Steven,
I have enjoyed reading through Michael Benson's "Ballparks of North America"
(park details) and Michael Gershman"s "Diamonds" (good photos of MLB parks) but
I don't know that there is an error-free source out there.
Howard Henry
henryhw@...
________________________________
From: SABRballparks@yahoogroups.com on behalf of Steven Leffew
Sent: Mon 7/2/2007 2:44 AM
To: SABRballparks@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [SABRballparks] Working on a stadium database, have a few questions.
Hello everyone,
I'm new to SABR and the SABRballparks yahoo group. I'm working on a stadium
database that will include yearly information - dimensions, fence heights,
backstop distance, playing surface, fair and foul square footage, capacity, etc
- on every ballpark ever used by a professional baseball team since 1871
including the major leagues, minor leagues, independent leagues, negro leagues,
and some of the major foreign leagues. I find much of the information on
ballparks available out there to be inconsistent as it seems that ballpark
information listed in one source often conflicts with the information listed in
another source. My intention is to sort through all of that to make the most
accurate and complete source of historic ballpark data available.
I'm wondering if anyone here knows of any good books or websites containing
ballpark info for the minor leagues, independent leagues, and/or foreign leagues
- especially ones with pictures and/or diagrams.
I hear that Green Cathedrals is a very good source/starting point for info on
Major League and Negro League parks and I plan on obtaining a copy here shortly.
I understand that the book lists its dimensions in an LF LCF CF RCF RF format
but does anyone know what angle the LCF and RCF dimensions in the book are
supposed to represent? In other words, do they represent the distance at 15
degrees from center, 22.5 degrees from center, 30 degrees from center, or
something else entirely? I'm curious because, in my database, I plan on listing
the dimensions and fence heights at the left and right field lines, center
field, and the distances at 15 degrees, 22.5 degrees, and 30 degrees from center
in both directions.
Any information would be greatly appreciated and if you'd like to contribute to
the project please feel free to contact me via e-mail.
Thank you for your time,
Steven Leffew