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Citizens Bank Park
@ispykenny

Philadelphia Phillies

Citizens Bank Park

Philadelphia, PAOpened 0

Next home gameSeatGeek

Athletics at Phillies

Tue, May 5 · 6:40 PM

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Quick facts

Opened
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Capacity
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Left field
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Center field
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Right field
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Architect
Ewing Cole / HOK Sport

Has played as a hitter's park since opening, particularly favoring left-handed pull power.

What makes it iconic

  • The 50-foot Liberty Bell in center field — lights up and rings after every Phillies home run.
  • Ashburn Alley behind center field — a wide concourse named for Phillies broadcaster Richie Ashburn.
  • Replaced Veterans Stadium (1971–2003), the multi-purpose concrete bowl shared with the Eagles.
  • Statues of Phillies legends Mike Schmidt, Steve Carlton, Robin Roberts, and Richie Ashburn.

Notable moments

  • The final out of the 2008 World Series — Brad Lidge struck out Eric Hinske, ending a 25-year championship drought.
  • Roy Halladay's postseason no-hitter in Game 1 of the 2010 NLDS, the second no-hitter in postseason history.
  • Jimmy Rollins' walk-off, two-out double in Game 4 of the 2009 NLCS.
  • Bryce Harper's pennant-winning home run in Game 5 of the 2022 NLCS.

Timeline

  1. 2004

    Citizens Bank Park opens

    The Phillies moved out of Veterans Stadium and into a fan-friendly retro park with a 50-foot Liberty Bell beyond center field.

  2. 2008

    World Series title

    After 25 years, the Phillies won it all — Brad Lidge struck out the side in the ninth of Game 5 (resumed after a two-day rain delay) to clinch over Tampa Bay.

  3. 2009

    Back to the Series

    The Phillies repeated as NL champions but lost the World Series to the Yankees in six games. Cliff Lee was electric in the games he started.

  4. 2010

    Halladay's no-hitter

    Roy Halladay no-hit the Reds in Game 1 of the NLDS — only the second postseason no-hitter ever (Don Larsen's 1956 perfect game was the first).

  5. 2022

    Harper's pennant moment

    Down 1-0 in the eighth of NLCS Game 5, Bryce Harper hit a two-run, pennant-winning home run off Robert Suárez. The Phillies fell to Houston in the World Series.