Dodger Stadium was one of the last baseball-only facilities built before the dawn of the multi-purpose stadium.
It is a baseball-only facility.
As part of the deal, the stadium underwent an extensive renovation, returning the stadium to its original role as a baseball-only facility.
That practice ended in 1995 when Busch Stadium was remodelled into a baseball-only facility.
Formerly both a baseball field and football practice facility, the park was converted to a baseball-only facility in the 1990s.
After the Oakland Raiders football team moved to Los Angeles in 1982, many improvements were made to what was suddenly a baseball-only facility.
The team would have played in what was planned to be called Cisco Field, a 32,000-seat, baseball-only facility.
White said the league preferred teams use baseball-only facilities, but multipurpose parks would not be ruled out.
Although it is a baseball-only facility, its design took several stylistic cues from the multi-purpose stadiums of the day.
The stadium was the sole baseball-only facility built in the majors between 1962 and 1991.