Clover Stadium Brings Frontier League Ball Back to Pomona
The New York Boulders' summer home in Pomona offers independent baseball with fireworks nights and family promotions at a ballpark that has been a Rockland fixture since 2011.
There are slower ways to spend a summer evening in Rockland County than watching live baseball under the lights, but not many better ones. Clover Stadium in Pomona seats 6,362 people, which is large enough to feel like a real ballpark and small enough that you can actually see the players' faces from the cheap seats.
The stadium opened in 2011 under the name Provident Bank Park, the same year the Rockland Boulders — now rebranded as the New York Boulders — played their first season in the Frontier League. The team has been part of the county's summer rhythm ever since, peaking with a Can-Am League championship in 2014. Independent league baseball sits outside the MLB-affiliated pipeline, which means the rosters are full of players who are genuinely hungry — prospects chasing a shot, veterans squeezing out a few more seasons. That tends to make for good, scrappy games.
For families, the setup is hard to argue with. The Boulders run a full summer schedule with dedicated family promotions and fireworks nights scattered through the calendar. If you have kids who are too young to care about standings but old enough to be dazzled by a postgame fireworks show, this is a reliable formula. The field itself is turfed as of 2026, which keeps the surface consistent and the game moving whatever the weather has been doing that week.
Pomona sits in the southern part of the county, easy to reach whether you're coming from Nanuet, Suffern, or across the border from Bergen County. The stadium has decent parking and the compact footprint of a minor-league facility — you're not navigating a massive complex. It's the kind of place where you can arrive a little late, grab a hot dog, and still feel like you caught the game.
The Boulders don't get the attention of a Yankees or Mets affiliate, but that's part of the appeal. You're not sharing the experience with 40,000 people, and the tickets don't require a second mortgage. For anyone new to Rockland looking for a genuinely local summer tradition, this is a good place to start. See the full listing for schedule details and directions.
Dates, addresses, contact info, and any other details live on the listing page.




