Binghamton Mets

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For current information on this topic, see
2008 Binghamton Mets season
Binghamton Mets
Founded in 1992
Binghamton, New York

Team Logo

Cap Insignia
Class-Level
  • Double-A (1992-Present)
Minor League affiliations
Major League affiliations
Name
  • Binghamton Mets (1992-present)
Ballpark
Minor League titles
League titles 1992, 1994
Division titles 1994, 2000
Owner(s)/Operated by: David Maines, William Maines, George Scherer, Michael Urda
Manager: Mako Oliveras
General Manager: Scott Brown

The Binghamton Mets are a minor league baseball team based in Binghamton, New York in the United States. The team, which plays in the Eastern League, is the Double-A affiliate of the New York Mets major-league club. The Mets play in NYSEG Stadium, located in Binghamton.

Contents

[edit] History

The current franchise began as the Williamsport Bills in 1987, but was affiliated with several different major-league teams during its five seasons. The parent New York Mets bought the Bills franchise in late 1990 and announced they would move the club a short distance north to Binghamton. The Bills played out their final season in Williamsport in 1991 while a new stadium was constructed. Then, in 1992, minor league baseball was back in the Triple Cities for the first time in 24 years. (The Binghamton Triplets, a New York Yankee affiliate, had played at Johnson Field in nearby Johnson City until 1968.)

In their first year as the Binghamton Mets, the team set a still-standing attendance record by drawing just over a quarter-million fans to the ballpark. They also proceeded to win the Eastern League championship.

In 1994, the New York parent club sold ownership of the team to a group of local investors led by Michael Urda. That year, the team went on to another EL title and a league-best record of 82-59. Binghamton also hosted the Double-A All-Star Game in July of that year. Former Mets farmhand Blaine Beatty, who was the losing pitcher in that All-Star Game, would serve as the B-Mets' pitching coach in 2005.

The Mets alternated between 2nd- and 4th-place finishes for the next four years, and although they made the playoffs with their runner-up showings in 1996 and 1998, they were eliminated in the first round both times.

After a dreadful season in 1999 where the team finished 38 games out of first place, the Mets pulled off a "worst-to-first" turnaround in 2000, winning the EL Northern Division but losing to New Haven in the playoffs. Binghamton posted identical 73-68 records in both 2001 and 2002 but failed to make the postseason.

The B-Mets made it back to the postseason in 2004, winning the EL Northern Division with a 76-66 record before losing in the first round of the playoffs to the New Hampshire Fisher Cats who, like the B-Mets, would go on to win the EL championship in their inaugural season.

A new video scoreboard was installed at NYSEG Stadium in time for the 2007 season and, despite finishing in last place, the B-Mets drew 230,053 fans, their best attendance figure since 1992.

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] Current roster

Binghamton Mets roster
v  d  e
Players Coaching staff
Pitchers
  • 26 Salvador Aguilar
  • 17 Eude Brito
  • 45 Eric Brown
  •  1 Eddie Camacho
  • 33 Joe Hietpas
  • 44 Eddie Kunz
  • 34 German Marte
  • 18 Jonathan Niese
  • 39 Robert Parnell
  • 47 Robert Paulk
  • 20 Jacob Ruckle
  • 32 Jose Sanchez



† disabled list
‡ temporary inactive list
Roster updated April 9, 2008

Catchers
  •  5 Rafael Arroyo
  • 23 Salomon Manriquez
  • 26 Salvador Paniagua

Infielders

  • 21 Mike Carp
  • 10 Jose Coronado
  • 24 Nick Evans
  • 16 Emmanuel Garcia
  • 11 Jonathan Malo
  •  8 Dan Murphy

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches



[edit] Season records

(Place indicates finish in Eastern League 1992-93, in Northern Division from 1994)

[edit] Playoffs

[edit] External links