The construction on the modified, shorter left-field wall at Camden Yards is complete. The big winners will be the hitters -- both on the Orioles and other teams -- who will hit home runs that wouldn’t have gone out over the past three seasons.
Back in 2022, the Orioles decided to move back the left-field wall by 26.5 feet and raise the fence height by six feet. The result was a hilariously rough situation for power hitters ( particularly for lefties) that ended up being dubbed, "Walltimore."
The left wall at Camden Yards took away plenty of home runs from Ryan Mountcastle the past three years, but it hurt him on the road too.
The new features include food items, an expanded Bird Bath Splash Zone, new merchandise, and new ticket bundles.
The Red Sox and Orioles will play the rubber game of their three-game series. There is rain in the forecast throughout the day. It is raining now and the tarp is on the field as of 10 a.m.
Games in March are fun, but October matters most for Orioles fans. Camden Yards has a way of temporarily erasing any frustration.
The renovations are completed on the left field wall at Camden Yards. It’s moved closer to home plate and lowered, a “happier medium,” as executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias said in November.
When the Orioles come back to Baltimore, they won't just be welcomed with cheers from fans at Camden Yards — a new left field wall also awaits them.
Kristian Campbell, Alex Bregman and Triston Casas all homered. Here are some instant reactions from the Red Sox' win.
As a Band-Aid fix ahead of a more comprehensive sound system overhaul before the 2026 season, the Maryland Stadium Authority this month installed several speakers next to the Oriole Park scoreboard.