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The Rays get 120 hours to turn the Yankees' ballpark into their own. Here's how they'll do it

Steinbrenner Field is on North Dale Mabry Highway and is the spring training home of the New York Yankees.
Carl Lisciandrello
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WUSF
To convert Steinbrenner Field from a Yankee ballpark to a Rays ballpark, more than 3,000 unique signs and advertising boards will be installed. The team store, at left, will have been emptied of Yankee gear and restocked with Rays apparel. Not to be touched, however, are the Yankee player displays at the stadium entrance.

The Rays want to make recently upgraded Steinbrenner Field a home away from home. But there's a lot of work to do in the five days between the end of spring training and Tampa Bay's regular-season opener.

“Extreme Makeover: Baseball Edition" is about to premiere.

When Tampa Bay players leave Steinbrenner Field following the New York Yankees’ spring training home finale on March 23, their staff will launch a 120-hour transformation of the ballpark for the Rays' season in exile from storm-damaged Tropicana Field.

By the time the Rays return for their March 28 opener against Colorado, more than 3,000 unique signs and advertising boards will have been installed. The 10-by-9 foot “Y-A-N-K-E-E-S” letters above the first- and third-base stands, easily seen by drivers passing on Dale Mabry Highway, will have been covered with Rays markings.

Also covered will be the interlocking “NY” hanging from the ceiling in the center of the home clubhouse. And the Yankees’ team store at the stadium front gates will have been emptied of pinstriped gear and restocked with Rays apparel.

A metamorphosis that even Statcast can’t measure.

“Building the plane while you fly it,” said Bill Walsh, the Rays’ chief business officer. “At times really, really exciting and at times obviously just incredibly frantic and stressful.”

After playing indoors at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg since the franchise took the field in 1998, the Rays needed a rental after Hurricane Milton tore off the roof panels on Oct 9.

Concluding the ballpark couldn’t be repaired quickly, the Rays found an office site near the Trop two weeks later and announced a deal on Nov. 14 to play 2025 home games at Steinbrenner Field, the open-air 11,000-seat spring training base of the Yankees in Tampa.

A member of the media photographs a recently completed wing of the New York Yankees' clubhouse that lines the first base side of the stadium during a tour of the upgraded team spring training facilities Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, at Steinbrenner Field. When the Rays move in at the end of March, the large  letters spelling “YANKEES” above the first- and third-base stands will be covered with Tampa Bay markings.
Steve Nesius
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AP
A member of the media photographs a recently completed wing of the New York Yankees clubhouse that lines the first base side of the stadium during a tour of the upgraded team spring training facilities Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Steve Nesius)

These temporary digs will feel like a player palace. A two-year renovation designed by Gensler and executed by Turner Construction Co. transformed the home clubhouse from motel quality to a Four Seasons.

A home clubhouse more lavish than most regular-season facilities

Player and staff space doubled to 50,000 square feet. There is a two-story weight room with floor-to-ceiling windows and garage door, indoor and outdoor stretching areas, a pingpong table, a barbershop, eight beds in a trainers area, massage rooms and a SwimEx along with hot and cold tubs with TVs at water level, sauna red-light therapy and four batting cages.

Each player locker has a safe along with USB and USB-C ports. There is a 70-seat meeting room, six private offices and 12 desks for additional staff.

A made-to-order open kitchen is near a 2,400-square foot picnic patio with 18 tables for dining and a long counter.

“I could totally see a wedding,” said Matt Ferry, the Yankees' director of baseball operations.

Andy Pettitte, a former Yankees pitcher and now a spring training instructor, recalled how the food table was in a clubhouse corner near the showers when the stadium opened at Legends Field in 1996.

“It’s crazy it’s so beautiful,” Pettitte said after a dip in the cold tank. “When I came up, it was taboo to be in the trainers room.”

Steinbrenner Field’s regular-season team is the Yankees’ Class A Tampa Tarpons, who will dress a 1.2-mile drive away at the team’s minor league complex across Dale Mabry Highway and play home games on Field 2, a practice diamond behind Steinbrenner’s first-base side.

New York spent the last two offseasons renovating the home clubhouse.

“The industry owes Hal Steinbrenner a real debt of gratitude,” baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said of the Yankees’ owner. “He put literally tens of millions of dollars into improving Steinbrenner Field and the first people who are really going to get to use it for any period of time is the Tampa Bay Rays.”

Some reminders of Yankees will remain

A statue of late Yankees owner George Steinbrenner and the retired numbers commemorating Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and other Yankees greats near the entrance must remain untouched along with Steinbrenner’s name above the videoboard.

A baseball diamond with a New York Yankees logo below home plate
Lynne Sladky/AP
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AP
More than 3,000 unique signs and advertising boards will be installed at Steinbrenner Field to cover up as many references to the New York Yankees as possible.

All the other signage is set to change — the new ones would stretch a mile laid side to side. Five companies, 50 installers and at least 80 Rays staff will carry out the conversion.

A method will be found to cover the floor tiles leading to the clubhouse bathrooms that spell out: “The Bronx” and “New York.” It was unclear whether the Rays can cover wallpaper near the showers meant to create the illusion of scenery viewed from a speeding subway.

While the clubhouse is set up for spring training with 51 stalls along the walls circling the room and 28 in the center spread into four pods, the Rays thought it might be too difficult to remove the unneeded spaces in the middle.

“We didn’t do as much branding as we wanted to do because the Rays are going to cover most of it,” Ferry said.

Yankees staff will remain in their fourth-floor offices, but the team will use the cramped visitors’ clubhouse on the third-base side when the Rays host New York from April 17-20 and Aug. 19-20. Extra construction is being funded by the Rays.

What had been the visitors’ trainers room was opened to the main part of the locker room and in the equivalent of musical chairs, the training tables moved to the baseball storage area. The umpires room became the manager’s office, which was remade into the clubhouse manager’s space, and umpires were moved to a trailer outside the ballpark. Max’s Cafe, which had been used for media meals, will be the visiting team’s food area.

Batting cages stand ready adjacent to the New York Yankees clubhouse during a tour of the upgraded team spring training facilities Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Steve Nesius)
Steve Nesius
/
AP
Batting cages stand ready adjacent for the Rays in the home clubhouse of Steinbrenner Field, which recently underwent a major upgrade. Of course, the improvements were done for the Yankees, who spent tens of millions of dollars on them, but the Rays will be the first take advantage for an extended period.

A security room became the video review room and a humidor for baseballs was constructed off the tunnel circling between the dugouts. Tracking and replay technology was installed.

Seat inventory will change from Ticketmaster to Tickets.com and additional luxury suites will be created beyond the current 13. Food will be provided by Legends Hospitality, co-owned by the Yankees' parent company, instead of Levy Restaurants, Tropicana Field's concessionaire since 2018.

“We absolutely have kind of day-by-day, in some cases kind of hour-by-hour schedules for various installations,” said Walsh, who learned from the experience of shifting the team's 2023 spring training site after damage in Port Charlotte caused by Hurricane Ian.

Storms are likely in the summer

Absence of a roof figures to be disruptive in an area that had a record 80.29 inches of rain last year, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, including 82% from June 1 through Oct. 15. The Tarpons had eight games delayed by rain either pregame or in-game plus four cancellations, three postponements, four suspended games and one that was shortened.

Tampa Bay's schedule was adjusted to have 19 of its first 22 games at home and then 16 of 19 on the road from June 24 to July 13 and 19 of 22 from July 25 to Aug. 17.

“We’re going to be playing outdoor baseball in Tampa Bay for the first time ever during the regular season and people have been talking about this for decades," Walsh said. “It’s kind of in our DNA to be a bit of an agitator and try to find opportunity sort of through challenges and through doing things differently. And this is certainly doing things differently.”

Tampa Bay is one of two teams whose home games will be in minor league stadiums this year. The Athletics, who have left Oakland, moved to Sutter Park in West Sacramento, California, for at least three seasons while a planned structure is built in Las Vegas.

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