Princeton Panthers Baseball

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Princeton Panthers Baseball, Amateur Sports Team, Princeton, MN.

06/14/2026

Sunday Funday anyone?! Going to be a great day for a game 😎. The burgers and beers will be rolling ⚾️🍔🍺⚾️

06/11/2026

⚾ Baseball Day in Princeton Returns July 9th! ⚾

We're just under one month away from one of the best nights of the summer at Solheim Veterans Field.

Last year's Fox 9 Town Ball Tour stop reminded us just how special baseball is in Princeton. While the TV cameras won't be back this year, we're planning an even bigger celebration of everything we love about hometown baseball, community, and summer nights at our beautiful ballpark.

We'd like to extend a special invitation to all former Princeton Legion and Panther players. Like last year, Baseball Day is dedicated to you. Come reconnect with teammates and old friends, share stories, and relive those unforgettable summer nights at Solheim.

And to the rest of the community - Youth players, families, longtime residents, and newcomers alike - you are invited. Whether you live for baseball or simply want to spend a summer evening at the ballpark, Baseball Day has something for everyone.

⚾ Hometown Doubleheader ⚾

4:30 PM — Princeton Legion vs. Cambridge
(National Anthem performed by Fr. Kevin Anderson of Christ Our Light Catholic Church)

7:30 PM — Princeton Panthers vs. Albertville Anglers

🎟 FREE ADMISSION

🍺 Ballpark Bar serving ice-cold beer, seltzers, and more

🌽 16-Team Double Elimination Bags Tournament (5:30 PM Start)
• Top 3 teams take home cash winnings

🎟 50/50 Raffle and Prize Drawings throughout the evening

🌭 Grilled favorites and full concessions from the Princeton Baseball Boosters Club

Featuring local favorites:

🍕 Pizza Barn Food Truck

🍦 Oliver's Corner

🍓 Cloud 9 Energy Bowls

We're excited to continue what is quickly becoming a summer tradition in Princeton. Gather your family, invite your friends, and join us for an unforgettable night at Solheim Field.

See you at the ballpark!

Photos from Wizards Landscaping's post 06/08/2026

Yes it’s true - The Panthers have a couple of Wizards on the team. 🧙‍♂️🧙‍♂️

If you or someone you know is looking to upgrade your landscaping, get in touch with our boys and they’ll get your place looking it’s best for the summer.

(952) 529-0552
[email protected]

Home 06/03/2026

The Panthers will be serving beer and seltzers at the All-Class Reunion this Saturday from 5:00–10:00 p.m. at the Princeton Ice Arena. It’s been 25 years since an event like this has taken place, and graduates from nine different decades are expected to be in attendance! We hope to see all our fellow Princeton High School alumni there for what’s sure to be a night to remember.

See the link below to get registered!

Home We're planning a Class Reunion! Save this page to your favorites and keep returning to see what's new.Add your profile on the Classmates page and feel free to upload some photos to be published on the site.Share this website with as many of our classmates as possible and ask everyone to register. Mo...

05/21/2026

It’s Panther Time once again…

First pitch of the 2026 season is set for 7:30 PM tonight at Solheim Field!

Can’t make it tonight? No worries — check out our full season schedule below. There will be plenty of chances to catch the Panthers at the ballpark this summer!

04/19/2026

This offseason we teamed up with Solheim Field to launch the 1st Annual Princeton Baseball Raffle. The raffle was set up to help cover costs for both the Panthers and Solheim Field this upcoming summer as well as to support future ballpark improvements to ensure all of Princeton’s teams who call Solheim home – High School, Legion, VFW, and the Panthers – continue to play at one of the best ballparks in the area.

The support so far from fans, former players, and the community has been incredible. It’s a great reminder of the connection people have to not only their local townball team but also the charm of a classic, old-school ballpark like the one we’re lucky to have in Princeton.

If you’d like to get in on this year’s raffle, drop a comment or send us a DM. You can also connect with your favorite Panther, and they’ll get you taken care of.

Not local but still want to support? No problem – We’ve already had a number of people purchase tickets remotely via Venmo.

Raffle winners will be announced at 8:00 PM on Saturday, July 18th during the 56th Annual Legion Baseball Tournament at Solheim Field. We’d love to see you at the ballpark for the drawing, but you do not need to be present to win!

Thank you all for your support! We’re looking forward to another great summer of baseball!

Panthers keep season alive at state tournament 08/24/2025

It’s Panther Time Again Today - Hope to see you all down in Hutch at 4pm!

Panthers keep season alive at state tournament The Princeton Panthers’ 2025 season will continue for at least another game.

Zimmerman native Nolan Spence making a difference for Princeton Panthers town ball team 08/21/2025

A great write up by Erik Nelson from the Star News on our cleanup hitter and shortstop, Nolan Spence!

Zimmerman native Nolan Spence making a difference for Princeton Panthers town ball team Four years after graduating from Zimmerman High School in 2021, Zimmerman baseball alumnus Nolan Spence is making an impact both offensively and defensively for the Princeton Panthers baseball team.

Photos from Princeton Panthers Baseball's post 08/19/2025

Panthers Upset Plato, Advance to Sweet Sixteen in State

BROWNTON, Minn., Aug. 18 – It was a muggy afternoon in Brownton for the final day of the opening weekend of the State Amateur Baseball Tournament. Driving into Barney Tadsen Park, one couldn’t help but feel they were in the perfect setting for townball. Beyond the outfield fence, lush soybean fields stretched toward the western horizon, while grain bins formed a small-town skyline behind the grandstand. Inside the park, the scent of grilled food lingered in the air, and the crisp snap of beer cans opening carried down both baselines. Hundreds of fans had made the trip to this tiny dot on the map in western Minnesota, eager to cheer for their hometown ball clubs.

For the Princeton Panthers, the challenge ahead was a tall one. The Plato Bluejays entered the tournament with sky-high expectations from both themselves and their loyal fan base. Townball pundits echoed that confidence, many lamenting Princeton’s tough draw earlier in the week. A few experts even went so far as to tab Plato as the favorite to take home the Class B crown.

One big reason for those bold Plato predictions was Bluejay’s right-handed fireballer, Reece Schwirtz, one of the most feared arms in the western half of the state. And Schwirtz was worth every bit of the hype. Earlier this summer, he carried the Bluejays past the Young America Cardinals, a perennial title contender, by throwing a 1-0 complete game shutout. That same Young America team had been tabbed by many as the favorite to win this year’s tournament.

The Panthers also faced another hurdle: geography. Plato sits less than 20 minutes from Brownton, and as expected, its fan base turned out in force. Hundreds of Bluejay supporters made the short trip, packing the bleachers and turning Barney Tadsen Park into a de facto home game. When Plato struck first in the bottom of the opening inning, the response was thunderous, an unmistakable small-town Bronx cheer that set the tone. For Princeton, it was immediately clear they’d be battling more than just the nine Bluejays on the field.

That opening run came courtesy of a tough break for rookie outfielder Niko Bratulich, who misjudged a deep fly ball riding a fierce southwest wind out to right. The breeze wreaked havoc on Princeton’s outfield all afternoon, turning routine chances into headaches; all three outfielders saw catchable balls drop safely. This one glanced off Bratulich’s glove and resulted in a phantom double for the Bluejays. A passed ball and a single later, the Bluejays handed their ace Schwirtz a 1-0 cushion as he took the mound for the second inning.

But the sequence may have been a blessing in disguise. Rather than rattling Princeton, it seemed to shake off the early jitters and let them settle in. Or maybe it was cleanup hitter Nolan Spence, who had built a reputation this postseason for halting opponent momentum, ripping an 0-2 Schwirtz fastball into right to spark the Panthers’ offense. Three batters later, catcher Cam Jensen followed with an opposite-field hit of his own, a hard grounder through the right side that brought Princeton even at 1-1.

The Panthers kept chipping away at Schwirtz. He opened the third inning by plunking leadoff man Eli Gibbs, Princeton’s fastest player, who wasted no time swiping second. Moments later, Gibbs bolted home all the way from second when the Plato shortstop short-hopped a throw across the diamond. Just like that, the Panthers had their first lead, 2-1.

That edge held until the bottom of the fifth. Panther starter Kevin Rahe, who had spent most of the summer pitching for Minot in the Northwoods League, issued a leadoff hit-by-pitch of his own, and it snowballed into a two-run frame for Plato, putting the Bluejays back in front, 3-2.

With the scales tipped in Plato’s favor once again, the Panther offense pushed back. Jake Carlson, who led the Eastern Minny League in hitting this season with a .455 batting average, lined a single up the middle to leadoff the sixth, then got a great jump to go first to third on a single by Dan Voce. The baserunning acumen displayed by Carlson was a play subtle to many in the crowd, but a textbook example of a season-long mantra for the Panthers: take the extra bag. That hustle mattered, as Carlson came home on Damon Rademacher’s RBI single to tie the score. The very next hitter, longtime Panther first baseman Gehrig Scheffel, made his lone hit of the day count, threading a single between short and center to reclaim the lead for Princeton, 4-3.

Kevin Rahe guarded the new lead with poise, cruising through his final two innings on just 14 pitches. His last out of the day was punctuated by left fielder Tanner Kinney, who gunned down a Plato pinch-hitter trying to stretch a single into a double with a laser from the line. It was Kinney’s second outfield assist in the last four games.

Rahe shined in his state tournament debut, throwing seven quality innings built on a crafty mix of pitches that darted and tailed every which way and kept Bluejay hitters guessing. Just as crucial was Rahe’s resilience: he worked out of tight spots when they surfaced, avoided the big inning, and handed his offense a chance to seize the game.

The Panther offense did just that in the top of the seventh inning. Carlson was the catalyst yet again, lacing a double to the left-center fence to spark a two-out rally. Spence drove him in with his second of three hits, and Voce and Rademacher followed with back-to-back knocks. Four straight two-out hits off Schwirtz stretched Princeton’s advantage to 7-3. The heart of the Panther order - Spence, Voce, Rademacher, and Carlson - was every bit as pivotal as Rahe on the mound, combining for nine hits, five runs, and four RBI against Plato’s ace.

With Rahe’s day on the mound complete and just six outs to get, Princeton turned to the one-two punch that had gotten them to the state tournament. Cederic Moreno took the ball for the eighth inning, his fastball popping Jensen’s mitt with life. Plato, desperate to mount a late rally, scratched across a run but could do no more - thanks in large part to a defensive gem from shortstop Nolan Spence. After receiving a sharp relay from right fielder Wyatt Petron, Spence executed a rundown beautifully between third and home, applying a hard tag that sent the runner sprawling to the ground and, just as importantly, knocking down any hopes Plato had of getting back in the game.

Protecting a 7-4 lead, the Panthers handed the ball to Damon Rademacher in the ninth - a familiar role for the former Gustavus Adolphus closer. Rademacher wasted no time slamming the door. He pounded the zone with first-pitch strikes and made quick work of the bottom of the Plato lineup. When catcher Cam Jensen made a great catch up against the grandstand netting for the final out, the upset was complete.

The Panthers began to celebrate a terrific performance on the biggest stage. For a game in which the leadup commentary was dominated by the opposing team’s starting pitcher, it was the uncelebrated quality pitching depth of Princeton that shined brightest. The trio of Rahe, Moreno, and Rademacher limited Plato to just six hits and four runs, a great accomplishment.

For most townball clubs across the state, calling on a drafted arm after their ace is spent is more necessity than luxury. Princeton, on the other hand, rolled out a three-headed rotation all their own to shut down a talented lineup without ever dipping into the draftee well. That kind of pitching depth is one few teams in Class B can match. If one were to hypothetically add last year’s ace Mason Beltrand to the mix, the group would not only be one of the deepest in the tournament but one of the best in the state, period.

But pitching was never the biggest concern for Princeton heading into the state tournament. In their four previous state tournament games, this group of Panthers had allowed just 3.5 runs per contest against some of the best lineups in Minnesota - thanks in no small part to Rademacher. The point of focus was always the other side of the equation: the offense. Over those same four games, the Panther bats had managed to produce only a single run. This was a stat the team’s veterans knew all too well. In the days leading up to Sunday’s matchup, the message was simple: if the offense could simply provide a respectable amount of run support, their arms would give them a fighter’s chance. As it turned out, the bats did far more than give them a chance. By tagging one of the state’s most respected pitchers for eleven hits and seven runs, Princeton walked away with its largest margin of victory in the state tournament in 18 years.

With just 16 teams remaining, Princeton moves on to Veteran’s Memorial Field in Hutchinson, where they’ll face the New Ulm Brewers at 4 p.m. Another win, and the Panthers will punch their ticket to the final weekend of the state tournament, something they haven’t done since 2007.

Princeton Panthers headed to state 08/17/2025

Check out this Union-Times article about our region tournament run!

Princeton Panthers headed to state The Princeton Panthers earned a return to the Class B state tournament with a strong finish at the District 1B tournament played at Brennan Field in Hinckley this past weekend.

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