Buy Chicago Cubs Spring Training tickets at TickCo.com! Order Chicago Cubs spring training tickets online.
|
Cubs Home |
If You Go |
Historic Photos |
2008 Schedule |
Minor-League Schedule
|
Roster
(Note that both the Cubs and the city of Mesa use the terms HoHoKam Park and HoHoKam Stadium interchangeably. We'll use HoHoKam Park, as that's what it says on the sign at the ballpark.)
During the rest of the year HoHoKam Park is also the home of the Arizona Fall League Mesa Solar Sox and the Mesa Cubs in the Arizona Rookie League. During the 2002 college season HoHoKam was also home of the Arizona Sun Devils while renovation work was done to Packard Stadium.
The Chicago Cubs have trained in a variety of locations: Champaign, Illinois
(1901-02, 1906); Why Avalon on Catalina Island? (Catalina Island is located 20 miles outside of Los Angeles.) Because Cubs owner William Wrigley Jr. bought a majority interest in the island in 1919. Wrigley then constructed a ballpark on the island to house the Cubs in spring training: it was built to the same dimensions as Wrigley Field. (The ballpark is long gone, but a clubhouse built by Wrigley to house the Cubs exists as the Catalina County Club.) By 1951 the team had grown disenchanted with Catalina Island, however, and spring training was shifted to Mesa, Arizona, after the Cubs held a profitable series of games against the New York Yankees in Arizona. At the time Mesa was not seen as an attractive area for spring training, and in fact the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League failed to draw at all when the team held spring training at Mesa in 1952. (View pictures of the Cubs training at Catalina Island here.) The move to Mesa was also promoted by Dwight Patterson, a Mesa rancher and builder who worked to bring spring-training games to the area. The Cubs were hesitant to move to Mesa with the New York Giants training only 20 miles away in Phoenix, so Patterson and a group of local businessmen formed the HoHoKams, who put up a $22,000 guarantee if the Cubs moved to Mesa's Rendezvous Park. (Fittingly, Patterson was the first "Chief Big Ho.") Today the HoHoKams exist as a charity. Rendezvous Park seated 3,000 when the Cubs moved there in 1952 but was expanded soon afterwards. After the Cubs moved spring training to southern California in 1966, Mesa did not host any spring training until 1969, when the Oakland Athletics moved their training from Scottsdale. Charlie O. Finley was dissatisfied with the training facilities in Scottsdale; hence the move to Rendezvous Park. The A's were not a big draw in Mesa, however, and in 1976 Rendezvous Park was torn down. This is actually the second HoHoKam Park; the first was built in 1976 at Fitch Park as the spring-training home of the Athletics, who quickly bailed on Mesa and made way for the Cubs to return in 1979. The new complex provides 25,000 square feet of team facilities, including a major league clubhouse, four practice fields, one practice infield, enclosed batting tunnels, batting cages, a maintenance facility, and administrative offices for the Cubs. Cubs Home | If You Go | Historic Photos | 2008 Schedule | Minor-League Schedule | Roster |