History:
This $215 million park was
originally designed to seat
43,800 but after Mile High
Stadium had experienced record
numbers in 1993-1994, Rockies
ownership paid to increase
the capacity to 50,200. Coors
opened in 1995 and is the
most difficult place to pitch
in baseball because of the
5,200 ft field elevation.
In 1999, Coors became the
most prolific offensive ballpark
ever created. The Rockies
and their opponents combined
for 303 homeruns which is
the most ever in a season
at one stadium with one or
more tenants. The longest
homerun ever in Coors field
was a 496ft bomb by Mike Piazza.
Coors field also hosted the
1998 All-Star game in which
the American League won 13-8.
Playing Field:
120,000 sq feet of sod that
covers the field is grown
at Graff Turf Farms in Fort
Morgan, Colo. It's a mixture
of four bluegrass and two
ryegrass strains. The playing
field has 45 miles of wire
that provides an underground
heating system which enables
groundskeepers to quickly
melt any snow accumulation.
Coors Field Firsts
Official Game - April 26,
1995(Colorado beat Mets, 11-9)
Pitch - Bill Swift to Brett
Butler at 5:38 P.M
Batter - Brett Butler
Hit - Brett Butler
Homerun - Rico Brogna
Grandslam - Todd Hundley
Stolen Base - Eric Young
Complete Game - Tom Glavine
Extra-Inning Game - April
26, 1995 vs New York Mets
(Bichette hit a 3-run homer
in the 14th)
2001
Attendance:
Home Games: 81
Total Attendance: 3,166,821
Percent Capacity: 77.9%
Rank (by Pct. Cap.): 10th
Per-Game Average: 39,096
Rank (by Average): 5th
2002
Attendance:
Home Games: 81
Total Attendance: 2,737,838
Percent Capacity: 67.3%
Rank (by Pct. Cap.): 12th
Per-Game Average: 33,800
Rank (by Average): 9th
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