Cricket The Main Event Field was designed with
cricket in mind. It features a large circular grass field, roughly 167 yards (153 meters) diameter. Surrounding it is a 10,000-seat stadium and large berms capable of holding 15,000 more. It also features stadium lighting and a luxury viewing area. It was the first venue in the United States officially certified by the ICC for playing ODIs. The first organized cricket event held there was a
Twenty20 cricket tournament, the Martin Luther King Twenty20 Cricket Tournament (MLK T20), from January 18–20, 2008. The event featured local players from
India,
Pakistan and the
West Indies. The first international tournament hosted was another Twenty20 tournament, the MAQ T20 International Cricket Tournament, on May 23–25, 2008. That event featured teams from
Canada, Pakistan, the West Indies, and the rest of the world, including former superstars such as
Javed Miandad,
Richie Richardson, and
Mohammed Azharuddin. The park also hosted the first full cricket international matches on American soil, a two-match Twenty20 series between
New Zealand and
Sri Lanka, on May 22 and May 23 2010. The series was drawn 1-1, a low-scoring affair (the highest total by either team was New Zealand's 120/7 in the first game), with a healthy and supportive crowd, as well as the fine-quality facilities (allowing for the exception of substandard lighting, which resulted in the cancellation of an originally scheduled night match). On June 30 and July 1 2012, New Zealand and the West Indies played 2 T20 Internationals at this ground, with the Windies winning both matches convincingly. In 2016, the West Indies-based
Caribbean Premier League played multiple matches at the park during the second half of July. On August 2, 2016, India and the West Indies announced that they would play a two-match T20 series on August 27 and 28, marking India's first international matches on American soil, as an addendum to India's tour of the Caribbean. Ahead of the start of the series, Indian coach and retired star leg-spin bowler
Anil Kumble said about the park, "I certainly didn't expect the facilities to be as good as what it is in the United States. I certainly felt that it could be a makeshift. I had heard about Florida and this ground, but very impressed with the facilities that we have seen today." Only one match produced a result, with the second match ending in a no result due to rain and a technical delay. In the first match of the series, India's
KL Rahul scored the second-fastest T20I century off only 46 balls, eventually finishing on 110 not out for the highest international score in the venue's history. The two teams also posted the highest international innings totals in the venue's history, with the West Indies winning by one run (245/6 off 20 overs against 244/4 off 20 overs) thanks to
Evin Lewis' own century (100 off 49 balls). It also hosted two T20I matches
between the West Indies and Bangladesh in August 2018. In 2019, it also played host to two of the three T20I matches in the T20I Series in the
a tour of the West Indies by India. The first T20I held on August 3, 2019, was a low scoring match between the teams. India opted to field first and restricted West Indies to a total of 95. India struggled to get there but managed to win the match by 4 wickets. The second T20I, held on the next day was won by the Indian cricket team by 22 runs (D/L Method) in a match which had its second innings curtailed due to lightning and heavy rain. In September 2019, the venue hosted the
United States Tri-Nation Series, part of the
2019–22 ICC Cricket World Cup League 2—marking the first
One Day International (ODI) matches to ever be held in the United States, and the
U.S. national team's first-ever ODI win. == Sports ==