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Have the home run parks changed in the last five years?

Posted by

November 06, 2008

The very first Stat of the Week on www.StatOfTheWeek.com looks at the easiest and toughest home run parks in baseball five years ago. Let's take a look if it's changed much in the last five years.

We'll use park indices again (as shown in The Bill James Handbook 2009). The easiest park five years ago was the park in Puerto Rico where Montreal played a handful of games back then, Hiram Bithorn Stadium. It had a park index of 181, meaning there were 81% more home runs hit there than in an average National League park.

The easiest parks now and easiest parks five years ago are:

Now Five years ago
Chicago, U.S. Cellular Field - 128 Montreal, Hiram Bithorn Stadium - 181
Cincinnati, Great American Ballpark - 128 Colorado, Coors Field - 142
Baltimore, Oriole Park at Camden Yards - 123 Texas, The Ballpark in Arlington - 132
Philadelphia, Citizens Bank Park - 122 Chicago, U.S. Cellular Field - 130

The toughest parks:

Now Five years ago
San Francisco, AT&T Park - 80 San Francisco, Pacific Bell Park - 66
Pittsburgh, PNC Park - 80 Florida, Pro Player Stadium - 79
San Diego, PETCO Park - 81 Tampa Bay, Tropicana Field - 81
Boston, Fenway Park - 81 Detroit, Comerica Park - 81

Except for U.S. Cellular Field, home of the Chicago White Sox, all the easiest parks have changed. However, Colorado was third five years ago and just misses the current top-four list placing fifth with a park index of 120. Texas is also still a good home run park with a 108 park index.

San Francisco remains the toughest ballpark in all of baseball for home run hitters. Florida (park index 91) is still a tough park for home runs, but Tampa Bay (101) and Detroit (102) have become neutral.

Note: Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco changed its name to SBC Park in 2004; SBC Park became AT&T Park prior to the 2006 season. The dimensions never changed—just the name.


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