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Stadium:
Boone Pickens Stadium
In 1981, the start of a new chapter in Oklahoma State baseball history was written. The Cowboys began play in one of the nation?s finest facilities and returned to national prominence. Allie P. Reynolds Stadium has now been home to Cowboy baseball for over 20 years. Located on the northeast side of campus, Reynolds Stadium is located on the same site as the old baseball facility, University Park, and is named in honor of former OSU and major league pitching great Allie P. Reynolds. The $2.2 million structure, with approximately 1,000 cherubic seats, 2,000 bleacher seats in the main grandstand and 1,000 bleacher seats down the left-field foul line, Reynolds Stadium has a capacity near 4,000. Allie P. Reynolds also has one of the nation?s finest press boxes, featuring three radio booths and seating for 25 members of the media. Reynolds Stadium also has home-team facilities, including coaches? offices, player?s locker room, a training room, a classroom, and an enclosed concession stand and ticket booth. The major league-quality lighting system was installed in 1981 and has allowed OSU to host numerous local, regional, and national television appearances. During the storied history of Reynolds Stadium, it has undergone numerous renovations throughout the years including re-landscaping, new bleachers, and visiting team and umpire dressing rooms. In recent years, the addition of a new scoreboard, a new outfield fence, and the new indoor hitting facility have helped make Reynolds Stadium even better. Future plans for the stadium include box seats behind home plate and seating down the right field line.

Seating Chart:
Boone Pickens Stadium Seating Chart

Team Schedule:
Sep 1 @Georgia 6:45pm
Sep 8 Fla. Atlantic 7:05pm
Sep 14 @Troy 8:00pm
Sep 22 Texas Tech 3:30pm
Sep 29 Sam Houston State 7:05pm
Oct 6 @Texas A&M 2:00pm
Oct 13 @Nebraska TBA
Oct 20 Kansas St. TBA
Nov 3 Texas TBA
Nov 10 Kansas TBA
Nov 17 @Baylor TBA
Nov 24 @Oklahoma TBA

Season Preview:
Oklahoma State is a difficult team to read because it possesses so much promise that has yet to be fulfilled. Beating Alabama in the Independence Bowl was a huge confidence-builder and one that cannot be overlooked as an offseason boost. The Cowboys have enough game-breakers on offense to scare practically any opponent, but the defense must step up and realize its potential. Although Oklahoma State wants to promote competition at the quarterback position, the upside offered by versatile Bobby Reid makes him the man over backup Zac Robinson. Reid's versatility only makes playmakers such as WR Adarius Bowman and RB Dantrell Savage even more dangerous. After averaging 200 rushing and 200 passing yards per game last season, the OSU offense will be tough to contain. Oklahoma State has a new defensive coordinator, Tim Beckman, who spent the spring installing new schemes and moving some players around to get a read on their potential. Youth and injuries limited the Cowboys' defensive progress last season when they allowed 371.4 yards and 25.2 points on average. Expect improvement, though the coaching transition could limit progress early next season. Although he has been a disappointment as a receiver, Tommy Devereaux could be a big-play return man for the Cowboys, who have another proven weapon in that phase, Perrish Cox. Oklahoma State had trouble with snaps in its spring game, a problem that could become devastating if corrections aren't made.

Official Site:
okstate.com