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Ballpark Visit: James & Ann Dobbins Baseball Stadium NEW!
Posted March 26, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
Named for former player Jim Dobbins (1934-38) and his wife Ann, the home of the UC Davis Aggies was built in 1985 and is a relaxing, no-frills park in which to watch good quality college baseball. John Moist takes in an Aggies game.

Ballpark Visit: Clark-LeClair Stadium
Posted March 6, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
East Carolina has the pleasure of playing at Clark-LeClair Stadium, one of the better newer facilities in college baseball. Clark-LeClair was built at a cost of $11 million -- all from private donations raised by the ECU Educational Foundation. The magnitude of the place is immediately apparent as you approach the main gate, and once inside no aspect of the facility disappoints. Jim Robins takes in a Pirates game.

Ballpark Visit: Doak Field at Dail Park
Posted Feb. 27, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
It is always a fine thing when a college ballpark fits in just right with the scale and expectations of the baseball program it serves. This is particularly true when you look at Doak Field serving as home to the NCSU Wolfpack. Most years, NCSU features a handful of potential major leaguers on squads with an expectation to reach the NCAA Tournament (four straight years, 7 of past 10). The fit is right -- the rebuilt Doak Field at Dail Park is entirely worthy of the high-caliber Wolfpack program.

Academic reforms for baseball may be overturned NEW!
Posted May 15, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
Emergency legislation adopted last month by the NCAA Board of Directors to improve college baseball's academic record is facing opposition from member schools who might force an override of the reforms. That was the message Big 12 Commissioner Kevin Weiberg delivered Monday to the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. Baseball players have underachieved when measured by the NCAA's academic progress rate (APR), which tracks the retention of scholarship athletes and their progress toward degrees. Key elements in the legislation (effective in 2008-09) require players to be academically eligible in the fall in order to compete in the spring and eliminates the one-time transfer exemption. What has drawn broad criticism from coaches is requiring scholarships to be divided into nothing smaller than 33% and capping the players on scholarship at 27. More from AP.

Omaha floats new ballpark for CWS, O-Royals
Posted May 7, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
Omaha Mayor Mike Fahey is actively pursuing the option of building a $50-million-plus ballpark in the so-called NoDo area between the Creighton University campus and the Qwest Center Omaha in the northern side of downtown Omaha, replacing Rosenblatt Stadium as the home of the College World Series and the Omaha Royals (Class AAA; Pacific Coast League). A tentative decision to build a 9,000-seat ballpark with the ability to expand to 25,000 seats for the CWS could come by the first pitch of this year's series. The NCAA's baseball committee will be in Omaha when the series opens June 15. The O-Royals have pushed the idea of building a new ballpark for the Triple-A team and possibly Creighton University while leaving Rosenblatt Stadium intact for the College World Series, but Fahey says there's no way the city will own and maintain two ballparks; it also sounds like a gentle push from the NCAA led to the change of plans within Omaha city government.

Neighbors oppose BC ballpark plan
Posted May 7, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
More than 60 Brighton residents came out last week against Boston College's proposal to build a 2,000-seat ballpark near their homes on former Archdiocese of Boston property. BC's nascent plans, which are to be filed with the BRA next month, call for adding baseball, softball, and two multipurpose fields on the Brighton Campus, as the college calls the newly acquired site. Also planned are a 14,000-square-foot sports support facility and a 200-space garage, according to Jack Dunn, Boston College director of public affairs. Dunn said the baseball stadium, which would hold 1,500 more seats than BC's field near Chestnut Hill Reservoir, would still be one of the smallest facilities in the Atlantic Coast Conference, which BC joined two years ago.

Dean of the baseball diamond
Posted May 7, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
The Christian Science Monitor writes up John W. Winkin, the longtime collegiate baseball coach currently at Husson College in Bangor, Maine. Short and sinewy, his skin tanned and creased like a well-worn leather glove, Winkin is a legend in collegiate baseball circles. He coached the University of Maine's Black Bears for 22 years, leading the team to six NCAA Division I College World Series appearances, and at Colby College for 20 years before that. He was tapped as an assistant coach at Husson in 1996, at age 76, after UMaine chose not to renew his contract.

Rules of money game will change
Posted May 2, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
The rules of college baseball are changing, and many say not for the better. A package, passed by the NCAA board of directors last week, was spurred by baseball’s low Academic Progress Rate. Part of the legislation requires college baseball players who transfer to sit out a year, bringing it in line with other NCAA sports, as well as forcing players to be academically eligible for the fall semester rather than the spring semester, a move aimed at junior-college transfers. The so-called "27-8" rule will change more, however. Under the new rules, teams can have a maximum of 27 players on scholarship and eight walk-ons who can receive academic scholarship help. Currently, there is no limit on how many players can be on scholarship, so most coaches divvy up the available money with partial scholarships. But the NCAA allows only 11.7 scholarships for a program, so that must be divided up among 27 players by the 2009-10 academic year.

MTSU ballpark 'slightly behind' schedule
Posted May 2, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
MTSU's new ballpark might not be completed by opening day of 2008. The process for a $5 million renovation to Reese Smith Field is "slightly behind schedule," according to MTSU athletic director Chris Massaro. MTSU hoped to break ground on the facility immediately following BlueCross Spring Fling, which ends May 26. Instead, the start of construction will likely be delayed until mid-June at the earliest. MTSU will not open a 30-day bidding process for contractors until next week.

New USC ballpark will need a rally to make it on time
Posted April 29, 2007 (feedback) (submit story)
The State's Ron Morris says it will be a stretch to see a new ballpark at the University of South Carolina open on Feb. 22, 2008. USC officials say it's doable, but they admit they're a little nervous about the prospects. With site work still being done on the $28 million project, USC will need every potential work day to complete the project; a stretch of unseasonably wet weather could delay the project. Still, it wouldn't be the end of the world if the ballpark wasn't totally completed on Opening Day -- truth be known, not all baseball facilities are -- and it wouldn't be the end of the world if the Gamecocks played some nonconference games at Sarge Frye Field.