Tacoma Rainiers
Tacoma Rainiers Founded in 1960 Tacoma, Washington | |||||
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Class-level | |||||
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Current | Triple-A (1960–present) | ||||
Minor league affiliations | |||||
League | Pacific Coast League (1960–present) | ||||
Conference | Pacific Conference | ||||
Division | Northern Division | ||||
Major league affiliations | |||||
Current | Seattle Mariners (1995–present) | ||||
Previous |
Oakland Athletics (1981–1994) Cleveland Indians (1979–1980) New York Yankees (1978) Minnesota Twins (1972–1977) Chicago Cubs (1966–1971) San Francisco Giants (1960–1965) | ||||
Minor league titles | |||||
League titles (2) |
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Conference titles (3) |
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Division titles (4) |
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Team data | |||||
Nickname | Tacoma Rainiers (1995–present) | ||||
Previous names |
Tacoma Tigers (1980–1994) Tacoma Tugs (1979) Tacoma Yankees (1978) Tacoma Twins (1972–1977) Tacoma Cubs (1966–1971) Tacoma Giants (1960–1965) | ||||
Colors |
Navy blue, red, white | ||||
Mascot | Rhubarb the Reindeer | ||||
Ballpark | Cheney Stadium (1960–present) | ||||
Owner(s)/ Operator(s) | The Baseball Club of Tacoma | ||||
Manager | Pat Listach | ||||
General Manager | Aaron Artman |
The Tacoma Rainiers are a minor league baseball team that plays in the Pacific Coast League (PCL) and are the Triple-A affiliate of the Seattle Mariners. A team located in Tacoma, Washington has been in the PCL every year since 1960, for the longest current active streak of membership in the league. The Rainiers are based only 36 miles south of Seattle, the shortest distance between a Triple-A team and its major-league parent.
History
Tacoma's first team in the PCL was the Tacoma Tigers, who joined the league in 1904, having moved from Sacramento after the 1903 season. The 1904 Tigers won Tacoma's first PCL pennant, finishing first in both halves of the split season schedule, seven games (annualized) over the runner-up Los Angeles Angels. The 1905 Tigers won the first-half championship, then played so poorly in the second-half they moved back to Sacramento, finishing out the season as the Sacramento Solons, and losing the postseason series to the Angels. The PCL would not return to Tacoma for another 55 years; however, another Tacoma Tigers franchise operated in the Western International League from the 1930s until 1951.
The current franchise was founded in 1960 when the Phoenix Giants, an affiliate of the San Francisco Giants, moved to Tacoma and became the Tacoma Giants. In 1965, the Giants decided to move the team back to Phoenix, but the Chicago Cubs decided to move their affiliate, the Salt Lake Bees, to Tacoma exactly the same year and renamed the team the Tacoma Cubs. For the next 19 years, the team mirrored the name of its parent major league club, being known through the years as the Tacoma Giants (1960–1965), Tacoma Cubs (1966–1971), Tacoma Twins (1972–1977), and Tacoma Yankees (1978). Subsequently, the team was known as the Tacoma Tugs (1979) and, once more, the Tacoma Tigers (1980–1994).
The team became associated with the nearby Seattle Mariners in 1995, whose Triple-A team for the previous ten seasons had been the Calgary Cannons. Tacoma adopted the Rainiers name in part as a tribute to the Seattle Rainiers minor league teams that played in Seattle from 1938 to 1964 in the PCL, and again from 1972 to 1976. The Tacoma Rainiers play their home games at Cheney Stadium, which hosted the baseball portion of the 1990 Goodwill Games. The Mariners' Safeco Field is about 30 miles (48 km) to the north.
Oakland Athletics power hitters Mark McGwire, José Canseco, and Jason Giambi played for the Tacoma Tigers on their way to baseball stardom. Alex Rodriguez also played for the team in their first year as the Rainiers in 1995, before becoming a superstar, as did baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Juan Marichal.
In July 2006 the Rainiers were sold to the Dallas-based Schlegel Sports Group, giving pop star Nick Lachey a one-third stake in the team.[1]
The Rainiers are broadcast on KHHO 850 AM by play-by-play announcer Mike Curto. When they were called the Tacoma Twins, Jerry Howarth, Toronto Blue Jays broadcaster, broadcast games for them.
2010 Playoffs
The Rainiers went into playoffs with its home ballpark, Cheney Stadium, under construction. Displaced from its home field, Rainiers were forced to look for other venues to play its playoff home games. The first round of playoff game against Sacramento Rivercats saw the Rainiers winning two straight on the road, then coming "home" to the ballpark of its parent club, the Seattle Mariners, at Safeco Field. The Rainiers then dropped two straight games at Safeco Field, before winning Game 5 to advance to the PCL Championship Series against the Memphis Redbirds.
Due to Safeco Field not being available for the Championship Series and no other ball park in the Pacific Northwest meeting PCL requirements, the Rainiers were forced to play all games in the PCL Championship Series on the road. For Games 1 and 2 (the Rainiers' "home" games) the team batted second against the "visiting" Memphis Redbirds, with AutoZone Park in Memphis, Tennessee (the Redbirds' home park) hosting all the games. Having a hostile crowd even in its "home" games, the Rainiers nonetheless swept the Redbirds in three games to win the 2010 PCL Championship.
The Columbus Clippers defeated the Rainiers 12–6 on September 21, 2010, to win the Triple-A Baseball National Championship Game in Oklahoma City.
2015 Season attendance
Attendance at Cheney Stadium during the 2015 season approached record highs for the Rainiers. A total of 352,521 fans came to the stadium during the course of the club's 72-game home schedule, the second highest mark in club history and the highest since renovated Cheney's Stadium's inaugural season in 2011. The team averaged 4,965 fans per game in 2015—a five percent increase from 2014—and filled Cheney to 76 percent capacity on average, the fifth highest mark in the PCL.[2]
Uniforms
In March 2015, the Tacoma Rainiers announced a set of new logo marks and additions to the club's uniform set.[3] An updated version of the team's script logo, introduced in 1995, became the club's primary logo mark. A long-standing fan-favorite, the standalone "R" logo, became the team's secondary mark.
In addition to the logo marks, a new look was given to the club's home alternate, away, and batting practice uniforms.[4] A red alternate jersey, worn with a new red hat, was added to the rotation of uniform sets. The club's new road uniform was modeled after the Tacoma Giants uniforms of the 1960s with a gray color scheme and block letters on the front. The final addition to the uniform set was a new batting practice cap, adorned with a mountain outline and a climbing axe with a baseball bat handle.
Roster
Tacoma Rainiers 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 |
Notes
- ↑ Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- ↑ "Rainiers Post Near-Record Attendance in '15 | Tacoma Rainiers News". Tacoma Rainiers. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
- ↑ "Rainiers Reveal New Logo, Uniform Set | Tacoma Rainiers News". Tacoma Rainiers. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
- ↑ "2015 Tacoma Rainiers Logo and Uniform Set | Tacoma Rainiers Content". Tacoma Rainiers. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
References
- O'Neal, Bill. The Pacific Coast League 1903-1988. Eakin Press, Austin TX, 1990. ISBN 0-89015-776-6.
- Snelling, Dennis. The Pacific Coast League: A Statistical History, 1903-1957 McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, NC, 1995. ISBN 0-7864-0045-5
- Tacoma Rainiers
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tacoma Rainiers. |
- The Official Tacoma Rainiers website
- No Rhubarb! - Rainiers fan blog
- Interview about Rainiers' first season as Mariners affiliate
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