagen beat the Chicago White Sox on August 26, 1991. Dan Quisenberry, Dennis Leonard, Freddie Patek, Cookie Rojas and Amos Otis have all left their mark on Kauffman Stadium, but it will forever be linked to George Brett, one of the greatest hitters in baseball history.
Trivia:
A 12-story high scoreboard towers above the outfield.
Waterfalls and fountains run for 322 feet on the embankment overlooking right-center.
Best visibility for hitters in the majors.
Few homers are hit here because alleys are deep and the fence cuts away sharply from the 330-foot foul poles.
Royals 1985 World Series cup and other trophies are on display through the sixth inning of each game at Section 107.
Retired uniform numbers of Dick Howser (10), George Brett (5) and Frank White (20) are displayed on the base of the scoreboard.
Upper-deck fans near foul poles are in relative darkness.
Tenant: Kansas City Royals
Capacity: 40,793
Surface: Grass
Opened: April 10, 1973
Cost: $43 Million
Dimensions: 330-L, 375-LC, 400-C, 375-RC, 330-R
Architect: HOK | The Kansas City Royals play their home games at Kauffman Stadium. here are a few facts regarding the stadium that the Kansas City Royals call their home:
Ewing Kauffman bought the expansion Kansas City Royals in 1968 and brought the team into the American League’s smallest market. It became one of the most successful franchises in baseball. The Royals have won six division championships, two American League pennants, and one World Series and have drawn more than 2 million fans 11 times in this ballpark. After being known as Royals Stadium for 21 years, the park was renamed Kauffman Stadium on July 2, 1993. A month later the only owner the team had ever had died at the age of 76.
Part of a sports complex that includes Arrowhead Stadium (home of the NFL Chiefs), Kauffman Stadium is one of the most fan-friendly arenas in professional sports. Beyond the fence in right field is a 322-foot-wide fountain, the largest privately funded waterworks in the world, that features lighted cascades between innings. Beyond the fence in left field is a 30-by-40 foot Sony JumboTron video display board that was the largest in the United States when installed in 1990. Of the stadium’s 40,625 seats, over half (20,316) are on the lower level of the three-tiered park. In 1995 the Royals replaced their Astroturf field with natural grass. During 1999 and 2000 the team replaced all of the old red seats with dark blue seats. They also added dugout suites, the Crown Club and the Royal Pavilion.
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