Showing posts with label North Carolina Teams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Carolina Teams. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

Greensboro Grasshoppers Class A for Miami Marlins Greensboro NC.

This was a mail in concession so we could save time returning to SC on Cooper's trip in the summer of 2014.  







Greensboro has fielded professional teams since the early 1900s, in several different leagues. Early on, the nickname Greensboro Patriots was applied to those teams, in reference to the Battle of Guilford Court House.
There were a few false starts. In 1902 local cotton broker Leon J. Brandt fielded a Greensboro team in the North Carolina League, but the league failed in mid-season. The Virginia-North Carolina League of 1905 included a Greensboro franchise, also owned by Brandt. The league completed its season but disbanded thereafter.
The Patriots joined the Carolina Association in 1908 and began a run of 10 straight seasons in pro ball. The league was reorganized as the North Carolina Association for 1913 and renamed itself the North Carolina State League in 1916. The league played one more season and then disbanded after 1917. By then, America's involvement in World War I was well under way, and many minor leagues folded after 1917.
With peacetime, interest in professional baseball and the minor leagues revived. The Greensboro Patriots were revived as well, joining the newly formed Piedmont League in 1920, winning its inaugural championship. The Patriots also won the league title in 1926. In 1930, the club began a five-year affiliation with the St. Louis Cardinals.
The Greensboro clubs initially played their home games at Cone Athletic Park, better known as simply Cone Park, a small facility on the grounds of the Cone Mills textile plant. World War Memorial Stadium opened in 1926 (on Armistice Day), but the Patriots continued to play at Cone Park until 1930, when the addition of lights and other improvements to the Stadium, spurred by the affiliation with the Cardinals, resulted in the team moving to the Stadium. The various Greensboro clubs would call the Stadium "home" for the next 75 years.
After the Cardinals contract expired, the franchise transferred to Asheville Tourists in 1935. Five years later, minor league ball returned to Greensboro for a couple of years, with another Piedmont League entry called the Greensboro Red Sox, which played during 1941-1942.
After the Piedmont League years, another Greensboro team operated in the Carolina League during 1945-1968. The club was known variously as the Patriots (1945–1951), the Greensboro Pirates (1952–1954), the Patriots again (1955–1957), the Greensboro Yankees (1958–67), and the Patriots once again (1968). Following the 1968 season, Greensboro dropped out of professional ball for the next ten years, during a time when minor league baseball had lost popularity. That situation would start to change for the better in the late 1970s, and Greensboro would benefit from it.
The minors returned to Greensboro in 1979, with a new entry in the Western Carolinas League. The WCL renamed itself as the South Atlantic League the next year, reviving the name once used by the Southern League. Abandoning the old nickname of "Patriots", which by then was best known for the New England Patriots of the NFL, the new club instead decided to adopt the nickname Greensboro Hornets. That nickname was better known for teams based in Charlotte, but the Charlotte Hornets baseball team had abandoned its nickname after the 1973 season, and the new Greensboro team adopted it. Some naming rights complications arose when the Charlotte Hornets of the NBA began play in 1988. The nicknames co-existed in the state until 1994, when the Hornets settled with the NBA and changed their name to the punning nickname Greensboro Bats. Consequently, the team mascot switched from a hornet to a flying bat wielding a baseball bat.
With the move from 80-year-old War Memorial Stadium to the new park in 2005, the club further expanded its corporate face-lift by changing nicknames again, to the alliterative Greensboro Grasshoppers.
In the 2008 season 18-year-old rookie Michael Stanton, former second round pick by the Florida Marlins set the single season home run record for the Hoppers with 39 homers.[1]
In 2011, the Grasshoppers won their last 13 of 15 regular season games to make the playoffs for the first time in 12 years. After winning the second half of the season in the Northern Division, the Grasshoppers went on to beat the Savannah Sand Gnats in five games to win the South Atlantic League championship, their first title in 29 years.
In 2012, the Grasshoppers won the SAL Northern Division "1st half" championship by posting a record of 46-24. They won the Northern Division title with a 2-0 sweep of the Hagerstown Suns



Greensboro Grasshoppers
Founded in 1979
Greensboro, North Carolina
Greensboro Grasshoppers Logo.svgGrasshoppers cap.PNG
Team logoCap insignia
Class-level
CurrentSingle-A
Minor league affiliations
LeagueSouth Atlantic League
DivisionNorthern Division
Major league affiliations
CurrentMiami Marlins (2003–present)
PreviousNew York Yankees (1990–2002)
Minor league titles
League titles4 (1980–1982 as the Hornets, 2011)
Division titles2 (2011, 2012)
Team data
NicknameGreensboro Grasshoppers (2005–present)
  • Greensboro Bats (1994–2004)
  • Greensboro Hornets (1979–1993)
ColorsGreen, Orange and White
BallparkNewBridge Bank Park (2005-present)
Previous parksWorld War Memorial Stadium (1979-2004)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Greensboro Baseball LLC

Friday, April 11, 2014

Mail in visit- Carolina Mudcats High A for Cleveland Indians Zebulon, N.C.

Decided to do this as a mail in so we could save time on the return trip from Maine this summer.









Carolina Mudcats
Founded in 1978
Zebulon, North Carolina
CarolinaMudcats.pngCarolinaMudcatsCap.png
Team logoCap insignia
Class-level
CurrentAHigh-A (1963–1974, 1978–present)
PreviousB (1925–1927, 1956–1957, 1962)
  • D (1908, 1928–1929, 1937–1941, 1946–1952)
  • semipro (1934–1936)
  • outlaw (1921–1922)
Minor league affiliations
LeagueCarolina League (1956–1957, 1962–1974, 1978–present)
DivisionSouthern Division
Previous leaguesCoastal Plain League (1934–1941, 1946–1952)
Major league affiliations
CurrentCleveland Indians (1987–present)
PreviousCo-op (1973, 1986)
Minor league titles
League titles1935, 1947, 1962, 1988, 1991, 1995, 2004, 2006
Division titles1988, 1990, 1991, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2011
Team data
NicknameCarolina Mudcats (2012-present)
Previous namesKinston Indians (1987–2011)
  • Kinston Eagles (1925–1973, 1978–1981, 1986)
  • Kinston Blue Jays (1982–1985)
  • Kinston Expos (1974)
  • Kinston Highwaymen (1922)
  • Kinston Robins (1921)
BallparkFive County Stadium (2012–present)
Previous parksGrainger Stadium (1949–1952, 1956–1957, 1962–1974, 1978–2011)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Steve Bryant (majority owner) and Carolina Mudcats Professional Baseball Club, Inc and Quint Studer.
ManagerEdwin Rodríguez
General managerJoe Kremer

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Revisit- Salem Red Sox, was Salem Avalanche

Date of visit- Day game, Sunday June 3, 2010

Tina, Brandon, Cooper and I went to a game way back in 2008 I think here, when the franchise was known as the Salem Avalanche.  Today, they are the High A team for the Boston Red Sox. 

This is a beautiful stadium!  In the foothills of Salem, Va.  Seats about 5000 or so. 

We got to the field about 3 for a 4:05 game-  parked for free- and got great seats first row on the visitors dugout. 

There was an announced crowd of 2507- that looked about right. 

Got a ball and pin, and this day, the players were all signing autographs on the concourse before the game, and Cooper was able to get a poster and have Jackie Bradley Jr sign it for him.  Bradley played at the Univ of SC and is having a terrific year this year, batting .370 something, and has an on base percentage of like .491 batting leadoff. 

He went one for 3 today, and had an RBI with a double. 
The outcome was never in doubt:

The Red Sox crunched em!  They had 18 hits, a lot of them for extra bases, and won going away. 





Saturday, June 2, 2012

Park Only Visit- Hickory Crawdads- Hickory NC

Date of visit- May 31, 2012

Stopped by Hickory on the way to Advance, NC and the Winston Salem Dash on the first day of the Summer 2012 trip.  Nice park, got a ball and pin here. 

This field has a huge jumbotron, the biggest and nicest I've seen at any minor league park. 

There was a posted attendanced of 3607, but I'm pretty sure there were not more than a thousand folks there. 


Because we had had a long day, and there was lots of weather around, we left after 6.5 innings, with the Dash loosing 4-0, but they wound up making a game of it, and lost 8-5


Note that there were 25 hits in the game, plus 5 errors.  I would say the official scorer was very generous tonight, we saw what we thought were about another 5 or so errors in just the game we saw!

Got a nice logo ball and pin.



Park Visit- Danville Braves Danville Virginia

Date of Visit-  June 1, 2012

We stopped in here on our way to Lynchburg, Va.  Had to try twice, since the first time I tried, I took an incorrect turn and then couldn't make the turn with the motor home, so we had to go back out and across the highway to a rest area, unhook, and then drive in. 
Danville is the rookie Appalachain League affiliate of the Atlanta Braves.
The field is a smallish, 2500 capacity American Legion Field.


We got a ball and pin here, plus Cooper got a free league ball, and I got a free Army T Shirt. 

Friday, June 1, 2012

Winston Salem Dash- Winston Salem NC

Date of Game:  May 31, 2012


On the first leg of the 2012 Summer Adventure, Coop and I did two parks today, and we got here at Winston Salem about 6 pm for a game between the Dash and the Frederick Keys. 

We thought we had good seats, Section 107, Row 5 right at the home dugout.  Turned out to be good seats for seeing the game, but not worth anything for getting balls-  This league or team clearly is cheap when it comes to baseballs, they kept everyball all night, never threw any into the crowd, didn't have batting practice, so Cooper got skunked for balls. 

This is a beautiful new park, about two years old. 

Since it was a long travel day, and we had been up very early, we left after 6.5 innings, with the score 4-0 Frederick, the Dash came back and made it interesting, and Frederick wound up winning 8-5.

Line Score showed 25 Hits and 5 errors, I would say the official scorer was very generous with that, I thought there were 4 or 5 more errors. 

Official crowd was listed at 3708, I would have said there were no more than a thousand there... lots of empty seats. 

This park has one of the nicest video jumbotrons of any minor league park I have seen-

They had a big fancy control room on the concourse, with a staff of about 10 or so running the various components of the information systems: