It's a waste to not be outside when the mercury touches 60° in March in Wisconsin, so in that spirit, I finally made it to the new MSOE Raiders Stadium yesterday afternoon. It opened in Fall 2019, but due to the early days of the pandemic in 2020, and Megan about to burst with Elliot last year, this was my first opportunity to see it. This park resides in what I'll graciously refer to as an "eclectic" section of Glendale, Wisconsin, sandwiched amongst an industrial park, a row of auto dealerships, a freight rail line, a rehab center, and a scattering of houses. Like many of the D-III ballparks I have been to, it is a part of a larger community park - in this case, Maslowski Park, which also boasts a Nicolet High School field, a brand new community events/concessions building, a spacious plaza, and a top-of-the-line children's playground. I thought that maybe I was in the wrong place when I arrived, as the first thing I heard turning into the parking lot was the all-too-familiar sound of a dad yelling at a child to not run up the slide. But that sound was quickly followed by the ping of a bat, and I continued forward to boldly park within homerun distance of the left field fence.
For this level of play, it was certainly much more than I was expecting as I got out of my car and approached the field. It had a feel sort of like a spring training complex on a much smaller scale, where there is a lot of other stuff going on and kids running around playing, and if you turn your head you can just so happen to watch a ballgame 50 feet away. As I made my way past the screaming children and took my free seat in the front row among the 100 or so fans that were mostly parents, I was quickly grounded that this was in fact D-III ball and not Arizona. The park features 5 rows of bleachers spanning roughly between the on-deck circles, a gap for entry on each side of that (all behind full-height netting of course) and then stand-alone at-grade dugouts on either side as well. The dugouts and the press box building behind the bleachers were the only real structures of the "stadium," but as I eluded to earlier, there is a very nice concessions/events building back and to the left of the ballpark, connected by a plaza, all of which serve the greater park itself. There is a sign that says "no alcohol beyond this point" as you enter the bleachers, so I can only assume that either Glendale is OK with BYOB in their parks, or the concession stand doubles as a beer garden during the year - although the only thing I noticed on tap was root beer from nearby Sprecher. I was shocked that there was even concessions at all, so I am definitely not complaining about the lack of beer. They served the standard ballpark fare of sausage, nachos, popcorn, and ice cream, but most of the spectators, myself included, brought their own beverages and snacks. Overall I would say that the size of the facility and operations, and certainly the level of play were all what I was expecting, but I was pleasantly surprised with how nice everything was and the synergy with the greater park. It certainly wasn't an afterthought to plop a baseball field among a community park, or vice versa, and it was a nice wholistic experience. The stadium and the concessions building are both done in the same limestone, cast stone, and phenolic wood siding, with a similar architectural aesthetic, so it was clear they were thought about if not designed at the same time. Now that I got my token nerdy architect comment out of the way - on to the game.
Between the generally lower level of play and trying to move around to find a decent place to sit, it wasn't the easiest game to watch. The press box drowns out a big portion of the bleachers in shade - which is probably nice when it's 80° but not in March - so I tried to keep moving with the sun, but the fencing also created a lot of obstructions, so there were very few seats that were actually usable. Anyways, the fast pace of play did make up for this significantly. If MLB is looking to increase action and pace of play, they need look no further than D-III ball. Quick at-bats, no stepping out of the box or off the mound, no long replay reviews, no 3-4 minutes between half-innings - just throwing heat and taking hacks. In fact, there was one player that stepped out of the box at one point to mentally process a poor umpire call, and he was booed by the other bench and told to get back in the box. Defense was actually pretty crisp, but there were a combined 25 strikeouts out of 54 possible outs, and there were only 2 combined extra-base hits, so that's a pretty good snapshot of how the game went. Even though he was tagged with the loss, the MSOE starter Nolan Vincent was the most entertaining player of the game. The guy looked like a bar-league softball player with a gut and long ratty hair, and couldn't have thrown much higher than 80mph, but he managed 10 Ks in 8 strong innings with only 1 earned run and 91 pitches. Connor Brinkman, who notched the save for for UW-Oshkosh, was also quite impressive. He was a lefty with a Lucas Giolito-type short-arm delivery, and a wicked slider. He struck out 6 in 4 hitless innings. John Jacob "Jingleheimer" Kalitowski had the lone hit for the Raiders, who was stranded following a leadoff triple in the 6th, and Zach Taylor had the big RBI double for the Titans in the 5th that would be all they needed in the 3-0 victory.
As you've probably figured out from reading this, Division III ball in a cold weather state certainly isn't the most glamorous. However, I still highly recommend an MSOE game as a way to enjoy an uncharacteristically warm March day, for anybody looking for something free and fun to do with your kids, or simply a way to get your baseball fix in before the Brewers get started. Speaking of which, Home Opener is on April 14th - Milwaukee Day! Megan and I got our tickets and we can't wait!
best food - Sprecher Root Beer on tap
field dimensions - 320/395/315