Schoonover Stadium

Coordinates: 41°08′08″N 81°20′34″W / 41.135646°N 81.342913°W / 41.135646; -81.342913
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Schoonover Stadium
Schoonover Stadium is located in Ohio
Schoonover Stadium
Schoonover Stadium
Location in Ohio
Schoonover Stadium is located in the United States
Schoonover Stadium
Schoonover Stadium
Location in United States
Full nameOlga Mural Field at Schoonover Stadium
Former namesGene Michael Field (1990–2003)
Location1544 Campus Center Drive
Kent, Ohio, 44242
United States
Coordinates41°08′08″N 81°20′34″W / 41.135646°N 81.342913°W / 41.135646; -81.342913
OwnerKent State University
OperatorKent State University
Capacity1,148
SurfaceShaw Sports Turf
ScoreboardElectronic
Construction
Opened1966
Renovated2005
Construction cost$3,000,000
Tenants
Kent State Golden Flashes (NCAA)
(1966–present)

Olga Mural Field at Schoonover Stadium is a baseball venue located on the campus of Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, United States. It is home to the Kent State Golden Flashes baseball team, a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in Division I and the Mid-American Conference East Division. The field opened in 1966 and was previously known as Gene Michael Field from 1990 to 2003. The field was renamed in late 2003 and renovated in 2005 with additional upgrades made from 2006 through 2008 and again in 2013 to 2014. It has a seating capacity of 1,148 people with a Shaw Sports Turf synthetic playing surface.

History[edit]

Main seating area in 2010

The Golden Flashes have played at the current site of Schoonover Stadium since 1966. It is the fourth location to serve as the team's home field since the team was founded in 1914. After playing their first few seasons at a makeshift field at the bottom of the hill on the original campus, the team played at Rockwell Field from 1920 to 1941, then the southeastern edge of campus. Rockwell Field was also shared with the football and track teams. In 1942, the team moved to a new field along Summit Street that was part of a Works Progress Administration project that also included an adjacent football field surrounded by a cinder track, later known as Memorial Stadium. This baseball field, often referred to just as the "varsity baseball field" served as home to the Flashes until 1960, when the site was needed for construction of a new academic building, later named Bowman Hall.[1] A new field, located on the opposite end of Memorial Stadium from the previous field, opened in 1961, and was often referred to as Memorial Field or "Memorial baseball field". While at Memorial Field, in 1964, the team qualified for its first NCAA tournament and hosted the eventual national champion Minnesota Golden Gophers in the district round of the 1964 NCAA University Division baseball tournament.[2] Memorial Field served as the Flashes' home field through the 1965 season when that site was needed for construction of the university's new 12-story library and a science classroom building later named Williams Hall.

The first game at the current baseball field, which had no official name, was May 3, 1966 against the Ohio State Buckeyes.[3] Initial plans called for the new field to be adjacent to a new football stadium, but the stadium would later be built at a different site further east as Dix Stadium.[4] By 1969, the new varsity baseball field was referred to as Allerton Field as Allerton Street was nearest street at the time of the field's construction. It was a natural grass field with wooden bleacher seating for approximately 700 people. After the conclusion of the 1989 season, a grandstand was added behind home plate, replacing the original wooden bleachers and increasing the seating capacity to approximately 1,000. The project also included a press box, new concession stand, a warning track on the field, a new outfield fence, and updates to the infield, completed prior to the 1990 season.[5] In September 1989, the university named the field in honor of Kent State alumnus Gene Michael, who played and managed professionally in Major League Baseball.[6] It was formally dedicated April 23, 1990.[7]

The Schoonover Foundation donated US$1.53 million to the university in November 2003 and the stadium was renamed for 1949 KSU alumnus Harold "Hal" Schoonover and his wife Julie.[8] The initial donation helped fund a $3 million project that included new dugouts and bullpens, upgrades in seating, a drainage system and artificial FieldTurf playing surface, restroom facilities, and outfield fencing. The renovations were completed in 2005. The first game at the renovated and updated stadium was on April 1, 2005, with Kent State losing to Ohio 6–2 in front of 476 fans.[9][10]

Area philanthropist Olga Mural donated $1 million towards further renovations to the ballpark in 2006 and the playing field at Schoonover Stadium was named after her in recognition of the contribution. With Mural's donation, a new locker room and players' lounge was built and chairback seating was added to the grandstand in 2007. Additional upgrades including a new scoreboard were installed in 2008.[11]

Facilities[edit]

The field is located on the southern edge of the Kent State campus, at the corner of Campus Center Drive and Ohio State Route 261. Adjacent to the field is the Allerton Softball Complex, a set of four intramural softball fields. Immediately north of the field is the indoor practice facility for both the baseball and softball teams, which was built in 2014. Plans call for construction of a new varsity softball field adjacent to the hitting facility as well as upgrades to the seating areas at Schoonover Stadium.[12]

In 2005, the playing surface was changed to FieldTurf, after having previously been natural grass. The FieldTurf was replaced in 2015 by Shaw Sports Turf. After the team's appearance in the 2012 College World Series, permanent lighting was added to the stadium in time for the 2013 season opener.[11]

Panorama in 2015

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Accept Bids On Planned Classrooms". Daily Kent Stater. January 13, 1961. p. 1.
  2. ^ "Kent Employees Groom Flash Park For Invasion of Gophers on Friday". Daily Kent Stater. April 28, 1964. p. 4.
  3. ^ "Fighting Irish Trip Kent". Daily Kent Stater. May 3, 1966. p. 4.
  4. ^ "Growing Campus May Produce New Stadium, Library". Kent State University Summer News. August 11, 1964. p. 1.
  5. ^ Kennedy, Gregory James (July 19, 1989). "KSU baseball fans will sit pretty in 1990". The Summer Kent Stater. p. 6. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  6. ^ "Sports Briefs". Daily Kent Stater. September 14, 1989. p. 10. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  7. ^ "Michael, Gene, Dedication of Gene Michael Field". Centennial Collection. Kent State University Special Collections and Archives. April 23, 1990. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
  8. ^ Harrington, Joe & Russ, Jeff (January 16, 2008). "Former baseball player, stadium namesake dies". KentWired.com. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
  9. ^ Peters, Matt (April 4, 2005). "New field highlights Schoonover's debut". KentWired.com. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
  10. ^ Harris, Colin (March 28, 2005). "Schoonover on deck as renovated park". KentWired.com. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
  11. ^ a b "Schoonover Stadium". KentStateSports.com. 2014. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
  12. ^ "Schoonover Complex". KSUBuildingChampions.com. Kent State University. 2014. Retrieved May 12, 2014.