The Cloverleaf

Lower Woodland’s Cloverleaf is more than a cluster of diamonds—it’s where families crowd the bleachers, coaches pour in hours, and the season’s soundtrack carries across the park. As players grow, the fields grow with them.

NCLL badge logo
League badge
NCLL clover mark
Primary clover mark

That connection inspired the spring 2025 brand refresh, which introduced the new clover mark and updated badge. When you spot the clover on gear or uniforms, it’s a piece of the Lower Woodland home fields traveling with you. See the full breakdown on our logo refresh page.

Who We Are

North Central Little League (NCLL) serves families across Green Lake, Greenwood, Phinney Ridge, Fremont, Wallingford, and Ballard—offering baseball and softball opportunities for players at every experience level.

We emphasize skill growth, teamwork, inclusion, and community connection. Volunteer coaches and families create a supportive environment where players learn the game, gain confidence, and simply enjoy being part of a team.

Green Lake, Lower Woodland, and Partner Fields

Lower Woodland’s athletic fields trace back to Guy C. Phinney’s late-1800s estate layout. After Seattle acquired the land in 1899, the Olmsted Brothers’ 1910 plan formalized the park’s expanded athletic use.

Greenlake shoreline changes beginning in 1911 opened additional playable space, and by 1913 a third field was in place. Later additions—including grandstands (1915) and a shelter with dressing rooms (1929)—show how quickly the community embraced the grounds. Today’s baseball and softball diamonds rest on more than a century of neighborhood sport; you can explore the complex on Google Maps.

Field Development Highlights

  • Late 1880s – Two private estate fields laid out by Guy C. Phinney
  • 1899 – City of Seattle acquires the property (city archives)
  • 1910 – Olmsted Brothers plan formalizes public athletic expansion (Olmsted legacy)
  • 1911 – Greenlake shoreline lowering & fill work begins (Green Lake history)
  • 1913 – Third athletic field created
  • 1915 – Second grandstand added
  • 1929 – Shelter with dressing rooms built; upper field integrated into the zoo
  • Today – Multi-diamond complex supporting youth baseball and softball

Have photos, programs, rosters, or stories from earlier eras? We would love to preserve them. Email [email protected].