Long Island Ducks

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Long Island Ducks
Founded in 1998
Central Islip, New York
Team logo Cap insignia
League affiliations
Name
  • Long Island Ducks (2000-present)
Team Colors
  • Black, green, orange, white
                       
Ballpark
Championships
  • League titles: (3) 2004, 2012, 2013
  • Division titles: (4) 2004, 2011, 2012, 2013
Owner(s)/
Operator(s):
Frank Boulton, Bud Harrelson, Seth Waugh
General Manager: Michael Pfaff
Manager: Kevin Baez
Media:
New York Newsday
Website
www.liducks.com

The Long Island Ducks are an American professional baseball team based in Central Islip, New York. They are a member of the Liberty Division of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, which is not affiliated with Major League Baseball. Since the 2000 season, the Ducks have played their home games at Bethpage Ballpark - formerly known as EAB Park, Citibank Park, and Suffolk County Sports Park.

The "Ducks" name refers to Long Island's duck-farming heritage, which is further represented by the Big Duck ferrocement. The Big Duck is in Suffolk County, in which Central Islip is also located.[1]

The Ducks currently own the independent league baseball single-season attendance record of 443,142 fans. They reached this total in the summer of 2001, surpassing the previous record of 436,361 fans which the team had also set in 2000. The Ducks reached the 3 million mark in attendance in September 2006.

Bud Harrelson, a 1971 Rawlings Gold Glove Award winner, is a part-owner of the Ducks. He was the first manager of the team following a stint as the New York Mets manager.

History

Residents of Long Island anticipated the arrival of professional baseball for many years, until the Ducks' inaugural 2000 season. The New York Mets and the New York Yankees own the territorial rights to keep an affiliated team, Major or Minor League, from moving within 75 miles of their respective ballparks. The last attempt by any team to move to Long Island was made by the Albany-Colonie Yankees. The Albany-Colonie team hoped to reestablish themselves in Suffolk County, home to the Ducks, but the Mets prevented the move. The Yankees later moved to Norwich, Connecticut, becoming the Norwich Navigators and, later, the Connecticut Defenders (now the Richmond Flying Squirrels).[2] Baseball fans on Long Island enthusiastically support the Ducks and have led the Atlantic League's attendance since its beginning.[citation needed] In 2007, team owner Frank Boulton expressed his contentment with the Ducks to Baseball America saying, "The Long Island Ducks are the best thing I've ever done in baseball."[3] Despite their success at the gate, the Ducks did not field a championship team until the 2004 season, when they defeated the Camden Riversharks in a three-game sweep to capture the Atlantic League Championship Series.

In 2005, a controversial former MLB player John Rocker signed with the Ducks in an attempt to revive his career. He asked New Yorkers to "bury the hatchet," claiming his willingness to play on Long Island proved he had matured since his controversial comments. Rocker was poorly received by the fans and ended up pitching with an 0-2 record and an ERA of 6.50.

On August 14, 2007, the Ducks appeared in national headlines in the United States after former Major League player José Offerman assaulted opposing players of the Bridgeport Bluefish. In his second at-bat with Bluefish pitcher, Matt Beech, Offerman was hit by a pitch. He retaliated by hitting Beech's hands with a bat, as well as striking catcher John Nathans in the head. Nathans was taken out of the stadium on a stretcher, and Offerman was arrested and taken into custody.[4]

On Monday November 10, the Ducks announced that Gary Carter would be the new manager for the 2009 season.

Former MLB All-stars Dontrelle Willis[5] and Ramon Castro[6] signed with the Ducks in 2013. In 2014, the Ducks made headlines when they stated they were open to signing Alex Rodriguez after he had been suspended by MLB for over a year due to his PED controversy. [7]

Go Green

The Long Island Ducks have implemented an environmental conservation program called "Go Green." The program includes the placement of solar panels on the roof of Bethpage Ballpark to power the luxury suite level, the placing of "Ricky Recycle" receptacles throughout the ballpark for each home game so fans can recycle their bottles and cans, the enrollment in an electricity reduction program called Operation Save New York, and the participation in "Reuse a Shoe" program, in which sneakers are collected at Bethpage Ballpark to be recycled and used for materials to create new playing surfaces and sports equipment.[8]

Logos and uniforms

The official colors of the Long Island Ducks are black, green, orange, and white. The primary logo features the "Ducks" wordmark in orange with black outline. The wordmark begins with a stylized, cartoon duck head in the form of a capital, cursive "D." The secondary logo is the webbed foot of a duck in orange with black outline.

The Ducks wear caps produced by The Game Headwear and uniforms by Rawlings. The home caps are black throughout with the cap logo centered on the front. The cap logo is the stylized, cartoon duck head. The away caps are green with the duck head cap logo. The batting helmets are green with the webbed-foot logo.

The home jersey is white with black pinstripes with the "Ducks" wordmark centered across the front. The numbering on the jersey is primarily in green with white outline and black drop shadow. The away jerseys are grey with the "Long Island" cursive wordmark centered across in green with white and orange outline. The numbering is in green with white outline and orange drop shadow. The alternate is a sleeveless, green jersey with the "Ducks" word mark centered across the chest. The numbers are in orange with white drop shadow.

Season-by-season records

Long Island Ducks - 2004 to 2013[9]
Season W - L Record Winning Percentage Finish Playoffs
2004 65-61 .516 3rd in North Division 5-1 (won championship)
2005 66-74 .471 1st in North Division 1-2 (lost division final)
2006 73-53 .579 2nd in North Division 0-2 (lost division final)
2007 72-54 .571 1st in North Division 0-2 (lost division final)
2008 71-69 .507 1st in Liberty Division 0-2 (lost division final)
2009 73-65 .528 1st in Liberty Division 2-3 (lost division final)
2010 70-68 .507 3rd in Liberty Division Did Not Make Playoffs
2011 78-47 .624 1st in Liberty Division 4-4 (lost in championship round)
2012 63-74 .460 3rd in Liberty Division 6-4 (won championship)
2013 63-77 .450 2nd in Liberty Division 6-2 (won championship)
Totals (2000–2013) 1,040-954 .522 1st Place 5 times 3 championships
Playoffs 23-22 .511 --


  • 3 Atlantic League Championships (2004, 2012, 2013)

Ferry Cup

The Long Island Ducks contend with the Bridgeport Bluefish over the Ferry Cup, which is sponsored by the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Steamboat Company. The two teams border on Long Island Sound, and many fans of both teams regularly cross it to support them. The current Bluefish/Ducks rivalry record is 85-83, in favor of Bridgeport.[10]

Radio

All of the Long Island Ducks weekend games are broadcast on WRCN/103.9 starting in 2013, with the rest of the games broadcast over the Ducks official website. Chris King, David Weiss, Michael Polak and Tom Felice serve as the team's official broadcasters.

Live on Internet TV

The Long Island Ducks' games are broadcast live on iBN Sports.

Mascot

The Long Island Ducks' official mascot is an anthropomorphic duck named QuackerJack. He wears the Ducks' full home uniform with green and white sneakers. He debuted on March 18, 2000 at Citibank Park.[11] His name alludes to a popular baseball game food produced by the Cracker Jack brand, and the quacking sound of a duck.

Current roster

Long Island Ducks roster
Active (25-man) roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 17 Eric Niesen
  • -- Casey Barnes
 

Catchers


Infielders

  • 12 Dan Lyons

Outfielders

  • -- Jon Myers
 

Manager

Coaches

Disabled list
‡ Inactive list
§ Suspended list

Roster updated February 1, 2014
Transactions

Retired numbers

Jackie Robinson
2B
Retired throughout
professional baseball
on April 15, 1997

References

External links

Official websites

Blogs


Achievements
Preceded by
Long Island Ducks
2012
Atlantic League Champions
Long Island Ducks

2013
Succeeded by
Achievements
Preceded by
Long Island Ducks
2012
Liberty Division Champions
Long Island Ducks

2013
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Nashua Pride
2003
North Division Champions
Long Island Ducks

2004
Succeeded by
Nashua Pride
2005
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