Explore the Red Sox Minor League ballparks
The Minor League Ballpark Guides series spotlights each stadium across baseball¡¯s affiliated ranks. Each edition provides ballpark highlights, from concessions to seating options to in-game entertainment to mascots. Ballpark Guides also take travelers through each facility¡¯s surrounding area, encompassing the best places in town to eat or drink, nearby tourist attractions and more. Plan your Minor League Baseball road trip today!
For Red Sox prospects, the journey to the big leagues is a a trip up and down the East coast, starting in the mid-Atlantic and ending up in the Northeast. Future Bostonians gets reps in Virginia, South Carolina and Maine before heading to Massachusetts.
The Red Sox system, in four parts:
Single-A: Salem Red Sox, Carilion Clinic Field at Salem Memorial Ballpark
The mountain views are panoramic and the region's baseball roots can be traced all the way back to the 1880s. While Salem's parent club is nearly 700 miles away, there are plenty of Red Sox fans in the area to make up for it. Read more ??
High-A: Greenville Drive, Fluor Field
Lots of brick. A neighborhood feel outside. A monster of a wall in left field with seats on top of it, a live organist, and ¡°Sweet Caroline¡± in the eighth inning. If it weren¡¯t for all the people decked out in orange and purple, you might for a moment think you were in Massachusetts. Read more ?
Double-A: Portland Sea Dogs, Hadlock Field
A stadium where Red Sox prospects are adored, the lobster rolls are unrivaled and the Maine Monster looms in left field. Read more ??
Triple-A: Worcester Red Sox, Polar Park
Enjoy the sights and sounds of passing freight trains, sit atop the Green Monster-inspired Worcester Wall and hobnob with the happiest mascot in all of professional sports. You may be in Massachusetts, but when it comes to food Coney Island is king. Read more ??