Montana park wins


We’ve been presenting our Ballpark of the Year award since the year 2000. It’s been an annual affair, except in 2020 when COVID wiped out the Minor League season, and last year when there weren’t really any new, fully finished parks. So we pushed the unfinished parks from last year (Glacier Range Riders and Lake Country DockHounds) to 2023, when a completely rebuilt park opened for the New Jersey Jackals. So following no award for 2022, that meant that there were three parks in the running for the 2023 plaque.

We visited all three, and wrote in-depth reviews of them all. At the top of this page are links that lead you to those reviews.

For years, we’ve used a committee of three (webmaster Joe Mock, broadcaster Doug Greenwald and author Graham Knight) to select the winner of the award. This year, there was no disagreement among the three: the winner is Glacier Bank Park in Flathead Valley in Montana, home of the Glacier Range Riders of the Pioneer League.

Read the press release announcing the award, then check out our review of the park to see all it has going for it!


National treasure


The National Trust for Historic Preservation has a special category for places like Hinchliffe Stadium. They call them “National Treasures.”

It’s easy to see why. This ballpark has a fascinating, unparalleled backstory: it was built just up the hill from one of the most scenic and historic waterfalls in the country (you can see its light towers high up on the hill beyond the falls in the photo) … it was used by Negro League teams in the 1930s and ’40s … then for high school sports … then it fell into such a state of disrepair that it was condemned … it was scheduled for demolition … but it was saved from the wrecking ball by the valiant efforts of some heroic people … and it was rebuilt to look as beautiful as it did in the 1930s.

Such is the story of Hinchliffe Stadium, which now is within the boundaries of the Paterson Great Falls National Historic Park in Paterson, New Jersey. Your first directive is to read all about this wonderful, miraculous stadium. Then your directive is to visit it.

Our in-depth review weighs in at over 5,000 words and includes 26 pictures you won’t see anywhere else. So what are you waiting for? Start reading