San Antonio Missions
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San Antonio Missions | |||||
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Minor league affiliations | |||||
Class | Double-A | ||||
League | Texas League | ||||
Division | South Division | ||||
Major league affiliations | |||||
Team | San Diego Padres (2007–present) | ||||
Previous teams | Seattle Mariners (2001–2006)
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Minor league titles | |||||
League titles | 1897, 1908, 1933, 1950, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2011 | ||||
Division titles | 1908, 1933, 1934, 1938, 1950, 1951, 1959, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1973, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1988, 1990, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2011 | ||||
Team data | |||||
Name | San Antonio Missions (1933–1942), (1946–1962), (1968–1971), (1988–present) | ||||
Previous names | San Antonio Dodgers (1977–1987)
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Ballpark | Nelson W. Wolff Municipal Stadium | ||||
Owner(s)/ Operator(s) | Elmore Sports Group | ||||
General manager | Dave Gasaway | ||||
Manager | Doug Dascenzo |
The San Antonio Missions are a minor league baseball team based in San Antonio, Texas. The team, which plays in the Texas League, is the Double-A affiliate of the San Diego Padres major-league club. The Missions play in Nelson W. Wolff Municipal Stadium, located in San Antonio. Opened in 1994, the park seats over 6,200 fans and holds more than 9,000.
The San Antonio Missions' logo features famous local attraction the Alamo, originally a Spanish mission. The team's official mascot is "Ballapeño," a baseballing jalapeño.
The Missions are owned by the Elmore Sports Group, an organization which also owns the Inland Empire 66ers of the California League, Colorado Springs Sky Sox of the Pacific Coast League, Idaho Falls Chukars of the Pioneer League and Eugene Emeralds of the Northwest League.
Late May 2012, it was announced that Joaquin Guzman had bought a 95% stake in the team. The following game, a severed hand was found on home plate.
History
Early years
San Antonio was home for one of the charter members of the Texas League back in 1888, making the town one of the richest in the country with baseball history. Since that inaugural season the town has hosted a number of Texas League franchises, most of them using the "Missions" moniker. Baseball was absent only a few of the early years (1893–94, 1900–1906) and again when World War II occupied most would-be ballplayers between 1943 and 1945.
Initially the team went by the names "Missionaries", "Gentlemen" and "Bronchos" – a Spanish twist on the name "Broncos". During these years, nearly 250 players reached the Major Leagues.
The current "Missions" moniker was coined with the team's first Major League affiliation, a partnership with the St. Louis Browns (later to become the Baltimore Orioles). They remained a Browns affiliate through the Texas League's temporary demise after the 1942 season due to World War II and until 1959, when they struck up a partnership with the Chicago Cubs. While with the Browns/Orioles, the team saw well over 100 players reach the Majors, including Hall-of-Famers Willard Brown (1956) and Brooks Robinson (1956–1957).
The “Missions” name was used for the teams affiliated with the Cubs, through 1962. In just four years in the Cubs’ system, more than 50 alumni reached the Major Leagues – including Ron Santo (1959) and Hall-of-Famer Billy Williams (1959).
The Missions changed their name to the Bullets in 1963, when the team joined the new Houston Colt .45s organization. The idea behind the name was that the team’s prospects would be the “bullets to the gun” of the .45s team. The Bullets boasted 30 prospects that would go on to see time in the Bigs, including Hall-of-Famer Joe Morgan and two-time National League All-Star Jerry Grote. (Much of Grote’s success came with the Miracle Mets of 1969, and not with the .45s/Astros organization.)
In 1965 the San Antonio franchise moved to Amarillo and eventually to Tulsa, Oklahoma where it remains in the Texas League as the Tulsa Drillers.
Baseball returned to San Antonio for the 1968 season, again taking on the Missions name, as part of an expansion of the Texas League. Again playing as a Cubs affiliate, another 42 future Big Leaguers took the field over a four-year stretch. After the 1971 season the team packed up again and moved to Midland, Texas, where they continue as the Midland RockHounds.
In 1972 another ownership group brought baseball into town to replace the group that left to Midland, and brought with it an affiliation with the Milwaukee Brewers, just two years removed from their move to Wisconsin from Seattle. With the affiliation change to the Brewers, the franchise took the parent club’s nickname—which it kept despite changes in affiliation to the Cleveland Indians (1973–1975) and Texas Rangers (1976). The "Brewers" nickname fit the city almost as well as it fit their single-season affiliate in Milwaukee, being the home of the Pearl Brewing Company.
The future Big Leaguers continued to pour onto the field through the affiliation changes, and more than 30 San Antonio Brewers made it to the top. Among them was Hall-of-Fame pitcher Dennis Eckersley, an Indians farmhand who tore through the Texas League in 1974.
The team became the San Antonio Dodgers with a change in affiliation to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1977.
Los Angeles Dodgers
While the franchise kept the "Dodger" moniker for eleven seasons (1977–1987), locals still referred to them occasionally as the Missions. The Dodgers responded by officially changing their nickname back to "Missions" for the 1988 season.
The Missions were the Double-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers until 2000, making the relationship the longest-standing Major League affiliation held by the San Antonio franchise. During the partnership Dodgers legends frequented the Alamo City, including Tommy Lasorda. In the 23 years with Los Angeles, some 211 players went on to see time in the Majors. That includes players like Ron Washington (1977), Bob Welch (1977), Ron Roenicke (1978–1979), Mike Scioscia (1978), Dave Stewart (1978), Orel Hershiser (1980–1981, 1991), Fernando Valenzuela (1980), Steve Sax (1981), Sid Bream (1982), Sid Fernandez (1983), Franklin Stubbs (1983), Ramon Martinez (1988, 1996), John Wetteland (1988), Eric Karros (1990), Pedro Martinez (1991), Raul Mondesi (1991–1992), Eric Young (1991), Mike Piazza (1992), Henry Blanco (1993–1996), Todd Hollandsworth (1993), Chan Ho Park (1994), Miguel Cairo (1995), Paul LoDuca (1995, 1997), Paul Konerko (1996), Alex Cora (1997), Dennys Reyes (1997), Adrian Beltre (1998) and Eric Gagne (1999).
The team played a bulk of its years with the Dodgers at V. J. Keefe Memorial Stadium, which they shared with the St. Mary’s University baseball team. In 1994 the team moved into Nelson W. Wolff Municipal Stadium, a design typical of baseball stadiums build during the late-1980s through the mid-1990s. The new stadium was named in honor of Nelson Wolff, the mayor of San Antonio at the time the stadium was built.
The affiliation with the Dodgers ended after the 2000 season with both clubs mutually agreeing to part.
Seattle Mariners
From 2001 until 2006 the Seattle Mariners had a player development contract with the team that brought back-to-back Texas League Championships during the 2002 and 2003 seasons.
The Mariners, fresh off a record season at the Major League level, was stocked with talent in a minor league system built by Pat Gillick, who worked with San Antonio as the farm director of the Houston Colt .45s in 1963. Gillick’s prospects turned San Antonio into a Texas League powerhouse, boasting future Major Leaguers Willie Bloomquist, Jeff Farnsworth, J.J. Putz, Raphael Soriano, Greg Dobbs, Julio Mateo, Gil Meche, Cha-Seung Baek, Jose Lopez, George Sherrill, Shin-Soo Choo, Felix Hernandez, Mike Morse and Yuniesky Betancourt.
The 2006 Missions struggled to score runs and finished 60–77 overall. (27–41, 33–37). The Missions were plagued by high player turnover and featured 52 different players over the course of the season.
San Diego Padres
On September 28, 2006, the San Diego Padres announced a two-year player development contract with the San Antonio Missions.
Randy Ready managed the Missions in 2007 following a promotion from Class A. The first home game as a member of the Padres organization was April 12, 2007 a 2–0 win against the Tulsa Drillers. Sean Thompson picked up the win and helped score a run.
Led by Chase Headley and Josh Geer who won player of the year and pitcher of the year honors the Missions were the 2007 Texas League Champions.
Since the beginning of the affiliation with the Padres, the Missions have seen nearly a dozen players crack the Big Leagues. Most notably include rising Padres regulars Headley, Kyle Blanks, Nick Hundley, Tim Stauffer, Mat Latos, Matt Antonelli, Chad Huffman, Will Venable and Luis Durango.
Rivalry with Hooks
Since the Corpus Christi Hooks moved to Corpus Christi from Round Rock in 2005 they have been the chief rivals of the Missions. The main point of the rivalry is to determine who is the better team of South Texas. Recently the Hooks have stated on their website that they are the "Baseball Capital of South Texas"
Prior to the birth of the Corpus Christi franchise, the chief rivalry was with the Round Rock Express, now a Triple-A member of the Pacific Coast League.
2009 season
The 2009 season started out with an exhibition game between players on the Missions roster and members of the Padres’ Big League Spring Training roster. The result was a 7–3 win for the minor league guys, bolstered by a grand slam by hometown hero Seth Johnston.
Under the leadership of former MLB All-Star Terry Kennedy, the team earned a playoff berth by winning the first-half division title—clinching the berth on the road during an extra-innings win at Corpus Christi on June 23, the last game in the first half of the season.
The season was anti-climactic, however, as the team struggled down the final stretch and into playoffs. The Missions were eliminated by the Midland RockHounds, the eventual Texas League title winners, in four games – mustering enough excitement to win one playoff game behind the pitching of Will Inman. During Game 2 of the southern division championship series, the benches cleared when Mitch Canham defended Inman, who let out a yell to celebrate striking out Midland’s catcher Josh Donaldson. When Canham came to bat the following inning, Midland pitcher Carlos Hernandez threw a pitch that came close to Canham’s head, clearing the benches again and nearly provoking a fight between the teams.
Several players stood out at times during the 2009 season, some of them being promoted for their performance. Outfielder Mike Baxter was promoted early on for his assault on Texas League pitching, batting .376 with 23 doubles in 51 games. Pitchers Tim Stauffer, Cesar Carrillo and Mat Latos were promoted to the Padres after performing well at the Double-A level, though Stauffer and Carrillo both spent a few weeks at the Triple-A level before moving on to the Majors. First baseman Craig Cooper led the team with a .312 average and 11 home runs by the end of the season. Outfielder Luis Durango led the Texas League with 44 stolen bases. Right-hander Ernesto Frieri led the team in most pitching categories, finishing the season protected on the 40-man Major League roster. Other noteworthy players include shortstop Lance Zawadzki, who played in the Arizona Fall League All-Star Game; third baseman Logan Forsythe, who led all of minor league baseball in on-base percentage for a bulk of the season; Cedric Hunter; lefty Nathan Culp and outfielder Sawyer Carroll. Also, second baseman Eric Sogard opened enough eyes to be sought by the Oakland Athletics in a trade that sent Sogard and Kevin Kouzmanoff to the A’s and Scott Hairston and Aaron Cunningham.
2010 season
On December 1, 2009, the Padres announced Kennedy and his coaching staff would be promoted to the Triple-A Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League for the 2010 season, and the Missions would be managed by Doug Dascenzo, who managed the Single-A Fort Wayne TinCaps to the best regular-season record in minor league baseball and a Midwest League title in 2009.
The 2010 Texas League All-Star Game, hosted by the division rival Midland RockHounds, featured seven Missions players – including three starters. Pitchers Simon Castro, Wynn Pelzer, Craig Italiano and Evan Scribner were selected to represent the Missions along with catcher Luis Martinez, first baseman Matt Clark and outfielder Cedric Hunter. Just before the game, Cedric was promoted to the Triple-A Portland Beavers, allowing utility infielder Andy Parrino to attend the All-Star Game in his place.
On July 29 the San Diego Padres traded Wynn Pelzer to the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for slugging infielder Miguel Tejada and cash.
2011 Season
The Missions got a hot start to the 2011 season, finishing April with the best record in Double-A baseball.[1] Remarkably, they also amassed the most home runs of any team in Minor League Baseball in that time despite playing in the notoriously pitcher-friendly Wolff Stadium. Their early season success can be attributed to a roster filled with some of the top slugging prospects in the Padres' system, including Jaff and Cody Decker (not related). They have also had an offensive boost with the return of Kyle Blanks. Blanks played for the Missions in 2008 and is currently rehabbing after having Tommy John surgery performed in July 2010.[2]
Despite this incredible performance on the field and enjoying one of the largest market sizes in minor league baseball, the team has boasted the lowest attendance figures in the Texas League.[3]
Through Memorial Day, the team also shows the lowest per-capita attendance in all of Double-A baseball with a rate of .17% of the population attending each game (Double-A average is .48% of the team's metro area population attending each game). The team with the next-worst attendance performance is the Carolina Mudcats, who share the Raleigh-Durham market with the nationally popular Triple-A Durham Bulls and still draw .28% of the population on a nightly basis.
The Missions will host the 75th Annual Texas League All-Star Game on June 29, 2011.[4]
The Missions won the 1st half division title, thus going to the playoffs.
The Missions won their 12th Texas League Championship, sweeping the Arkansas Travelers in the Texas League Championship series
Signature promotions
The San Antonio Missions rely more on the traditional approach to delivering a simple baseball game to their fans than other teams in minor league baseball, which is known for hosting a slew of wacky promotions. However, the Missions are known for a few of their own promotions – some of which have garnered nation-wide attention within the industry.
During the seventh inning of each game, an auxiliary mascot named Henry the Puffy Taco is chased around the bases by a kid from the stands, typically between 6 and 10 years of age. The kid tackles the giant taco to the ground just before reaching home plate (they start at first base), then poses triumphantly over the downed mascot. Henry has only won the race once, in 1992. In that race, Henry mis-timed his steps and he inadvertently crossed home plate before his 10-year-old opponent. Nearly 20 years later the Missions hosted a rematch and, on June 24, 2010, the kid finally avenged his loss.
In recent years the team has gained attention from within the baseball industry for two unique giveaway nights – Shirt Off Your Back and Used Car Giveaway. In the first, often held on or near the last game of the season, the jerseys worn by the players during the game are raffled off to fans in the stands (raffle tickets are offered at no charge, and each fan is limited to one entry). The same raffle format is used for the Used Car Giveaway, where more than 10 used cars are given away throughout the night. In 2010 the prizes included a 2001 Ford Mustang and a 2001 Volvo S60.
Like most Minor League Baseball teams, the Missions use on-field emcees to execute their promotions. The Missions have an emcee personality named "Lefty", performed by a rotating tandem of J.C Carpenter and Mike Lavender.
Current roster
Players | Coaches/Other | |||
Pitchers
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Catchers
Infielders
Outfielders
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Manager
Coaches
60-day injured list
7-day injured list |
Former San Antonio Missions with MLB experience
More than 700 former San Antonio baseball players have reached the Major Leagues, if only for a “cup of coffee”. Some of the more notable players include:
- Dirk Hayhurst
- Ted Lilly
- Dennis Eckersley
- Orel Hershiser
- Eric Karros
- Pedro Martínez
- Joe Morgan
- Aaron Poreda
- Brooks Robinson
- Fernando Valenzuela
- John Wetteland
- Paul Konerko
- Mike Piazza
- Ramón Martínez
- Paul LoDuca
- Alex Cora
- Chase Headley
- Adrián Beltré
- Félix Hernández
- Will Venable
- Nick Hundley
- Sean Kazmar
- Jose Lopez
- Mat Latos
- Luis Durango
- Adam Jones
In addition, Brian Anderson – the former radio voice of the San Antonio Missions – has reached the Big Leagues as the broadcaster for the Milwaukee Brewers. More recently, broadcaster Stu Paul has moved closer to his dream of being in the Majors and is now broadcasting for the Nashville Sounds of the PCL.
Nelson W. Wolff Municipal Stadium
Often referred to as the “Jewel of the Texas League” (probably a moniker given the facility when it was new in 1994), Wolff Stadium is currently the oldest ballpark in the Texas League with 17 years of use. The ballpark seats more than 6,200 and, when counting the “outfield berm” seating holds more than 9,000 spectators. Despite its relative newness, the stadium has often been criticized by regularly attending fans for its poor upkeep. Missions management has been seeking a new stadium since 2009, hoping to work in tandem with the University of Texas at San Antonio to bring a viable project about.
Tickets for Missions games are priced on par with other minor league parks, ranging from $7 to $10 based on the section of the ballpark the ticketed seat is in.
See also
- List of baseball parks in San Antonio, Texas
- Occurrence of Religious Symbolism in U.S. Sports Team Names and Mascots
References
- ^ www.milb.com
- ^ http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/38456548/ns/sports-player_news
- ^ http://ww2.minorleaguebaseball.com/private/2011/minor/aax/109/dailyleaguereport.html
- ^ www.samissions.com
External links
- Official website
- San Antonio Missions Roster, Splits, and Situational Stats
- MadFriars.com
- MySA.com New article about the affiliate change
- [1]
- 2004 Mission Belles Cheerleaders