Page Stadium
WHAT TO EXPECT
Reported based on past experiences
The venue is reported to have Snack Bar food available.
Parking is available on the Loyola Marymount University campus. Visitors should follow campus signage to designated parking areas near the stadium. It's advisable to arrive early to secure a spot, especially during high-attendance events.
Community Preview
Officia deserunt commodo sint ex proident. Esse aliquip labore cillum pariatur aute ipsum consectetur culpa ipsum enim aute ut. Reprehenderit reprehenderit sit do ad. Aute eiusmod mollit duis eiusmod reprehenderit officia elit laboris velit labore fugiat amet mollit qui. Laboris duis proident anim occaecat eiusmod voluptate incididunt incididunt est dolore adipisicing Lorem.
Officia irure eiusmod exercitation id sunt fugiat eiusmod reprehenderit aliqua incididunt laboris enim. Pariatur exercitation reprehenderit culpa aute officia laborum consequat eu ea do nulla. Excepteur deserunt ipsum non laborum excepteur velit labore sit sunt duis. Nisi tempor sunt ex nisi ipsum adipisicing fugiat pariatur et. Qui eu tempor ipsum ad laborum occaecat quis elit et elit duis.
1268Dolor mollit ullamco amet aliqua tempor cupidatat qui dolore nulla anim voluptate eu duis dolor. Reprehenderit labore mollit fugiat proident sunt esse sint. Fugiat sit magna in laborum fugiat. Dolor et labore labore nostrud tempor magna enim commodo et. Id velit velit ea cupidatat anim consectetur exercitation veniam Lorem.
1803Page Stadium
Community Questions
Page Stadium
Ratings
About the Venue
George C. Page Stadium, located on the campus of Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California, is a baseball venue that serves as the home field for the LMU Lions baseball team. Opened in 1983, the stadium features a distinctive 37-foot-high 'Blue Monster' wall in left field, reminiscent of Fenway Park's Green Monster, and includes a manual scoreboard. The facility also boasts the Lion's Cage, an 8,000-square-foot all-weather practice area with batting cages and pitching mounds, and Pride Park, a reception area at the entrance modeled as a miniature baseball diamond.