

The seating and the field, from the right-field bleachers.

A view from behind the plate.
3 baseballs
Regular-season ball came to the park in the form of the Yuma Bullfrogs, who spent three seasons at Desert Sun Stadium before the league went belly-up.
In 2004, the Edmonton Trappers, playing their last season north of the border before moving to Texas, were scheduled by the Pacific Coast League to open at home. With the weather too cold to play in Edmonton in early April, and with a lot of Canadian “snowbirds” calling Yuma their winter home, the Trappers arranged to play opening series against Sacramento and Fresno at Desert Sun Stadium. I got to see one of those, a 6-5, 10-inning victory over Sacramento that saw the visiting RiverCats leave 19 runners on base in the first nine innings. This was the second time a PCL team had used Desert Sun Stadium as a temporary home to open a season, following the 1988 Colorado Springs Sky Sox.
The park shows its age, but remains perfectly functional. It is large: 345 feet down the lines, 420 to dead center. The seating bowl contains molded stadium seats for the box seats below the cross aisle, and aluminum seats in the upper level, including some with backs behind the plate.
| Game # | Date | League | Level | Result |
| 655 | 9-Apr-2004 | Pacific Coast | AAA | EDMONTON 6, Sacramento 5, 10 inn |