Vince Genna Stadium is a baseball park in the northwest United States, located in Bend, Oregon. Opened 58 years ago in 1964, it currently hosts college summer baseball league and area American Legion games.
![]() Looking northeast at an Elks game in 2011 | |
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Former names | Municipal Ball Park (1964–1972) |
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Location | SE 5th & Roosevelt Ave Bend, Oregon |
Coordinates | 44.043°N 121.299°W / 44.043; -121.299 |
Owner | Bend Metro Park and Recreation District |
Operator | Bend Elks |
Capacity | 3,500 |
Field size | Left Field – 330 ft (101 m) Center Field – 390 ft (119 m) Right Field – 330 ft (101 m) |
Surface | Natural grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 1964, 58 years ago |
Renovated | 1974 |
Expanded | 2009 |
Tenants | |
Bend Rainbows (NWL) (1970–1971) Bend Timber Hawks (NWL) (1978) Central Oregon Phillies (NWL) (1979–1980) Bend Phillies (NWL) (1981–1986) Bend Bucks (NWL) (1987–1991) Bend Rockies (NWL) (1992–1994) Bend Bandits (WBL) (1995–1998) Bend Elks (WCL) (2000–present) |
Originally known as "Municipal Ball Park", it was renamed 50 years ago in June 1972 for Vince Genna (1921–2007),[1][2] the director of the city's parks & recreation department and former American Legion coach.[3] When minor league baseball returned in 1978 with the Timber Hawks, Genna was an honorary first base coach in their debut game.[4]
The stadium was the longtime home of Bend's minor league teams in the Class A-Short Season Northwest League, and later the Bend Bandits of the Western Baseball League. It is currently the home of the Bend Elks in the collegiate summer West Coast League and has a seating capacity of approximately 3,500.
In the south end of the city, the elevation of the natural grass playing field is approximately 3,700 feet (1,130 m) above sea level and is unconventionally oriented northwest; the recommended alignment of a baseball diamond (home plate to center field) is east-northeast.[5] In 1978, the Timber Hawks had intermissions called "sun breaks" near sundown when the glare was excessive.[6] The Angels cited the need for adequate sun screens in left field (west) as one of the reasons for breaking their affiliation with the Bend Bucks after the 1989 season.[7]
The stadium has hosted affiliates of four major-league teams (Angels, A's, Phillies, and Rockies), four players who made the majors (Brian Barden, Julio Franco, Jacoby Ellsbury, and Eric Sogard), and one future movie star (Kurt Russell played for the Bend Rainbows in 1971).[8]
In 1979, the Central Oregon Phillies paid the Bend Metro Park and Recreation District $9,500 for use of the ballpark for the season. In 1980, the team paid $9,700.[9] In 2008, the Bend Elks led the WCL in league and overall attendance, averaging 1,430 fans at Genna Stadium over 21 league home games.[10] In 2010 Genna Stadium continued to lead the WCL in total and league attendance, along with average game attendance; its record-setting season attendance exceeded 50,000.[11]
Short-season Class A
Year | Team | MLB team | Record | Finish | Manager | Playoffs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | Rainbows | none ^ (2 yrs.) | 39–41 | 3rd (t) | Charlie Silvera | |
1971 | 42–36 | 3rd | Ed Cecil | |||
No teams: 1972–1977 (six seasons) | ||||||
1978 | Timber Hawks | Athletics | 35–37 | 5th | Ed Nottle | |
1979 | Central Oregon Phillies | Phillies (8 yrs.) | 43–28 | 1st | Tom Harmon | League Champions |
1980 | 31–39 | 7th | P. J. Carey | |||
1981 | Phillies | 31–39 | 5th | P. J. Carey | ||
1982 | 30–40 | 5th | Roly de Armas | |||
1983 | 32–37 | 6th | Jay Wild | |||
1984 | 38–36 | 4th | Ramón Avilés | |||
1985 | 39–35 | 3rd (t) | P. J. Carey | |||
1986 | 21–53 | 8th | Ed Pebley | |||
1987 | Bucks | Co-op[12][13] | 33–42 | 5th | Mel Roberts | |
1988 | Angels (2 yrs.) | 38–38 | 5th (t) | Don Long | ||
1989 | 33–42 | 6th | Don Long | |||
1990 | Co-op[13][14] (2 yrs.) | 29–47 | 8th | Mike Bubalo | ||
1991 | 30–46 | 7th | Bill Stein | |||
1992 | Rockies | Rockies (3 yrs.) | 43–33 | 1st (t) | Gene Glynn | League finals |
1993 | 35–41 | 6th (t) | Howie Bedell | |||
1994 | 29–47 | 8th | Rudy Jaramillo |
^ The Rainbows were an affiliate of the Hawaii Islanders of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League;[15]
the Islanders' parent clubs were the California Angels (1970), and the San Diego Padres (1971)