Victoria Zidwick a RoamRight Blog Author

Traveling to Every Ballpark

How would you plan a trip to every baseball stadium in America? RoamRight discusses several ways to organize your trip.

Throughout the country, baseball fans celebrated Opening Day last week. Ballparks were packed, homeruns were hit, and batters were struck out. With close to 150 games still left in the season, fans have plenty of time to plan a trip to the nearest ballpark. But what about planning a trip to every ballpark? That’s 30 stadiums – from Fenway Park in Boston to PETCO Park in San Diego. Here are a few ways to break that trip up – after all, you don’t have to visit them all in one summer! (Although that would be a heck of a road trip!)

By Location

If you’re planning on visiting all of the ballparks in one spectacular road trip, the logical strategy would be to group them by location. In just a few days, you could easily work your way down the Eastern seaboard and hit up Fenway Park, Yankee Stadium, Citi Field, Citizens Bank Park, Camden Yards and Nationals Park.

By League / Division

Focus your travels on one specific division or league each month – or year. Watch the Arizona Diamondbacks battle the Colorado Rockies or the Detroit Tigers play the Cleveland Indians. By breaking the ballpark visits up into smaller chunks, it becomes a more manageable experience.

By Favorite Mascot

The home team’s mascot is central to any ballpark experience. Check out Ace, the Toronto Blue Jay, Lou Seal in San Francisco, Mr. Red in Cincinnati, and Southpaw in Chicago. Or, plan your trip based on on-field entertainment races, such as the Sausage Race in Milwaukee, the Presidents’ Race in Washington, D.C., and the Great Pierogi Race in Pittsburgh.

By Statistics

If you plan your by seating capacity, you’ll start you at the smallest ballpark, Tropicana Field (34,078) and end at the largest, Dodger Stadium (56,000). If you want to visit by distance to center field, you’ll start at Fenway Park (389 feet, 9 inches) and end at Minute Maid Park (435 feet). To plan a trip from the oldest park to the newest, you’ll start (again) at Fenway, which opened in 1912, and end at Marlin’s Park, which opened just last year.

Alphabetically

Even if you’re planning on an alphabetical journey, there are several options: Alphabetical by ball park name? Angel Stadium of Anaheim to Yankee Stadium. Alphabetical by city? Anaheim to Washington, D.C., Alphabetical by team name (including location)? Arizona Diamondbacks to Washington Nationals. By team name (without location?) Again, Angels to Yankees.

As with any vacation, a summer trek to visit all of the baseball stadiums can suddenly be interrupted by unexpected events. Protect your trip with a RoamRight travel insurance policy.

Finally, we’ve referenced almost all of the MLB teams in this one blog post. So to cover the remaining eight, here’s a shout out to St. Louis, Kansas City, Oakland, Texas, Seattle, Minnesota, Atlanta and the Chicago Cub. Go Teams!

Tell us - Where is your favorite major league ballpark?

Note: Available plans and coverages may have changed since this blog was published.

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About the Author

Victoria Zidwick

Victoria Zidwick, a RoamRight Blog Author RoamRight's Marketing Communications Specialist, Victoria Zidwick, has worked in the travel insurance industry for more than five years. She has traveled extensively throughout the United States and has a handful of international travel experiences.Victoria's travel experiences have changed in recent years, as her family grows and she is learning the ins and outs of traveling with children. Connect with Victoria on LinkedIn or follow her onTwitter or Google Plus.

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