Pacific Coast League
Pacific Coast League | |
---|---|
Sport | Baseball |
Founded | 1903 |
No. of teams | 16 |
Country(ies) | United States |
Most recent champion(s) | Sacramento River Cats |
Official website | www.pclbaseball.com |
The Pacific Coast League (PCL) is a minor league baseball league operating in the West and Midwest of the United States. It is one of two leagues, along with the International League, playing at the Triple-A level, which is one step below Major League Baseball.
Contents |
History
The PCL has had a long tradition on the West Coast, with teams with evocative names such as the Hollywood Stars, Los Angeles Angels, Mission Reds (representing San Francisco's Mission District), Oakland Oaks, Portland Beavers, Sacramento Solons, Salt Lake Bees, San Diego Padres, San Francisco Seals, Seattle Rainiers, and Vernon Tigers.
A near-major league
In the early 20th century, the Pacific Coast League developed into one of the premier regional baseball leagues. With no Major League Baseball team existing west of St. Louis, the PCL was unrivaled as the vehicle for West Coast baseball. Although never recognized as a true major league, the quality of play was considered very high. Drawing from a strong pool of talent in the area, the PCL produced a number of outstanding players, including future major-league stars Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams, Tony Lazzeri, Paul Waner, Earl Averill, and Ernie Lombardi.
While many PCL stars went on to play in the major leagues, teams in the league were often successful enough that they could offer competitive salaries to avoid being outbid for their stars' services. In addition, the mild climate of the West Coast, especially in California, allowed the league to play longer seasons, sometimes starting in late February and ending as late as the beginning of December. This let players earn an extra month or two worth of pay and reduced the need to find offseason work, something which even some major league players found necessary because of the low salaries, by today's standards, paid to many players. The longer playing season also provided room for additional games on the schedule, giving team owners a chance at generating more revenue. Teams sometimes played over 200 games in a single season. One consequence is that a number of the all-time minor league records for season statistical totals are held by players from the PCL.
In 1952, the PCL became the only minor league in history to be given the "Open" classification, a step above the AAA level. This limited the rights of major league clubs to draft players from the PCL, and was seen as a step toward the circuit becoming a third major league.
Sudden decline
The shift to the Open classification came just as minor league teams from coast to coast suffered a sharp drop in attendance, primarily due to the availability of major league games on television. The hammer blow to the PCL's major league dreams came in 1958, when the Brooklyn Dodgers moved to Los Angeles and the New York Giants moved to San Francisco. As a result, three of the PCL's flagship teams (the Los Angeles Angels, the Hollywood Stars, and the San Francisco Seals) were immediately forced to relocate to smaller markets. Additionally, the PCL did not benefit from the comparison with the major leagues, which now occupied the same territory and drew away much of the attention of its former fans. The league never recovered from this blow. It reverted to AAA classification, and soon diminished in the public eye to nothing more than another minor league.
Of the cities represented in the PCL in its heyday, only Salt Lake City, Portland, and Sacramento remain, and even these are represented by different franchises than those that had originally called these cities home. The Oakland Oaks had moved to Canada two years before the arrival of the Giants. The San Diego Padres and Seattle Rainiers were displaced by Major League teams in 1968, but by this time the PCL's decline was already far advanced.
Recent expansion
In 1997, the Pacific Coast League agreed to take teams from the disbanding American Association, which had operated in the Midwest. The league now stretches from western Washington to Middle Tennessee. The league is divided into two conferences, the American Conference and Pacific Conference; after a realignment for 2005 necessitated by the move of the Edmonton Trappers to Round Rock, Texas, each is divided into a North Division and a South Division. The Trappers' move also ended the league's presence in Canada; as recently as 1999 the league had teams north of the border in Vancouver, Calgary, and Edmonton, but they left for Sacramento in 2000, Albuquerque in 2003, and Round Rock in 2005 respectively. In 2005, the Pacific Coast League became the first minor league ever to achieve a season attendance of over 7 million.
Current member teams, affiliations, and stadiums
American Conference
Name | MLB Affiliation | Stadium |
---|---|---|
Iowa Cubs | Chicago Cubs | Principal Park |
Memphis Redbirds | St. Louis Cardinals | AutoZone Park |
Nashville Sounds | Milwaukee Brewers | Herschel Greer Stadium |
Omaha Royals | Kansas City Royals | Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium |
Name | MLB Affiliation | Stadium |
---|---|---|
Albuquerque Isotopes | Florida Marlins | Isotopes Park |
New Orleans Zephyrs | New York Mets | Zephyr Field |
Oklahoma RedHawks | Texas Rangers | AT&T Bricktown Ballpark |
Round Rock Express | Houston Astros | Dell Diamond |
Pacific Conference
Name | MLB Affiliation | Stadium |
---|---|---|
Colorado Springs Sky Sox | Colorado Rockies | Security Service Field |
Portland Beavers | San Diego Padres | PGE Park |
Salt Lake Bees | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | Franklin Covey Field |
Tacoma Rainiers | Seattle Mariners | Cheney Stadium |
Name | MLB Affiliation | Stadium |
---|---|---|
Fresno Grizzlies | San Francisco Giants | Chukchansi Park |
Las Vegas 51s | Los Angeles Dodgers | Cashman Field |
Sacramento River Cats | Oakland Athletics | Raley Field |
Tucson Sidewinders | Arizona Diamondbacks | Tucson Electric Park |
2007 Standings
Final standings for the 2007 season
American Conference | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North Division | |||||
Team | W | L | Win % | GB | Finish* |
Nashville Sounds | 89 | 55 | .618 | - | 1st |
Iowa Cubs | 79 | 65 | .549 | 10.0 | 3rd |
Omaha Royals | 73 | 71 | .507 | 16.0 | 9th |
Memphis Redbirds | 56 | 88 | .389 | 33.0 | 16th |
South Division | |||||
Team | W | L | Win % | GB | Finish* |
New Orleans Zephyrs | 75 | 69 | .521 | - | 6th |
Albuquerque Isotopes | 72 | 70 | .507 | 2.0 | 8th |
Oklahoma RedHawks | 71 | 72 | .497 | 3.5 | 10th |
Round Rock Express | 61 | 81 | .430 | 13.0 | 14th |
Pacific Conference | |||||
North Division | |||||
Team | W | L | Win % | GB | Finish* |
Salt Lake Bees | 74 | 69 | .517 | - | 7th |
Colorado Springs Sky Sox | 69 | 75 | .479 | 5.5 | 11th |
Tacoma Rainiers | 68 | 76 | .472 | 6.5 | 12th |
Portland Beavers | 58 | 86 | .403 | 16.5 | 15th |
South Division | |||||
Team | W | L | Win % | GB | Finish* |
Sacramento River Cats | 83 | 60 | .580 | - | 2nd |
Fresno Grizzlies | 77 | 67 | .535 | 6.5 | 4th |
Tucson Sidewinders | 75 | 66 | .532 | 7.0 | 5th |
Las Vegas 51s | 67 | 77 | .465 | 16.5 | 13th |
* Finish denotes position in the overall league standings.
Teams timeline
Note: Teams in italics are PCL "classic" teams.
- Los Angeles Angels (1903-1957) → Spokane Indians (1958-1970) → Albuquerque Dukes (1971-1999) → Portland Beavers (2000-present)
- Memphis Redbirds (1998-present)
- Oakland Oaks (1903-1955) → Vancouver Mounties (1956-1961) → Dallas Rangers (1962-1964) → Vancouver Mounties (1965-1969) → Salt Lake City Angels (1970-1974) → Salt Lake City Gulls (1975-1984) → Calgary Cannons (1985-2002) → Albuquerque Isotopes (2003-present)
- Portland Beavers (1903-1917) → Sacramento Solons (1918-1960) → Hawaii Islanders (1961-1987) → Colorado Springs Sky Sox (1988-present)
- Portland Beavers (1918-1972) → Spokane Indians (1973-1982) → Las Vegas Stars (1983-2000) → Las Vegas 51s (2001-present)
- Portland Beavers (1978-1993) → Salt Lake Bees (1994-present)
- San Francisco Seals (1903-1957) → Phoenix Giants (1958-1959) → Tacoma Giants (1960-1965) → Phoenix Giants (1966-1985) → Phoenix Firebirds (1986-1997) → Fresno Grizzlies (1998-present)
- Seattle Indians (1903-1938) → Seattle Rainiers (1938-1964) → Seattle Angels (1965-1968) → Tucson Toros (1969-1997) → Tucson Sidewinders (1998-2008 (projected))→ Reno (2009- (projected, name not announced yet))[1]
- Sacramento Sacts/Senators (1903-1906) → Fresno Raisin Eaters (1907) → Sacramento Solons (1908-1914) → Salt Lake Bees (1915-1925) → Hollywood Stars (1926-1935) → San Diego Padres (1936-1968) → Eugene Emeralds (1969-1973) → Sacramento Solons (1974-1977) → San Jose Missions (1978) → Ogden A's (1979-1980) → Edmonton Trappers (1981-2004) → Round Rock Express (2005-present)
- Vancouver Canadians (1978-1999) → Sacramento River Cats (2000-present)
- Vernon Tigers (1909-1925) → Mission Reds (1926-1937) → Hollywood Stars (1938-1957) → Salt Lake Bees (1958-1965) → Tacoma Cubs (1966-1971) → Tacoma Twins (1972-1977) → Tacoma Yankees (1978) → Tacoma Tugs (1979) → Tacoma Tigers (1980-1994) → Tacoma Rainiers (1995-present)
Former American Association teams
Five current league teams were acquired by the PCL following the disbandment of the American Association after the 1997 season.
- Evansville Triplets (1970-1984) → Nashville Sounds (1985-present)
- Houston Buffaloes (1959-1961) → Oklahoma City 89ers (1962-1997) → Oklahoma RedHawks (1998-present)
- Iowa Oaks (1969-1981) → Iowa Cubs (1982-present)
- Kansas City Blues (1902-1954) → Denver Bears (1955-1983) → Denver Zephyrs (1984-1992) → New Orleans Zephyrs (1993-present)
- Omaha Royals (1969-present)
Presidents of the PCL
- 1903-1906
- 1907-1909
- 1910-1911
- 1912-1919
- 1920-1923
- 1924-1931
- 1932-1935
- 1936-1943
- 1944-1954 Clarence H. Rowland
- 1955-1955
- 1956-1959
- 1960-1968
- 1968-1973
- 1974-1978
- 1979-1997
- 1998-present Branch Rickey III
See also
- Pacific Coast League champions
- List of defunct PCL teams
- Triple-A World Series
- Bricktown Showdown
- Sports league attendances