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Allan Saxe Field consists of a combination of bleacher and chairback seating for 622 fans as a result of the complete stadium reconstruction following the 2014 season. The main entryway to Allan Saxe Field after the venue was rebuilt prior to the 2015 season. The playing field is a natural grass surface while foul territory is an artificial turf.
Take a bow, Texas. You deserve it. And the rest of this Women’s College World Series field maybe should just bow down to the No. 1 seed Longhorns, who are playing like it.
The park is the site of Erv Lind Stadium, a softball and baseball facility named for Erwin "Erv" Lind in 1964. Lind coached the Erv Lind Florists, a women's fast-pitch softball team based at Normandale Park, from 1937 [5] until his death in 1964; the team won the ASA Softball national tournament twice, in 1944 and again in 1964, along with many state and regional championships. [6]
The City of Portland purchased 32 acres from private owners in the 1940s and 1950s to assemble land between SE 88th Ave, SE 92nd Ave, SE Holgate Blvd and SE Steele St to expand Lents Park. The city prepared a central plan in 1953 to propose locations for a baseball stadium, playing fields, tennis courts, community buildings, pathways, and ...
About the Longhorns: Team tested by Texas A&M. Texas (52-8) survived a grueling three-game series with Texas A&M to reach the WCWS for the seventh time in school history and the second time in ...
[2] [4] (The Big 12 did not hold a softball tournament during the 2011 to 2016 seasons.) Texas has made 22 total appearances in the NCAA Tournament in 26 seasons of varsity competition through the end of the 2023 season, reaching the Women's College World Series (WCWS) seven times (1998, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2013, 2022, 2024) and the super ...
The Aggie Softball Complex was the home to the Texas A&M Aggies softball team from 1994 to 2018. The stadium was dedicated on March 30, 1994. The stadium was dedicated on March 30, 1994. The final game played in the Aggie Softball Complex was April 15, 2018, a military appreciation game, against the Kentucky Wildcats.
The Red and Charline McCombs Field is the current home of the University of Texas Longhorn Women's Softball team. [1] Opening in 1998 at a cost of $4.5 million, the stadium seats 1,254 and is named after university benefactor Red McCombs and his wife Charline. It features a clay infield and a grass outfield. [2]