GLENDALE, AZ - November 15, 2006 - With
the approval of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) by the Glendale
City Council today, the city of Glendale formally announced a
partnership to bring the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox
together to create a Cactus League Spring Training experience like no
other.
The MOU confirms Glendale’s
effort to submit a proposal to the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority
(AZSTA) for funding to build a new, two-team spring training facility
in the West Valley.
The site of the
project is located west of Loop 101 between Camelback Road and Glendale
Avenue and reaches across both Glendale and Phoenix city borders. The
two-team facility would be the new home to the Los Angeles Dodgers and
Chicago White Sox, and the entire project is proposed to include a
state-of-the-art training facility, restaurant and retail development,
4-star hotel and 18-hole golf course.
Located
just across Loop 101 from Glendale’s Sports and Entertainment District,
this facility will complement the existing amenities in the area,
providing additional venues and entertainment options to an area
already expected to generate a regional economic impact of more than $1
billion over the next two years.
A Team Effort
This
unprecedented project partners two of the state’s largest cities in an
effort to benefit an entire region. It will provide baseball fans,
residents and tourists a full array of activities and creates economic
and tourism opportunities that will make the region’s newest sports and
entertainment district like no other in the country.
"We
are pleased that these two teams want to be a part of our community and
all that is happening in the region's newest sports and entertainment
district," states Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs. "The collaborative
effort between Glendale and Phoenix makes this project a true regional
project that will provide a very significant economic impact for the
west valley cities and the metropolitan area as a whole. Glendale
welcomes both teams and we look forward to working together to bring
spring training to our city."
As two
of the highest-drawing, most well respected teams in Major League
Baseball, both the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox have
worked diligently with city staff to develop a concept that would give
their fans and Valley residents a family-oriented, one-of-a-kind spring
training experience.
“The annual
rite of spring training is a unique opportunity for a baseball
franchise and its players to become part of a local community, to
connect with the fans in an intimate environment and to provide an
atmosphere where friends and families can create a lifetime of
memories,” said Frank McCourt, Owner and Chairman, Los Angeles
Dodgers. “Today’s announcement is an important step towards bringing
the Dodgers and this wonderful tradition closer to our legions of fans
throughout the West. We are pleased to partner with the cities of
Glendale and Phoenix and the Chicago White Sox to pursue the
opportunity of building a state-of-the-art spring training facility
that will bring passionate baseball fans to the state of Arizona.”
“A
great many residents in the Valley can trace their roots back to or
through Chicago,” said Jerry Reinsdorf, chairman of the Chicago White
Sox. “Many transplanted White Sox fans live in the Valley, so we see
this Glendale/Phoenix effort as a terrific opportunity to move closer
to our fan base during spring training. We enjoy training at our
first-class facility in Tucson each March and have nothing but the
greatest of respect for Pima County, Tucson and our spring training
fans. Through the leadership of the Governor’s Baseball and Softball
Commission, the White Sox are committed to expanding economic
opportunities for baseball, for baseball fans and for Arizona residents
around the entire state. We believe this partnership with two great
cities and the Los Angeles Dodgers accomplishes the Governor’s goals
and benefits everyone.”
Proposed elements of the project:
- A
private developer will create more than one million square feet of
commercial, office, retail and dining mixed-use development, which will
include a 4-star hotel property and possible 18-hole golf course
- 10,000-seat stadium, with 3,000 lawn seats
- Two Major League practice fields per team
- Four Minor League practice fields per team
- 42,000-square-foot team clubhouse
- Workout fields
- Parking to accommodate 5,000 vehicles
The
city of Glendale will now move forward to formally submit a proposal to
the AZSTA for funding and continue to work with the teams and private
developer to finalize development agreements.
For the White Sox, the move is a relocation to a better facility,
and closer to a lot of Chicago transplant retirees and relocated
busineses to the sun belt.
For the Dodgers, long tradition-bound
to the Florida market, the move is more of an earthquake, but one which
Grapefruit League experts have seen coming. The Dodgers once
owned the Vero Beach property at Dodgertown, but had sold it back to
the city in recent years. Earlier this year they announced the
relocation of their Class A club out of the FSL.
No team has
announced moving into the Vero facility for Spring Training, nor has
the city announced any plan to improve the facility, which has some
state-of-the-art facilities but also has the very aged Holman Field,
which lacks both fan friendly concessions and even shade on a hot
Florida summer day. Dodgertown has seen nearly 58 years of
continuous Springs. While the Devil Rays have announced having a Class
A club in Vero for the summer, another Spring facility closer to their
fan base is under construction. It is unclear that the Devil Rays'
Class A club will remain in Vero long-term after the new digs further
North are built.
"It's the way of everything in baseball today,"
said Ben Landham, a resident of Vero Beach who lives not far from
Holman. "It's not a game of traditions anymore. It's all about the
money, and the TV. We're Florida fans who love our Dodgers, but there
ain't that many of us, and we're a long ways away. I guess it makes
sense in the pocketbook, but it hurts alot here."
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