St. Louis Americans keep ACAC Park as Missouri cricket base
ACAC Park in O’Fallon is still the entry gate for St. Louis Americans players, with separate links for new, returning and trial cricketers.

If you want into Minor League Cricket through Missouri, the first stop is still ACAC Park in O’Fallon. The St. Louis Americans’ official site keeps 9620 Hwy DD listed as the club’s home base and splits registration into separate paths for new players, returning players and trial attendees.
That setup matters because O’Fallon is not just a mailing address, it is the local access point to the Americans’ competitive pathway. The club says players must complete registration to take part in the Minor League edition, which turns the page into a direct sign-up route for anyone moving beyond casual league cricket and into organized team play.
The Americans have used that base from the start of the league era. Minor League Cricket said the St. Louis Americans were a new team for the 2021 season and would play matches out of ACAC Park, with the inaugural MiLC season beginning July 31, 2021. League records later showed St. Louis finishing 5-9 and fifth in the division, and home schedules show Americans matches at ACAC Park in both 2021 and 2022, including a home game against the Michigan Cricket Stars.
The registration push also sits on top of a wider development structure. American Cricket Academy and Club of St. Louis says it now has more than 200 athletes, backed by active parents involved in day-to-day operations. Third-party nonprofit listings put the academy and club at more than 150 youth players in the St. Louis area, which helps explain why the Americans’ registration links matter to families as well as adult cricketers: the same local system that trains kids is also feeding a team that plays in Minor League Cricket.
There is also a clear track record of players moving through that setup. MiLC coverage identified Obus Pienaar as one of St. Louis’s biggest stars in 2021 before he moved on to the Morrisville Raptors, and early league rosters also included Siddarth. That kind of movement shows why a registration page at ACAC Park is more than administrative housekeeping, it is where Missouri players check in when they are ready for the next competitive step.
American Cricket Academy says it began in July 2015 with six kids, so the O’Fallon home base now represents the end point of a long local climb from youth sessions to league cricket and Minor League play. For Missouri players looking for the most practical route into that system, the message is straightforward: ACAC Park remains the address, and the registration door is still open.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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