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Doak Field at Dail Park / North Carolina State Wolfpack
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.
Our visit came on opening day in 2007, a game against William & Mary that was nearly canceled due to cold weather but got moved up by one hour with very little advance notice. In this instance, the place seemed a tad overly spacious but the fans weren’t wild about temperatures hovering near 40 degrees accompanied by a stiff breeze. The last-minute time change probably didn’t help attendance either. For most games, though, the 2,200 comfy chair-back seats and cozy left-field berm seem just right. The team averages nearly 25,000 fans each season.
This year NCSU
boasts a trio of top pro prospects -- junior starting pitcher
Andrew Brackman, senior catcher Caleb Mangum and junior second
baseman Ramon Corona. The sports information office has done a
fine job of featuring them in various materials, including a
free poster on opening day that promotes the trio and 2007
team schedule. Brackman breezed through four innings, but the
cool weather and first-game fatigue took a toll. He struggled
through the fifth to claim the win in a well-played game
overall considering the circumstances. The new facilities, finished in deep red-toned brick and
steel, blend in well with the dominant campus architecture.
Bright red seating and scoreboard in the usual Wolfpack color
theme combine especially well with dark green fencing and pine
trees dotting the landscape. Perhaps the most important improvement from the players’
perspective is hardly noticeable to the fans. A
state-of-the-art drainage and irrigation system was installed
giving Doak Field one of the finest playing surfaces in all of
college baseball. This was evident even on opening day in the
first week of February.
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