Tointon Family Stadium is a baseball stadium in Manhattan, Kansas. It is the home field of the Kansas State University Wildcats college baseball team. The stadium holds 2,000 people and opened for baseball in 1961. It is named after Bob and Betty Tointon, who donated money for renovations in 2002.
Tointon Family Stadium opened as KSU Baseball Stadium in 1961, with a capacity of 1,500. It would be built around the existing diamond, now called Frank Myers Field, which hosted Kansas State baseball games since 1897. In 1907, the team won the Topeka Conference title, a first in K-State history. 
After the stadium's completion the field was dedicated on April 7, 1961, in honor of Frank Myers, K-State's baseball coach who retired the following year. It would be another 24 years until the team could play "night games" after lights were installed in 1985.
In 2002, on its 41st anniversary, KSU Stadium saw the completion of its first significant renovation. The $3.1 million dollar project ended with the dedication on April 20, 2002, named in honor of Betty and Bob Tointon (Class of 1955).
New features included:
The stadium is lined with the limestone donated by the Bayer Stone Company of St. Marys, Kansas to match main campus buildings, including Anderson Hall. In 2003 a state of the art lighting system, electronic scoreboard, improved warning track and permanent ticket booth were added, followed two years latter by new batting cages.
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