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Camelback Ranch Guide: Dodgers and White Sox Spring Training in Glendale
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Camelback Ranch Guide: Dodgers and White Sox Spring Training in Glendale

ZonaHaps|June 5, 2026

Camelback Ranch – Glendale is one of the premier spring-training facilities in the Cactus League, and it hosts two of baseball's most storied franchises: the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Chicago White Sox. The complex opened in 2009, and it set a new standard for what a spring-training experience could look like. If you are visiting the West Valley for Cactus League baseball, this is one of the first stops worth building your trip around.

The stadium and grounds

The main stadium seats just over 13,000 fans, including a large grass berm in left field that fills up fast on weekends. The berm is the move: bring a blanket, get there early, and you are essentially watching major-league caliber baseball from a lawn chair in the Arizona sun. Reserved seating runs along both baselines and behind home plate, with shade available on the covered sections on the first-base side.

What sets Camelback Ranch apart is the surrounding practice complex. There are twelve practice fields spread across the grounds, and on non-game mornings you can walk right up to the fields and watch players go through drills, batting practice, and fielding work. The Dodgers and White Sox practice on separate sides of the campus, so you can bounce between them. Autograph seekers tend to cluster near the paths between the clubhouses and the practice fields in the hour before workouts begin.

Location and parking

The address is 16101 N 127th Ave, Glendale, AZ 85338. It sits at the western edge of the metro, about 25 minutes from Sky Harbor International Airport on a clear day. Parking on the grounds is plentiful but fills quickly on weekends and for marquee games — plan to arrive 45 minutes before first pitch if you want a spot close to the gates. Rideshare drop-off and pick-up is available near the north entrance.

Tickets and game schedule

Spring training games typically run from late February through late March. The Dodgers and White Sox split home and away dates throughout the Cactus League schedule, so on any given day the game at Camelback Ranch could feature either club as the home team. Check mlb.com for the official spring-training schedule once it is released each fall. Weekend games and Dodgers home dates sell the fastest — book those well in advance. Weekday games and White Sox home dates often have tickets available closer to game day, and prices are notably lower than the regular season.

Lawn tickets are the best value in spring training. You lose a fixed seat but gain freedom, a better social atmosphere, and a view that actually puts you close to the action in left field. Bring a blanket and a cooler — both are allowed.

What to eat and drink

Camelback Ranch leans into local Arizona food vendors alongside standard ballpark fare. The concession options along the main concourse include Sonoran hot dogs, birria tacos, and decent craft beer from regional Arizona breweries. Lines move fastest during innings rather than between them, so plan accordingly. The berm has its own concession points that are usually shorter than the main-stand lines.

Before and after the game

Glendale's food and bar scene is within a short drive of the ballpark. The area around Westgate Entertainment District, about ten minutes north, has sports bars, chain restaurants, and a walkable strip that fills up before and after Coyotes games in winter — the same spots serve the spring-training crowd well. For a more local feel, look for bars and restaurants along Glendale Avenue toward Old Town Glendale, which has a quieter antique-and-dining district a few miles east.

To browse restaurants, bars, and things to do near the stadium before your trip, check the West Valley guide and the Arizona events calendar — spring is the Valley's busiest season and there is almost always something worth stacking on your itinerary around the game.

Tips for first-timers

  • Get there early. The practice fields are open before games, and that access is what makes spring training different from anything else in baseball.
  • Bring sunscreen and a hat. The Arizona sun in February and March is stronger than it looks, especially on the berm.
  • Park on the north side for shorter walks to the main entrance.
  • Check the home team schedule before buying tickets — the visiting team changes daily, and some matchups draw significantly larger crowds than others.

Camelback Ranch is a genuine highlight of the Cactus League, and Glendale in spring is one of the better reasons to make the trip to the West Valley. See the full Cactus League overview for a broader look at planning a spring-training trip across the Valley.