The University of Mississippi Athletics

Oxford-University Stadium / Swayze Field

Swayze Field - 2018 NCAA Oxford Regional

 Swayze Field - Photo Gallery
 Baseball Performance Center - Photo Gallery

For the latest gameday policies at Oxford-University Stadium/Swayze Field, please visit OleMissGameday.com/baseball.
 

The 2025 season marks the Ole Miss Rebels’ 37th year of calling the friendly confines of Oxford-University Stadium/Swayze Field home.

Construction of the $3.75 million stadium was completed in October, 1988, while landscaping and touch-up work was finished through the course of the 1989 season and through the summer months.

The stadium’s first action saw the Rebels sweep a doubleheader from Cumberland University on a bitter cold day, February 19, 1989. Still, a crowd of 1,016 braved the elements to be a part of that historic day in the school’s baseball history.

Ole Miss officially dedicated its new home on April 22, 1989, with a ceremony attended by many dignitaries, including Hall of Famer Whitey Ford and Ole Miss great Archie Manning. A sellout crowd of 2,967 attended and watched the Rebels down Kentucky, 4-3.

The ballpark has grown and undergone changes since its original opening date, including an $18 million renovation project prior to the 2009 season and a $19 million project that was completed in 2018. The latest project features an exclusive performance center for Ole Miss Baseball that features the following: a new locker room, weight room, training room, player’s lounge, team meeting room, indoor hitting cages and an indoor pitching tunnel.

A seating area was added beyond the right field fence in 1993, where hundreds of students have become accustomed to spending their sunny spring afternoons at the ballpark.

The outfield area has since undergone another transformation as a left field and right field lounge area was constructed during the 2000 season. The area, which is complete with picnic tables and barbecue stands was expanded again prior to the 2007 season.

In the fall of 2003, the Charles M. Merkel Hitting Complex, a 6,800-square-foot indoor hitting facility, was added to the ballpark, and the indoor batting tunnel underneath the first base stands has become an indoor pitching area.

Beginning with the 2006 season, the park received a new scoreboard which contains a large video board capable of showing highlights and replays throughout the course of the game. Then completed in front of the stadium was a new office suite to house the Rebel baseball coaching staff and support staff for the program.

The 2009 renovations to O-U Stadium added a new club suite level as well as a new press box down the third base line. The grandstands were also extended down both baselines with new box seats and grandstand seating.

On the third base side of the stadium, 2009 brought the Rebels a new locker room and lounge, as well as a brand new team room with theater style seating and audio-visual equipment. Also included was a new training room. Prior to the 2011 season, the Rebels installed a new HD video board and scoreboard to replace the one put in place for the 2006 season.

In February 2016, Ole Miss Athletics announced plans for a $19 million baseball project to enhance the student-athlete experience as well as the gameday atmosphere for Rebel fans. After multiple phases of renovations, the project was completed ahead of the 2019 season. The added dugout club and rooftop plaza, as well as the state-of-the-art baseball performance center, make Swayze Field one of the best facilities in all of college baseball for both fan experience and student-athlete amenities.

The addition of the Baseball Performance Center provides a new weight room exclusive to Ole Miss baseball and overlooking Swayze Field on one side and Bailey’s Woods on the other.  The Henry Ullrich Fueling Station, staffed by the Ole Miss Athletics nutrition staff is adjacent to the weight room, along with a players’ lounge, complete with pool and ping-pong tables, TVs and gaming systems. Elsewhere on the top floor of the facility is a new team meeting room with a projection system and theater-style seating.

The new locker room provides more space and amenities for the Rebel student-athletes and sits sandwiched between expanded equipment and training rooms. The training room features both hot and cold tubs to aid rehabilitation and recovery. Also on the lower level is the new hitting and pitching indoor facility, allowing the Rebels to work on their craft in all weather conditions. When the Rebels are ready to go, they walk past the fans in the Dugout Club, down to the first base dugout and out onto the field.

SWAYZE FIELD
Upon completion in 1989, the new Ole Miss baseball field was fittingly named Swayze Field in honor of the late Tom Swayze, one of the great legends in Ole Miss history. A three-year letterman in baseball at Ole Miss, Swayze later became head coach of the Ole Miss program. During his 21-year tenure at the helm of Ole Miss from 1950-1971, Swayze compiled a 361-201-2 record, which gives him a .642 winning percentage, the best winning percentage in school history. Swayze led Ole Miss to three NCAA College World Series appearances and four SEC Championships.

ATTENDANCE RECORDS

SEASON
Total - 323,047 in 2023 (32 games)
Average - 10,095 in 2023 (32 games)

THREE-DATE SERIES
35,055 vs. Mississippi State April 21-23, 2022
33,438 vs. Tennessee March 25-27, 2022
33,423 vs. Arkansas April 10-11, 2021
33,070 vs. East Carolina February 17-19, 2017
32,901 vs. LSU April 21-23, 2023
32,888 vs. Charleston Southern February 18-20, 2022
32,819 vs. Mississippi State April 12-14, 2024
32,476 vs. LSU April 22-24, 2021
32,075 vs. LSU April 26-28, 2018
31,775 vs. Florida March 25-26, 2023
SINGLE GAME
Mississippi State April 23, 2022 12,503
LSU April 28, 2018 12,152
Tennessee March 26, 2022 12,134
East Carolina February 17, 2017 12,117
Mississippi State April 22, 2022 12,078
Alabama April 9, 2022 12,045
LSU April 27, 2018     11,861
Arkansas April 10, 2021 11,857
LSU April 23, 2021 11,788
Alabama April 13, 2013 11,729
LSU April 22, 2023 11,661
LSU April 24, 2021 11,653
Charleston Southern February 19, 2022 11,621
Florida March 25, 2023 11,560
Arkansas April 10, 2021 11,524
East Carolina February 18, 2017 11,494
Mississippi State April 13, 2024 11,486
Tennessee March 25, 2022 11,337
Murray State April 12, 2022 11,331
Saint Louis June 2, 2018 11,304
Mississippi State April 12, 2024 11,277
Iowa March 2, 2024 11,226
Mississippi State April 1, 2017 11,204
Delaware February 17, 2023 11,146
Charleston Southern February 18, 2022 11,146
Arkansas     March 31, 2018 11,146
Florida April 5, 2019 11,026