High Desert Mavericks
High Desert Mavericks Founded in 1988 Adelanto, California | |||||
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Class-level | |||||
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Current | Class A - Advanced | ||||
Minor league affiliations | |||||
League | California League | ||||
Conference | South Division | ||||
Major league affiliations | |||||
Current | Texas Rangers (2015–present) | ||||
Previous |
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Minor league titles | |||||
League titles (3) |
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Team data | |||||
Nickname | High Desert Mavericks (1991–present) | ||||
Previous names | Riverside Red Wave (1988–1990) | ||||
Ballpark | Heritage Field at Stater Bros. Stadium | ||||
Owner(s)/ Operator(s) | Main Street Baseball | ||||
Manager | Spike Owen | ||||
General Manager | Ben Hemmen |
The High Desert Mavericks are a minor league baseball team in Adelanto, California, USA. Their Major League parent club is the Texas Rangers. They are a Class A - Advanced team in the California League.
The franchise was founded in 1988 and was first located in Riverside, California and known as the Red Wave from 1988. In 1991 it relocated north across the mountains to Adelanto, part of the Victor Valley metro area in California's High Desert region. The Rangers are the eighth parent club in the Mavericks' relatively short history.
The Mavericks play their home games at Heritage Field at Stater Bros. Stadium (known as Stater Bros. Stadium from 2007 to 2014 and Mavericks Stadium until 2007) which opened in 1991 and seats 3,808 fans. The park is known to be an extreme hitter-friendly venue which tends to inflate home run totals drastically.[1] As a result, offensive statistics for High Desert players must be discounted for comparative purposes, while the reverse is the case for statistics accumulated by High Desert pitchers.[2]
Achievements
- The Mavericks are the only team in California League history to win championships in the years that their major league parent clubs came into existence.
- The Mavericks were the first team in California League history to have cheerleaders. The Maverick Girls would perform dance numbers on top of the dugouts in between innings.
- On June 28, 2009, the Mavericks performed two historic feats on one day. They combined with the Lake Elsinore Storm to set a California League record for combined runs scored (51) in a 33-18 loss, and outfielder James McOwen broke the California League record for longest hitting streak, hitting safely for the 36th straight game on the same day.
Notable High Desert Mavericks alumni
- Rod Barajas
- Nick Bierbrodt
- Bruce Bochy (inaugural manager)
- Craig Breslow
- Billy Butler
- Howie Clark
- Jack Cust
- Greg Halman
- Robby Hammock
- J. J. Hardy
- Corey Hart
- J. P. Howell
- Shawn Kelley
- Travis Lee
- Cory Lidle
- Javier López
- Matt Mangini
- Matt Mieske
- Brad Nelson
- Vicente Padilla
- Brad Penny
- Michael Pineda
- Stephen C. Reich
- Michael Saunders
- Junior Spivey
- Matt Vasgersian (MLB Network Announcer, was the Mavericks first radio announcer 1991)
- Don Wakamatsu (managed Mavs in 1998, was California League Manager of the Year that year; first Asian-American MLB manager)
- Brandon Weeden
Sale of team
On November 29, 2010, High Desert Mavericks were sold to Main Street Baseball after more than a year on the open market.[3] Rumors have the team possibly relocating to Chico, California, if a new ballpark is proposed and built there.
According to an article in the Victor Valley Daily Press dated August 12, 2012, the Mavericks will be staying in the High Desert through the 2015 season and possibly through 2018.[4]
Roster
High Desert Mavericks roster | ||||
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Players | Coaches/Other | |||
Pitchers
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Catchers
Infielders
Outfielders
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Manager Coaches
7-day disabled list |
References
External links
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