East is a weird one and has been in most of the discussions (see tweet below). I don't remember the distance to the building in Right but it isn't long.
Growing up I played little league on the varsity softball field. At the time there was a giant oak tree and a utility pole in left center. As a center fielder that was interesting. When I was in high school they ended up putting in a fence that put those outside of the field of play. I think the tree is gone now too.
I played many games at East (having graduated from there).
Right field is what gets all the attention, but the oddities of that field don’t end there.
The fence in left all the way to dead center is perfectly parallel to University Avenue, which is straight as a string there. As a result, it is something like 360 down the left field line, 335 to the left center power alley and 400 to straight away center.
Moving to right, it continue to move away from home plate in right center. It’s about 410-415 in right center, then cuts drastically in as the baseball field interacts with Williams Stadium. If I’m not mistaken, it’s only something like 260 or so down the right field line, but a homer had to me hit over the Williams Stadium bleachers. The real screwing thing, back when I played, was the right field fence was only about 10-12 feet high, and Williams stadium open underneath, so there was an opening between the field fence and the top of the bleachers, where a ball would clear that fence, but not be a home run. Ground rule double.
Back to right center for a second...if a ball was hit to right center, beyond the short porch in right, that was a triple haven. You get one in that gap, and you could run for daaaaaaaays.
Ahhhh...memories.