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A Rich History of Baseball Spring Training in Yuma, AZ!

1969 - 1993 Padres Spring Training

Spring training baseball with the Padres began in 1969 at Keegan Field on 24th street while Desert Sun Stadium was being Built. The first game was on March 6, 1970.

1979 Padres Spring Training in Yuma Arizona Program

When the Padres Called Yuma Home

For 25 years, every February and March, Yuma became a baseball town.
From 1969 to 1993, the San Diego Padres chose Yuma as their spring training home, beginning at Keegan Field for their inaugural season before moving to the newly built Desert Sun Stadium in 1970. The stadium was built using a 2% hospitality tax and $100,000 in bonds, with the first game played on March 6, 1970, with Arizona Governor Jack Williams throwing out the ceremonial first pitch.
 
It was a natural fit. The short 170-mile drive along Interstate 8 made Yuma very popular with Padres fans, and many would travel by car from San Diego for spring training games. A “Welcome Home San Diego Padres” banner stretched across Fourth Avenue every spring, and the whole community embraced the team as their own.

A Front-Row Seat to Greatness

Those who filled the stands at Desert Sun Stadium witnessed something special. Future Hall of Famers took the field in Yuma long before their names were etched into Cooperstown. Tony Gwynn, Ozzie Smith, Dave Winfield, and Roberto Alomar all began their careers with the Padres during the Yuma era. Randy Jones, drafted in the eighth round out of Chapman University, made the club out of spring camp in 1973 and went on to win the 1976 Cy Young Award.
 
The 1984 Padres, who went on to win the National League pennant that season, trained in Yuma. A record crowd of 5,866 fans packed Desert Sun Stadium on March 16, 1985, to watch that pennant-winning squad play their first Cactus League game of the new season.
 
For many fans, tickets were five dollars. Children brought baseball cards to games and waited by the dugouts for autographs. The atmosphere was intimate in a way that regular-season baseball rarely offered. Players were accessible, the setting was unhurried, and the desert sunshine made every game feel like a gift.
Hank Aaron Played in Yuma Arizona
Who's Who of the Major League Baseball World!

An Opportunity of
a Lifetime

During the more than two decades of professional baseball in Yuma Arizona, the residents had many opportunities to watch the best in the league play in their hometown and from a very close distance.  

Ray Kroc:

The early owner of McDonalds, Ray Kroc bought the Padres in 1974.

His ownership of the team was key in hosting the Padres Spring Training in Yuma Arizona and in refurbishing and maintaining Desert Sun Stadium.

Began

1969

Ended

1993

Location

Desert Sun Stadium

1280 Desert Sun Drive

Yuma, Arizona 85365

The Caballeros de Yuma

Were the Proud Sponsors

Padres Spring Training in Yuma AZ Ticket Stubs

The Caballeros Connection

The Caballeros de Yuma was founded in 1962, in association with the Chamber of Commerce for the purpose of hosting civic events like bringing the Padres Spring Training to Yuma. For many visiting Padres fans, seat cushions bearing the Caballeros’ logo became standard issue at Desert Sun Stadium. The Caballeros welcomed fans, publicized the games, and made spring training a true community event year after year.

Yuma’s business community leaned in fully. Local restaurants fed the players and their families. Hotels filled with San Diego fans making the weekend drive across the desert. The economic and cultural impact of 25 springs of professional baseball shaped Yuma in ways that are still felt today.

The End of an Era

The final contract between the Padres and Yuma covered just two seasons, 1992 and 1993. After the 1993 spring training season, the Padres announced they would move to the newly built Peoria Sports Complex, which they would share with the Seattle Mariners, making it the first two-team spring training facility in MLB history.
 
Tony Gwynn said he would miss playing in Yuma because after more than a decade, he had finally found a good fishing spot nearby. For longtime Yuma residents who had grown up watching Padres players practice at Desert Sun, the departure landed hard.
 
But Yuma endured, as it always has. The Caballeros de Yuma stayed true to their mission and committed to bringing community minded events to town. The community that once rolled out the welcome mat for a major league baseball team now welcomes dozens of hot air balloons to their annual festival, welcomes hundreds of runners to their annual marathon/half marathon/10K, and welcomes nearly a thousand classic cars to their signature event Midnight at the Oasis.
 
Desert Sun Stadium eventually found new life as the Ray Kroc Baseball Complex, honoring the late Padres owner who had been such a part of the team’s identity during the Yuma Spring Training years. Although the Ray Kroc Baseball Complex no longer hosts MLB Spring Training, it is home to many community events throughout the year.
 
The spring training era is gone, but not forgotten. For anyone who ever caught an autograph outside that ballpark, watched Tony Gwynn work the batting cage, or simply drove across the desert on a February morning for a cold beer and a baseball game in the sunshine, Yuma’s Padres years remain one of the Southwest’s great community baseball stories
Padres help receive chocolate boxes from local little league players

Sources

Caballeros de Yuma in Yuma, Arizona
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