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Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

RFK Stadium
Facility Statistics
Location 2400 East Capitol Street Southeast
Washington, D.C. 20003
Broke Ground 1959
Opened October 1, 1961 (Football)
April 9, 1962 (Baseball)
Surface Grass (Prescription Athletic Turf)
Owner District of Columbia
Operator D.C. Sports & Entertainment Commission
Construction Cost $20 million USD
Architects George A. Dahl
Osborn Engineering
Tenants
Washington Redskins 1961-1996
Washington Senators (II) 1962-1971
D.C. United 1996-present
Washington Freedom 2001-2003
Washington Nationals 2005-present
Seating Capacity
Baseball 45,596
Football 55,672
Dimensions
1962-1971
Left Field 335 ft / 102.1 m
Left-Center 381 ft / 116.1 m
Center Field 410 ft / 125.0 m
Right-Center 378 ft / 115.2 m
Right Field 335 ft / 102.1 m
Backstop 60 ft / 18.2 m
2005
Left Field 335 ft / 102.1 m
Left-Center 380 ft / 115.8 m
Center Field 410 ft / 125.0 m
Right-Center 380 ft / 115.8 m
Right Field 335 ft / 102.1 m
Backstop 54 ft / 16.5 m

Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, informally known as RFK Stadium, is a sports stadium that opened in the fall of 1961. Originally called D.C. Stadium, it served as home to the Washington Senators of Major League Baseball from the spring of 1962 through 1971, when the team moved to Arlington, Texas. The stadium was also the home of the Washington Redskins, a team in the National Football League, from 1961 until 1996, when they moved to FedEx Field in suburban Maryland.

The stadium was renamed for the slain presidential candidate Robert Kennedy in 1969.

Concerts featuring renowned rock bands and performers still take place at the stadium. It has also hosted World Cup matches in 1994 and Women's World Cup matches in 2003.


The stadium now serves mainly as the home of the Washington Nationals of Major League Baseball as well as the D.C. United of Major League Soccer. A complex conversion is necessary to switch the stadium seating from baseball to soccer configuration and back again. This includes rolling the 3rd-base lower-level seats into the outfield along a buried rail, dropping the hydraulic pitcher's mound 3 feet into the ground, and laying sod over the infield dirt. In 2005, this conversion will be done over 20 times.

RFK Stadium is most remembered for being home to the Redskins, whose return to prominence as a football power really began the same year the Senators left town. The Redskins' first game in RFK Stadium was a 24-21 loss to the New York Giants on October 1, 1961. The team's first win in the stadium was over its archrival, the Dallas Cowboys on December 17, 1961. The Redskins' last win at RFK Stadium was a 37-10 trouncing of the Cowboys on December 22, 1996

As a baseball park, RFK Stadium was unique in having only an upper deck across the outfield, atop a high wall. Burly slugger Frank Howard (6'7", 270 lbs) hit a number of tape-measure home runs in his career, a few of which landed in the center field area of that upper deck. Another memorable baseball moment, which had nothing to do with the Senators, occurred in a Cracker Jack Old Timers game in the early 1980s, when 75 year old Hall of Famer Luke Appling smacked a home run.

With its revival as a major league baseball facility, RFK Stadium now displaces Dodger Stadium as the fourth oldest major league ballpark, behind Fenway Park, Wrigley Field and Yankee Stadium.

New Developments

On September 29, 2004, Major League Baseball announced its intentions to move the Montreal Expos to Washington, DC and rename them the Washington Nationals. RFK Stadium has undergone a $13 million dollar renovation, and will be used for a total of three years for the new baseball team, while a $440 million dollar state-of-the-art stadium is built on the north bank of the Anacostia River at South Capitol Street. Their first regular-season home game at RFK was April 14, 2005, vs. the Arizona Diamondbacks.

On April 14, 2005, just before the Nationals' home opener, the D.C. Sports and Entertainment Commission announced an agreement with the Department of Defense under which the military would pay the city about $6 million for the right to place recruiting kiosks and signage in the stadium. In return, the stadium would be dubbed Armed Forces Field at RFK Stadium.

Memorable games/moments at RFK Stadium

External Links

Last updated: 05-21-2005 02:16:36