Greensboro Grasshoppers (PIT) @ Asheville Tourists (HOU)
June 7, 2026
S: Kyle Larsen
HR: Yordany De Los Santos 2 (GBO), Murf Gray 2 (GBO), Carlos Caro (GBO), Chase Call (ASH)
Attendance: 2,373
Time of Game: 3 hours, 50 minutes
Stadium Facts
Location: Asheville, NC
Opened: 1924
Capacity: 4,000
Level: High A
League: South Atlantic
Time of Game: 3 hours, 50 minutes
Stadium Facts
Location: Asheville, NC
Opened: 1924
Capacity: 4,000
Level: High A
League: South Atlantic
After opening my trip seeing a Saturday evening no-hitter in Hickory, I finished the weekend with a Sunday afternoon game a little further west in the city of Asheville, North Carolina, nestled within the Appalachian Mountains. For a modestly sized city, Asheville has a lot going on. It is one of the craft brewery capitals of the country. You are pretty much a stone's throw away from a brewery anywhere in the downtown area. At the south end of downtown sits quite possibly the most unique ballpark in all of professional baseball.
HomeTrust Park, which was named McCormick Field until very recently, opened way back in 1924, making it the third oldest park in affiliated minor league baseball and the oldest outside the state of Florida. It occupies a small patch of flat land surrounded by hills, necessitating comical dimensions for the playing field. It is only 297 feet to the right field foul pole and just 373 feet to straight away center field. Left field is only slightly deeper than right, but has a slightly lower wall as well, making it incredibly easy for batters to clear the fence in all directions. I'm glad this ballpark exists and highly recommend checking it out sometime. That said, I'm also glad I don't root for a MLB team that has Asheville as an affiliate because it would be impossible to judge players' true talent by looking at their statline. In this park, routine fly ball outs elsewhere turn into home runs or doubles off the wall. I suppose it might turn some doubles into singles too since it is not easy to advance on balls that slam off the wall. However, the ballpark gives hitters far more bases than it takes away. I feel for the Tourists pitchers. It also makes me wonder if the Astros are hesitant to send their top prospects to Asheville for long tours of duty as both hitters and pitchers could develop bad habits playing there. Anyway, now back to the stadium itself. Green hills and trees encircle almost the entire ballpark. It has a classic brick exterior. It has recently undergone renovations which has added some luxury seating options and party areas down each baseline. But the bulk of the seats exist in one seating bowl that stretches into the outfield area down the first base line, but barely past third base on the other side. The concourse is underneath the upper part of the seating bowl, with the entrances from the concourse leading to a walkway that bisects the seating area. A roof overhangs a good portion of the seats, which was nice on this sunny afternoon. The concourse is lined with an impressive array of concessions, including several beer stands from local breweries.
This game resembled the one I saw the night before in no way, shape or form. I suspect it was a pretty typical game in this bandbox though. It took two batters to see what this park is all about. Grasshoppers shortstop Yordany De Los Santos started his huge day by lining an opposite field homer to right center, well over the tall wall. It seemed to be crushed, so it's quite possible it would have been a home run just about anywhere. But I really don't know for sure when the wall is 30 feet closer to the plate than just about any other park I've seen. In the bottom of the first, the Tourists tied it up on a towering fly ball hit by Chase Call that carried over the left field wall. I think I can safely say this one would have been an out in most parks. Things really got crazy in the top of the second, where I will start skipping run scoring plays for the sake of time. The first three Greensboro batters got hits. Then with one out, De Los Santos came up and slugged his second home run in as many innings, this one a three run shot hit in the exact same direction as the first one. Maybe just a little higher though. Again, a no doubter in this park. Two batters later, Murf Gray crushed a hanger well over the left field wall for a two run homer. The Grasshoppers wound up putting up an 8 spot in the inning to take a 9-1 lead, amazingly a lead they would not hold. Asheville chipped away with four runs in the bottom of the third, aided by a pair of hit batters by Greensboro's lefty starter Connor Oliver. The Tourists added two more in the fourth and then took the lead with another four runs in the sixth, with the big blow coming on a three run double by Nehomar Ochoa. What was once an eight run lead turned into a 2 run deficit for the Grasshoppers after six. They finally got back on the board in the seventh though, retaking the lead on another homer by Gray, a line shot over the wall just to the right of dead center. Pretty sure this one would not have been a homer in most parks, but probably a solid double. Asheville tied it up in the bottom of the seventh. Greensboro then took the lead for good with two more in the eighth. Both teams scored in each of the final three innings. The difference wound up being that the Grasshoppers scored multiple runs while the Tourists put up single runs in those frames. When it was all said and done, Greensboro hung on to win this slugfest by a score of 16-14. There were 30 runs scored on 29 hits, six of which were home runs. Oh, and there were 26 strikeouts as well. So that's a lot of damage being done on balls in play. The game took 3:50 to complete, definitely one of the longest baseball games I've attended in years. But I had nowhere else to be, so I enjoyed every minute of it.
This was a really fun game in what seems to be a fun city. Perhaps it was a bit of a mistake to leave town the following morning without checking out more of the Asheville scene. That concluded the North Carolina portion of this trip. Next up were a couple more South Atlantic League ballparks in South Carolina, my first time venturing into that state for baseball games.
Next ballpark: Fluor Field in Greenville, SC














