Left Field: 310 feet Left-Center Field: 379 feet Center Field: 390 feet Deep Center Field: 420 feet Deep Right Field: 380 feet Right Field: 302 feet Left-Field Wall: 33 feet
Fluor Field nearly replicates the dimensions of Fenway Park, home of the Red Sox. The ballpark has its own "Green Monster" replica, a 30-foot high wall in left field as opposed to the 37-foot one found at Fenway, and contains a manual scoreboard. Every other dimension is to the same specifications as Fenway Park, including "Pesky’s Pole" in right field. Other than the tribute to Fenway, Fluor Field also pays tribute to the Greenville area as the ballpark's nostalgic look utilizes reclaimed bricks from local mills. As is the tradition in Fenway Park, Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline" is sung in the middle of the seventh inning.[5] Fluor Field is adjacent to the Shoeless Joe Jackson Museum.[citation needed]
In 2007, the Greenville Drive privately funded the enhancement of Fluor Field at a cost of approximately $1.5 million. One of these enhancements include a display regarding Greenville's baseball heritage with information about players who were either born or played in the upstate region.[6]
On February 26, 2008, the stadium was officially renamed to Fluor Field at the West End.[7] The field was named for Fluor Corporation, a major local employer.
Since 2010, the field has hosted a neutral site game of the Reedy River Rivalry between the Clemson Tigers and South Carolina Gamecocks. The lone exception was in 2012, when that year's neutral site game was played in Charleston. Fluor Field hosts the second of three games spread out over a weekend on a Saturday, as the Friday and Sunday contests rotate yearly between the respective home fields for the two schools. The Gamecocks, as of 2017, hold a 4–3 advantage over the Tigers in games played at Fluor Field. The field has also hosted several regular season collegiate baseball games for South Carolina-based schools since its opening.
First hit: Jesús Soto, on April 6, 2006, in the 4th inning
First Drive hit: Jeff Natale, April 6, 2006, in the 4th inning
First home run: Jesús Soto, April 6, 2006, in the 4th inning
First Drive home run: Jeff Natale, April 6, 2006, in the 4th inning
On December 9, 2023, at around 3:00 a.m. EDT, 3 juveniles broke into the stadium and stole items from the press box. They were identified by their parents and turned themselves in.[10][11]
Attendance records
Highest season attendance: Over 350,000 (2012)
Highest single game attendance: 7,839 (April 24, 2022, (Greenville Drive vs. Winston-Salem Dash)