Billings might be known as Montana’s Trailhead, but it’s also a city where local sports teams set the tone for how people spend their evenings and weekends. Between partner-league baseball, indoor football, college matchups, high school rivalries, and a growing community sports scene, you’ve got plenty of ways to plug into Billings’ energy while you’re in town.
This guide focuses on five things to do in Billings that revolve around local teams and the places they call home. Whether you’re visiting for a few days or you live here and want to try something new, these highlights make it easy to turn “going to the game” into a full night out:
- Billings Mustangs at Dehler Park
- Billings Outlaws at First Interstate Arena (MetraPark)
- MSU Billings Yellowjackets at Alterowitz Gymnasium
- Friday Night Lights at Daylis Stadium / Wendy’s Field
- Community soccer, rugby & future hockey at Amend Park and the Signal Peak Energy Arena
Cheer on the Billings Mustangs at Dehler Park
If you only have time for one sporting event in Billings, it’s hard to beat a night with the Billings Mustangs at Dehler Park. The Mustangs play in the MLB Partner Pioneer League, and their home field sits just north of downtown, so it’s easy to pair with dinner, breweries, or a stroll through Billings’ core before and after the game.
Dehler Park is a modern, multi-use stadium that replaced the old Cobb Field in 2008. City park information notes that it serves as home field not only for the Mustangs, but also for American Legion Baseball and Montana State University Billings baseball, making it one of the main hubs of the local diamond scene all summer long. Billings Parks & Recreation describes it as a multi-use stadium primarily used for baseball, with schedules that stay busy from May through late summer.
Online reviews tell the same story. On TripAdvisor, visitors call Dehler Park “very accessible” and praise the “family friendly atmosphere and affordable prices on tickets and food,” saying it’s a great stop if you’re passing through Billings in the summer. One reviewer points out that it’s a comfortable and friendly ballpark with an old-school baseball environment where the game comes first and the distractions stay minimal.
Other platforms echo the same vibe. Wanderlog calls Dehler Park “a must-visit for sports enthusiasts” and mentions lively summer games, a “beer batter” promotion that keeps fans engaged, and a capacity of around 6,000 when you factor in standing areas and berm seating. Reviewers there highlight its role as a shared home for the Mustangs and Yellowjackets, and mention the Rimrocks backdrop as a uniquely Billings touch. On Yelp, fans describe it as “a great place to go watch baseball with the family,” noting that the only real drawback is limited shade on the hottest days. They still give high marks for the friendly staff and easy-going atmosphere.
Dehler Park also plays a key role in bigger regional events. In recent years, American Legion Baseball’s Northwest Regional Tournament has used Dehler Park as its host venue, bringing in teams and fans from all over the region. Tournament information from American Legion Baseball lists Dehler Park as the site of multi-day regional action, turning Billings into a summer baseball destination.
What does that mean for you as a visitor or local fan? A Mustangs game at Dehler Park is an easy, low-stress night out. Tickets are typically affordable, kids can roam the berm area, and you’ll be surrounded by Billings residents who treat summer at the ballpark as an annual tradition. Arrive early to walk the concourse, grab a local snack, and get a photo of the Rimrocks beyond center field before the first pitch.
Catch Indoor Football with the Billings Outlaws at First Interstate Arena
When you want something louder and a little more intense, trade the open air of Dehler Park for the roar of indoor football with the Billings Outlaws at First Interstate Arena at MetraPark. The arena is one of Montana’s major indoor venues and has hosted indoor football, ice hockey, big-name concerts, rodeos, and more for decades.
First Interstate Arena has a long history in Billings. According to the venue’s own information, it can host up to about 12,000 people for certain configurations and regularly serves as the setting for Montana’s largest concerts, family shows, rodeos, and motor sports events. MetraPark’s facility page notes the arena’s flexible floorplans and its role as a regional events hub. A profile from a national event-booking platform confirms the capacity figure and describes how the space can be configured for sports, concerts, and other spectacles for crowds of around 10,000–12,000. Event planners highlight the arena’s large standing capacity and convenient location.
The Outlaws, Billings’ professional indoor football team, have played their home games at First Interstate Arena in recent seasons. League and news coverage describe them as a championship-caliber side, with indoor football titles and deep playoff runs on their résumé. MontanaSports covered a playoff game at MetraPark and called it “a blast from the past” for fans, noting how a late-season winning streak brought indoor football postseason excitement back to Billings after a long break. The Outlaws’ own site points fans to MetraPark as their home turf and central ticketing hub. Their arena page lists MetraPark as the place to go for schedules, tickets, and game-day info.
Indoor football is fast and fan-friendly. The field is shorter than outdoor football, the boards keep the action close, and scoring tends to come in bunches. Because the arena is enclosed, sound bounces around, so every big hit or touchdown feels amplified. For casual visitors, that means there’s little downtime: the music, in-game promotions, and constant motion keep you entertained even if you’re still learning the rules.
First Interstate Arena’s location at MetraPark also makes it easy to build a fuller itinerary. The complex often hosts fairs, trade shows, and other events around the same time as games. If you’re planning a weekend in Billings, you can check the MetraPark calendar, line up an Outlaws matchup, and then fill the rest of your time with concerts, rodeo nights, or family shows in the same general area.
Experience College Game Day with MSU Billings Yellowjackets at Alterowitz Gymnasium
For a more intimate, campus-focused sports experience, set your sights on Alterowitz Gymnasium at Montana State University Billings. This is home court for the MSU Billings Yellowjackets’ men’s and women’s basketball and women’s volleyball teams, and it delivers the kind of college game-day atmosphere that feels personal rather than overwhelming.
University facility pages describe Alterowitz Gymnasium as a several-thousand-seat arena inside the Physical Education Building. MSU Billings notes that the building includes the gym, an official collegiate-size swimming pool, an indoor track, racquetball courts, and weight rooms, plus offices and classrooms for health and human performance programs. Athletics pages add that Alterowitz houses the athletic department offices, training room, team locker rooms, and workout facilities, making it the core of the Yellowjackets’ sports operations. The gym’s dedicated facility page describes it as a home for basketball and volleyball with upgraded seating installed to make the fan experience more comfortable.
Because it’s a true college venue, the atmosphere at Alterowitz is driven by students, alumni, and community members. Gameday posts from MSUB athletics encourage fans to “pack Alterowitz” for big conference matchups, and photos show sections of yellow-and-black-clad fans lining the stands, bands playing, and mascots working the crowd. Basketball and volleyball camp sites also highlight Alterowitz Gym as the main facility for MSUB camps and events, underscoring its importance for both collegiate and youth sports in the area.
From a visitor’s perspective, an evening at Alterowitz is an easy addition to your Billings itinerary, especially in fall and winter. Tickets are typically affordable, parking on campus is manageable outside of major events, and you’ll be close enough to the court to hear coaches calling plays and players communicating on defense. If you enjoy college sports, this is an ideal way to see how Billings rallies around its university teams.
To make it a full outing, check the MSUB athletics calendar, arrive a bit early to walk campus and find your seats, then plan a late bite in town after the final buzzer. It’s a nice counterpoint to the bigger-scale energy of First Interstate Arena and the open-air feel of Dehler Park.
Feel the Friday Night Lights at Daylis Stadium / Wendy’s Field
If you really want to feel Billings as a community, point your Friday night toward Daylis Stadium / Wendy’s Field, the longtime home of high school football and track in the city. Located along Grand Avenue and adjacent to Billings Senior High School, Daylis Stadium hosts crosstown football rivalries, track meets, and other school and community events throughout the year.
Billings Public Schools list Daylis Stadium/Wendy’s Field as a stadium, field, and track complex next to Senior High, with its address at 427 Grand Avenue. The district’s facility page notes the stadium’s role as a primary practice and football field for local programs. Community organizations build on that; the Billings Family YMCA, for example, has used Daylis for youth track and field programs when available, treating it as the natural home for running events in the city. Their program descriptions list Daylis Stadium as the preferred location for youth track sessions.
Local coverage has also focused on the stadium’s future. Recent news reports explain that Billings School District 2 is investing in a major renovation of the nearly century-old venue, addressing worn grandstands and planning a modernized facility that stays central to the city’s sports life. One report outlines a multi-million-dollar plan to revamp Daylis Stadium, ensuring that Friday night lights will continue to shine there for years to come.
For fans and visitors, though, the charm of Daylis is simple: it’s where Billings gathers to watch its high school teams. Expect student sections in full voice, marching bands in the end zones, cheer squads leading chants, and families chatting in the bleachers with hot chocolate in hand on cold nights. Online writeups describe it as a stadium that reflects “athletic excellence and community pride,” and it feels like exactly that when you’re there for a big game. A local feature even calls Daylis Stadium one of Billings’ key sports hubs.
If you’re visiting in the fall, check local high school schedules or district calendars for a home game at Daylis. Tickets are inexpensive, concessions are straightforward, and the experience of standing during the national anthem under the lights, with the Rimrocks off in the distance, makes for a memorable Billings evening.
Join the Community Sports Scene at Amend Park & the Future Signal Peak Energy Arena
Beyond the big venues and school stadiums, Billings has a thriving community sports scene built around Amend Park and a new ice facility that’s on the way. This fifth highlight is perfect if you like seeing how local clubs, youth teams, and emerging programs keep a city playing year-round.
Amend Park, on the south side of Billings, is a 60-acre multi-use complex that primarily serves as the city’s main soccer facility. The park’s own site describes it as a multi-field soccer hub for the Billings area, while city listings call it the largest soccer complex in town, with plenty of open space, a picnic area, and basic amenities. Billings Parks & Recreation highlights Amend Park’s role as the city’s biggest soccer complex and notes that it’s managed by the Amend Park Development Council. Yelp reviewers, meanwhile, emphasize just how many fields are packed into the property, calling it a “large, well-maintained soccer complex” that can accommodate everyone from the youngest kids to high school-level players. They point to its multiple fields and family-friendly layout as major strengths.
Local clubs make good use of all that space. Real Billings FC, for instance, hosts youth tournaments and development programs that lean heavily on Amend Park’s fields. The club’s announcements describe upcoming tournament play based at Amend Park, underscoring how important the complex is for youth soccer in the region. On any given weekend, you’re likely to find dozens of teams rotating through, parents lining the sidelines in camping chairs, and younger siblings weaving between games.
Rugby has also carved out a place in Billings’ community sports landscape. The Magic City Marmots, the local men’s rugby club, actively recruit new players and promote their fall season, inviting people of all experience levels to join. The club’s site notes that their season runs through 2026 with state tournament ambitions, and social media posts show them playing home matches at local parks and spreading the word about practice times. A nearby women’s club, the Black Mambas, has also worked to grow the sport, encouraging newcomers to come watch matches or even give rugby a try. A local listing describes them as always welcoming new players and highlighting rugby as a sport for all body types.
Looking just ahead, the biggest change to Billings’ community sports scene will be on ice. Construction is underway on the Signal Peak Energy Arena near Amend Park, a two-sheet ice facility spearheaded by the Yellowstone Ice Foundation. Foundation materials describe the arena as a world-class ice venue designed to host hockey, figure skating, curling, and year-round recreation. Local news outlets have reported that once it opens, the existing Centennial Ice Arena will close, centralizing Billings’ hockey scene at the new facility. Coverage from KTVQ explains that Billings Amateur Hockey will shift its activities to Signal Peak Energy Arena.
That new arena already has a headline tenant on the way. MontanaSports recently reported that a Tier II junior hockey team, part of the United States Premier Hockey League’s National Collegiate Development Conference, will begin play in Billings in 2026. The article notes that games will be held at the upcoming Signal Peak Energy Arena near Amend Park, positioning Billings as a future stop for high-level junior hockey and giving local fans a new team to cheer for in the colder months.
For visitors and locals, that means two things. Right now, Amend Park is the place to go if you want to feel the pulse of Billings’ weekend sports scene, from youth soccer to club rugby. In the near future, the same general area will transform into the city’s main ice-sports hub, offering hockey games, skating, and more under one roof. If you’re planning a return trip to Billings or looking for reasons to come back, the launch of Signal Peak Energy Arena and the new junior team provide a great excuse.
Putting It All Together: Building Your Billings Sports Itinerary
One of the best things about Billings’ sports scene is how close everything feels. Dehler Park and downtown are neighbors, MetraPark sits just across the river from the core of the city, MSU Billings and Daylis Stadium anchor Grand Avenue, and Amend Park is an easy drive to the south. That makes it simple to stack experiences into a single weekend.
Here are a few sample combinations:
- Classic summer night: Explore downtown Billings in the afternoon, grab dinner at a local spot, then walk to Dehler Park for a Billings Mustangs game.
- High-energy weekend: Hit an indoor football game with the Outlaws at First Interstate Arena one night, then catch a Yellowjackets basketball game at Alterowitz Gym or a high school football showdown at Daylis Stadium on another.
- Community-focused day: Spend a Saturday morning watching youth soccer or rugby at Amend Park, then head into town for lunch and an evening stroll or brewery visit.
- Future return trip: Plan to come back once Signal Peak Energy Arena and the new junior hockey team are fully up and running, and combine winter hockey with skiing or other winter activities elsewhere in Montana.
Wherever you start, you’ll find that Billings’ local sports teams give you more than just a game to watch. They offer a window into the city’s personality, from lifelong Mustangs fans at Dehler Park and rowdy indoor football crowds at MetraPark to students chanting in Alterowitz and families cheering under the lights at Daylis. Add in the community action at Amend Park and the upcoming ice arena, and you’ve got plenty of reasons to put “catch a game” high on your Billings to-do list.
