Salem Red Sox
Salem Red Sox Founded in 1955 Salem, Virginia | |||||
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Class-level | |||||
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Current | Advanced-A (1968–present) | ||||
Previous | Class-D (1955–1967) | ||||
Minor league affiliations | |||||
League | Carolina League (1968–present) | ||||
Division | Southern Division | ||||
Previous leagues | Appalachian League (1955, 1957–1967) | ||||
Major league affiliations | |||||
Current | Boston Red Sox (2009–present) | ||||
Previous |
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Minor league titles | |||||
League titles (7) |
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Division titles (10) |
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Team data | |||||
Nickname | Salem Red Sox (2009–present) | ||||
Previous names |
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Ballpark | Lewis-Gale Field at Salem Memorial Baseball Stadium (1995–present) | ||||
Previous parks | Kiwanis Field (1955–1994) | ||||
Owner(s)/ Operator(s) | Fenway Sports Group | ||||
Manager | Joe Oliver | ||||
General Manager | C Ryan Shelton |
The Salem Red Sox are a Minor League Baseball team in Salem, Virginia, an independent city adjacent to Roanoke, Virginia. It is a team in the Class A-Advanced Carolina League and a farm team of the Boston Red Sox. The team, known from 1995 through 2008 as the Salem Avalanche, was previously affiliated with the Houston Astros from 2003 to 2008 and the Colorado Rockies from 1995 to 2002. Prior to 1995, the franchise played under several different names and affiliations. The Red Sox play home games at Lewis-Gale Field at Salem Memorial Ballpark, a 6,300 seat facility opened in 1995 that hosted the Carolina/California League All Star Game in 2006.
The franchise was owned from 1986 until 2006 by Kelvin Bowles, a local resident and major league baseball scout. Bowles (who, coincidentally, scouted for the Boston Red Sox from 2002–05) bought the team when it was in danger of moving from Salem. In 2006, the team was sold to a pair of businessmen from Atlanta who also owned the Fort Wayne Wizards. In December 2007, this group sold the team to Fenway Sports Group, a subsidiary of the Boston Red Sox ownership group, preparing the team for an affiliation change after its Player Development Contract with the Astros ended in 2008.
Notable former players
- Moisés Alou, 6-time All Star (retired)
- Xander Bogaerts, Boston Red Sox
- Jackie Bradley, Jr., Boston Red Sox
- Mookie Betts, Boston Red Sox
- Will Middlebrooks, Milwaukee Brewers
- Daniel Nava, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
- Anthony Ranaudo, Texas Rangers
- Brandon Workman, Boston Red Sox
- Drake Britton, Chicago Cubs
- Carson Blair, Oakland Athletics
- Garin Cecchini, Milwaukee Brewers
- Christian Vazquez, Boston Red Sox
- Daisuke Matsuzaka, Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks
- Orlando Cepeda, San Francisco Giants Hall of Famer
- Aaron Cook, pitcher (retired)
- Chone Figgins, third baseman
- Brad Hawpe, Colorado Rockies
- Jason Hirsh, pitcher
- Matt Holliday, St. Louis Cardinals
- Art Howe, 3rd base coach for Philadelphia Phillies
- Jason Jennings, Texas Rangers
- Ryan Kalish, Chicago Cubs
- Ed Ott, 23rd round pick played 8 yrs in MLB before career ending injury (rotator cuff)
- Jason Kendall, 3-time All Star (retired)
- Ryan Lavarnway, Atlanta Braves
- Esteban Loaiza, Chicago White Sox (retired)
- Hunter Pence, San Francisco Giants
- Dave Parker, 7-time All Star (retired)
- Craig Reynolds, 15 MLB seasons as SS (Pirates/Mariners/Astros)
- Omar Moreno, 12 MLB seasons. Led MLB in stolen bases ('78 & '79) stole 96 bases in 1980 (2nd to 97, Ron LeFlore)
- Anthony Rizzo, Chicago Cubs, 2-time All-Star
- Kenny Rogers, Detroit Tigers (retired)
- Juan Uribe, New York Mets
- Tim Wakefield, Boston Red Sox (retired)
- Larry Walker, St. Louis Cardinals (retired)
- Ron Wotus, Bench Coach of the San Francisco Giants
- Eric Young, San Diego Padres (retired) (works for ESPN)
- Mario Mendoza, The Mendoza Line in batting
- Jimmy Sexton, 6 MLB seasons. Became major sports agent (Alabama Coach Nick Saban, UCLA's Jim Mora, etc.) SI's "… college football's most powerful agent"
- Doug Bair, Pitched 15 years in MLB
- Ken Macha, named Manager of Milwaukee Brewers (2009) by former Salem teammate (pitcher) ...
- Doug Melvin, Brewers General Manager
- Terry Collins, Manager, Houston Astros, 1994-6, Anaheim Angels, 1997–99, New York Mets, 2011 to present
- Jim Sadowski, 1 yr in MLB. Part of Sadowski baseball family (nephew of Bob (pitcher, Braves), Ed (catcher, Braves, Red Sox, Angels) and Ted Sadowski (pitcher, Senators and Twins)
Club records
- Batting: .370 – Oswaldo Olivares, 1977
- Hits: 208 – Oswaldo Olivares, 1977
- Doubles: 43 – Garrett Atkins, 2001
- Triples: 17 – David Arrington, 1968
- Home Runs: 34 – Gerald Davis, 1981
- Total Bases: 280 – Oswaldo Olivares, 1977
- Runs Batted In: 103 – Gerald Davis, 1981
- Stolen Bases: 84 – Miguel Diloné, 1975
- Wins: 16 – Jim Minshall 1972
- Losses: 15 – Frank Brosious, 1983; James McKee, 1970
- Strikeouts: 186 – Ed Whitson, 1976; Doug Bair, 1972
- Walks: 127 – Benjamin Willbank, 1978
- Innings Pitched: 203 – Ed Whitson, 1976
- Earned Run Average: 2.11 – Josh Kalinowski, 1999
- Saves: 27 – Travis Thompson, 1999
Home attendance: 1968–present
- 1968 – 64,532
- 1969 – 63,248
- 1970 – 50,076
- 1971 – 37,872
- 1972 – 43,910
- 1973 – 45,915
- 1974 – 41,379
- 1975 – 39,007
- 1976 – 30,387
- 1977 – 32,744
- 1978 – 51,096
- 1979 – 43,036
- 1980 – 102,456
- 1981 – 72,125
- 1982 – 47,202
- 1983 – 56,451
- 1984 – 61,623
- 1985 – 71,788
- 1986 – 87,047
- 1987 – 111,661
- 1988 – 119,966
- 1989 – 121,581
- 1990 – 126,121
- 1991 – 131,582
- 1992 – 134,598
- 1993 – 145,657
- 1994 – 153,575
- 1995 – 140,111
- 1996 – 173,703 (new stadium)
- 1997 – 188,023
- 1998 – 189,069
- 1999 – 206,012
- 2000 – 200,863
- 2001 – 203,375
- 2002 – 196,347
- 2003 – 175,155
- 2004 – 224,991
- 2005 – 255,225
- 2006 – 237,724 (5 games cancelled due to heavy rain)
- 2007 – 258,469 (5 games cancelled)
- 2008 – 235,823
- 2009 – 231,186 (4,968 was stadium capacity with 1,000 covered seats not available for use)
- 2010 - 211,527
- 2011 - 226,337
- 2012 - 178,730
- 2013 - 172,293
- 2014 - 220,782
- 2015 - 228,120
Total attendance – 6,085,549
Playoffs
- 1968 season: Lost to Lynchburg 1-0 in quarterfinals.
- 1969 season: Defeated High Point-Thomasville 2-0 in quarterfinals; lost to Burlington 2-0 in semifinals.
- 1972 season: Defeated Burlington 2-1 to win championship.
- 1974 season: Won both halves, making a playoff unnecessary.
- 1987 season: Defeated Hagerstown 2-0 in semifinals; defeated Kinston in championship.
- 1988 season: Lost to Lynchburg 2-1 in semifinals.
- 2001 season: Defeated Kinston 2-1 in semifinals; defeated Wilmington 3-2 in championship.
- 2006 season: Lost to Kinston 2-0 in semifinals.
- 2007 season: Defeated Kinston 2-1 in semifinals; lost to Frederick 3-1 in championship.
- 2009 season: Defeated Winston-Salem 3-0 in semifinals; lost to Lynchburg 3-0 in championship.
- 2013 season: Defeated Myrtle Beach 2-0 in semifinals; defeated Potomac 3-0 in championship.
- 2014 season: Lost to Myrtle Beach 2-1 in semifinals.
Media information
- Media Relations Manager: Kevin Burke
- Flagship radio station: 960AM WFIR News Talk Radio
- Radio announcers: Kevin Burke / Brian Gardner
- Number of games broadcast: All
- Newspapers covering the Red Sox: The Roanoke Times, Salem Times-Register
- Official scorer: Billy Wells
Team mascots
Mugsy A St. Bernard mascot who made his rookie debut in professional baseball in 1997 with the Avalanche. According to the team's website, Mugsy descended from the passing Hale-Bopp comet that raced across the Roanoke Valley sky on April 4, 1997.
Misty Misty is a female saint bernard mascot who joined the team in 2005.
Lefty and Righty Coming to Salem all the way from Boston. Lefty and Righty are the new mascots. They're two red sox, both wearing Boston Red Sox hats, they also have an L on one's back and an R on the other.
Big Mo The Salem Avalanche's Kid's Club mascot, Big Mo is a giant abominable snowman.
The Baseball Nut The Avalanche's first mascot was this distinctive character, which resembled an almond. While the idea was original, the Baseball Nut proved to be unpopular. Lacking a cute or friendly appearance, the mascot intimidated children and was an object of derision by adult fans. Mugsy was developed as a replacement.
Roster
Salem Red Sox 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 |
External links
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