Jackie Robinson Stadium
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jackie_Robinson_Stadium an entity of type: Thing
Jackie Robinson Stadium is a college baseball park in Los Angeles, California. It is the home field of the UCLA Bruins of the Pac-12 Conference. Opened 41 years ago in 1981, it is the smallest ballpark in the conference, with a seating capacity of 1,820. It is named after former Bruin athlete Jackie Robinson, the first African-American major league baseball player of the modern era. The diamond is aligned nearly true north (north by east, home plate to center field) at an approximate elevation of 360 feet (110 m) above sea level.
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Le Jackie Robinson Stadium est un stade de baseball situé à Los Angeles (Californie) aux États-Unis. Cette enceinte de 1 250 places inaugurée en 1981 est utilisée par les universitaires d'UCLA Bruins qui évoluent en Pacific Ten Conference. Officiellement doté de 1 250 places, le stade accueille régulièrement des affluences supérieures à 1 800 spectateurs. Le financement du stade a été pris en charge par Hoyt Pardee, qui fréquenta UCLA à la même période que Jackie Robinson.
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Jackie Robinson Stadium
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Jackie Robinson Stadium
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Jackie Robinson Stadium
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With the old scoreboard in 2011
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Center Field –
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Left Field –
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Right Field –
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Jackie Robinson Stadium
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Natural grass
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UCLA Bruins baseball 1981–present
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Jackie Robinson Stadium is a college baseball park in Los Angeles, California. It is the home field of the UCLA Bruins of the Pac-12 Conference. Opened 41 years ago in 1981, it is the smallest ballpark in the conference, with a seating capacity of 1,820. It is named after former Bruin athlete Jackie Robinson, the first African-American major league baseball player of the modern era. Robinson (1919–1972) attended UCLA from 1939 to 1941, after graduating from Pasadena Junior College. He was the first UCLA athlete to earn varsity letters in four sports: baseball, basketball, football, and track. He played in the major leagues for ten seasons (1947–56), all with the Brooklyn Dodgers. A statue and a mural of Robinson can be found at the entrance concourse of the stadium. The venue is located about one mile (1.6 km) southwest of campus, just west of the San Diego Freeway (Interstate 405), on the grounds of the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center. Robinson's classmate, Hoyt Pardee (UCLA '41), gave a gift to help with its construction. The stadium's "Steele Field" was dedicated in honor of the on May 3, 2008, prior to a game against Arizona State, for its support of the stadium. The hitting facility at the stadium is named Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility. Gifford played baseball at UCLA and graduated from its engineering school with a BSEE degree. He was a founder of Advanced Micro Devices and Maxim Integrated Products. In 2010, a capacity crowd of 2,613 saw the Bruins defeat the defending national champion LSU Tigers 6–3 at the Los Angeles Regional of the NCAA Tournament on June 5. That season, the Bruins ranked 48th among Division I baseball programs in attendance, averaging 1,178 per home game. The ballpark's record attendance of 2,914 was set in 1997, against rival USC on March 23. The diamond is aligned nearly true north (north by east, home plate to center field) at an approximate elevation of 360 feet (110 m) above sea level. The stadium is not to be confused with the Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (dedicated on January 30, 1988) at Brookside Park in Pasadena, next to the Rose Bowl, where UCLA plays its home football games.
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Le Jackie Robinson Stadium est un stade de baseball situé à Los Angeles (Californie) aux États-Unis. Cette enceinte de 1 250 places inaugurée en 1981 est utilisée par les universitaires d'UCLA Bruins qui évoluent en Pacific Ten Conference. Le stade porte le nom de Jackie Robinson, qui joua chez les Bruins de 1939 à 1941. Robinson, qui porta les couleurs d'UCLA en athlétisme, basket-ball, football américain et baseball ne joua que la saison 1940 de baseball. La céréomine de dédicace du stade se tient le 7 février 1981 devant plus de 2500 spectateurs. Une statue de bronze de Jackie orne l'enceinte depuis 1985. Officiellement doté de 1 250 places, le stade accueille régulièrement des affluences supérieures à 1 800 spectateurs. Le financement du stade a été pris en charge par Hoyt Pardee, qui fréquenta UCLA à la même période que Jackie Robinson. Ne pas confondre ce stade avec le Jackie Robinson Ballpark de Daytona Beach (Floride), parfois nommé Jackie Robinson Stadium.
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