List of Major League Baseball spring training cities
The following is a list of current and former Major League Baseball spring training cities.
Some Toronto Blue Jays regular-season home games for 2021 were played in TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Florida.
Current cities
City
|
Current team(s)
|
Current ballpark(s)
|
Capacity
|
Former team(s)
|
Bradenton
|
Pittsburgh Pirates (1969–present)
|
LECOM Park[1]
|
6,602
|
St. Louis Cardinals (1923–24) Philadelphia Phillies (1925–27) Boston Red Sox (1928–29) Boston Braves/Milwaukee Braves (1928–40, 1948–61) Kansas City/Oakland Athletics (1963–68)
|
Clearwater
|
Philadelphia Phillies (1947–present)
|
BayCare Ballpark[2]
|
8,500
|
Brooklyn Dodgers (1923–32, 1936–41) Cleveland Indians (1942, 1946)
|
Dunedin
|
Toronto Blue Jays (1977–present)
|
TD Ballpark[3]
|
8,500
|
|
Fort Myers
|
Boston Red Sox (1992–present)
|
JetBlue Park[4]
|
11,000
|
|
Minnesota Twins (1991–present)
|
Hammond Stadium[5]
|
7,500
|
Philadelphia Athletics (1925–36) Cleveland Indians (1941–42) Pittsburgh Pirates (1955–68) Kansas City Royals (1969–87)
|
Jupiter
|
Florida/Miami Marlins (2002–present) St. Louis Cardinals (1998–present)
|
Roger Dean Stadium[6]
|
6,871
|
Montreal Expos (1998–2001)
|
North Port
|
Atlanta Braves (2019–present)
|
CoolToday Park[7]
|
8,000
|
|
Lakeland
|
Detroit Tigers (1934–42, 1946–present)
|
Joker Marchant Stadium[8]
|
8,500
|
Cleveland Indians (1924–27)
|
Port Charlotte
|
Tampa Bay Rays (2009–present)
|
Charlotte Sports Park[9]
|
7,000
|
Texas Rangers (1998–2002)
|
Port St. Lucie
|
New York Mets (1988–present)
|
Clover Park[10]
|
7,347
|
|
Sanford
|
Historic Sanford Memorial Stadium
|
New York Giants (1951–?)
|
Sarasota
|
Baltimore Orioles (1991, 2010–present)
|
Ed Smith Stadium[11]
|
7,500
|
New York Giants (1924–27) Boston Red Sox (1933–42, 1946–58) Chicago White Sox (1960–97) Cincinnati Reds (1998–2009)
|
Tampa
|
New York Yankees (1996–present)
|
George M. Steinbrenner Field[12]
|
10,000
|
Chicago Cubs (1913–16) Boston Red Sox (1919) Washington Senators (1920–29) Detroit Tigers (1930) Cincinnati Reds (1930–87) Chicago White Sox (1954–59)
|
West Palm Beach
|
Washington Nationals (2017–present) Houston Astros (2017–present)
|
The Ballpark of The Palm Beaches[13]
|
7,600
|
Milwaukee Braves/Atlanta Braves (1963–1997) Montreal Expos (1969-1972, 1981–1997)
|
City
|
Current team(s)
|
Current ballpark(s)
|
Capacity
|
Former team(s)
|
Glendale
|
Chicago White Sox (2009–present) Los Angeles Dodgers (2009–present)
|
Camelback Ranch[14]
|
13,000
|
|
Goodyear
|
Cincinnati Reds (2010–present) Cleveland Guardians (2009–present)
|
Goodyear Ballpark[15]
|
10,000
|
|
Mesa
|
Chicago Cubs (2014–present)
|
Sloan Park[16]
|
15,000
|
|
Athletics (2015–present)
|
HoHoKam Stadium[17]
|
12,623
|
Chicago Cubs (1997-2013)
|
Peoria
|
San Diego Padres (1994–present) Seattle Mariners (1994–present)
|
Peoria Sports Complex[18]
|
12,882
|
|
Phoenix
|
Milwaukee Brewers (1998–present)
|
American Family Fields of Phoenix[19]
|
10,000
|
|
Scottsdale
|
San Francisco Giants (1992–present)
|
Scottsdale Stadium[20]
|
12,000
|
|
Arizona Diamondbacks (2011–present) Colorado Rockies (2011–present)
|
Salt River Fields at Talking Stick[21]
|
11,000
|
|
Surprise
|
Kansas City Royals (2003–present) Texas Rangers (2003–present)
|
Surprise Stadium[22]
|
10,500
|
|
Tempe
|
Los Angeles Angels (1993–present)
|
Tempe Diablo Stadium[23]
|
9,785
|
Seattle Pilots/Milwaukee Brewers (1969–72) Seattle Mariners (1977–93)
|
See also
References
External links
Grapefruit League official website
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