"Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium

"Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium is a 1,000-seat baseball park in New Orleans, Louisiana.[2] It is the home stadium for the Delgado Community College Dolphins baseball team that competes in the National Junior College Athletic Association.[3] The stadium is also home to Louisiana High School Athletic Association baseball and American Legion Baseball.[4]

"Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium
Location5401 General Diaz St
New Orleans, LA 70124
Coordinates29.98688°N 90.1064°W / 29.98688; -90.1064
OperatorDelgado Community College
Capacity1,000[1]
Field size
  • Left Field: 325 feet (99 m)
  • Center Field: 400 feet (120 m)
  • Right Field: 325 feet (99 m)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
OpenedJune 19, 1957
Construction cost$70 thousand
Tenants

History

Kirsch-Rooney Stadium is named after Cyril Kirsch and Robert Rooney, Purple Heart recipients and New Orleans natives, who died in World War II. The field is named after Louis "Rags" Scheuermann, the long-time and founding Delgado Dolphins head coach and stadium supervisor.

The stadium has hosted two Major League Baseball (MLB) exhibition series, one between the Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds on April 6–7, 1967 and the other between the Atlanta Braves and Baltimore Orioles on April 1, 1974.[2] In the series between the Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds, future MLB managers Dusty Baker and Davey Johnson of the Indians hit home runs and Pete Rose played in the series for the Reds. In the Braves/Orioles game, Hank Aaron hit a home run, which was three days prior to his tying Babe Ruth's lifetime homerun record at 714 home runs at the Braves' home opener.

Other Major Leaguers that have played at the stadium include Tony Pérez, Jim Palmer, Brooks Robinson, Don Baylor, Rusty Staub, and Will Clark.[5]

The stadium hosted the 1984 American Legion Baseball World Series, multiple Southwestern Athletic Conference baseball tournaments and 2011 National Junior College Athletic Association Region 23 baseball tournament.[3]

gollark: I wanted a hyperapp-like state management thing with no view for skynet (it's a long story...) so I made this, because Javascript microlibraries are trendy.```javascriptconst R = require("ramda")module.exports = (initialState, actions, context = {}, expose) => { let state = initialState const wired = R.map(action => (...args) => { const result = action(...args)(state, actions, context) if (typeof result === "object") { state = R.merge(state, result) } }, actions) if ("init" in wired) { wired.init() } if (expose) { return R.pick(expose, wired) } else { return wired }}```
gollark: Er, how do I uninvert it?
gollark: It's to help users by emphasising the idiomatic bottom-up approach involving making programs from small composable functions.
gollark: Ours is upside-down, though.
gollark: I found an upside-down mappings table somewhere, which ought to help.

See also

References

  1. "Kirsch-Rooney Stadium". gnosports. Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  2. "Kirsch-Rooney History". hometeamsonline.com. Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  3. "Kirsch-Rooney Stadium". delgadoathletics.com. Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  4. "American Legion Baseball". kirschrooney.com. Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  5. Glisclair, S. Derby. Baseball in New Orleans. Mount Pleasant, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 1439612579.
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