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2009 International League season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 2009 International League Season |
| league | International League |
| sport | Baseball |
| duration | April 9 – September 7, 2009 |
| no_of_games | 143 |
| no_of_teams | 16 |
| season | Regular season |
| season_champs | Louisville Bats |
| MVP | Shelley Duncan |
| MVP_link | International League Most Valuable Player Award |
| finals | Governors' Cup |
| finals_link | Governors' Cup |
| finals_champ | Durham Bulls (3rd) |
| finals_runner-up | Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees |
| seasonslist | List of International League champions |
| seasonslistnames | IL |
| prevseason_link | 2008 International League season |
| prevseason_year | 2008 |
| nextseason_link | 2010 International League season |
| nextseason_year | 2010 |
The International League season began on Thursday, April 9, with all fourteen teams competing on opening day. The regular season ended on Monday, September 7.
In the semifinal playoff rounds, the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees defeated the Gwinnett Braves 3-1 and the Durham Bulls defeated the Louisville Bats 3-2. The Bulls swept the Yankees 3-0 in the championship series to win the Governors' Cup.
Teams
| Division | Team | MLB Affiliation | City | Stadium | Capacity | North | South | West |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buffalo Bisons | New York Mets | Buffalo, New York | Coca-Cola Field | 19,500 | ||||
| Lehigh Valley IronPigs | Philadelphia Phillies | Allentown, Pennsylvania | Coca-Cola Park | 10,000 | ||||
| Pawtucket Red Sox | Boston Red Sox | Pawtucket, Rhode Island | McCoy Stadium | 10,031 | ||||
| Rochester Red Wings | Minnesota Twins | Rochester, New York | Frontier Field | 10,868 | ||||
| Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees | New York Yankees | Moosic, Pennsylvania | PNC Field | 10,310 | ||||
| Syracuse Chiefs | Washington Nationals | Syracuse, New York | Alliance Bank Stadium | 11,117 | ||||
| Charlotte Knights | Chicago White Sox | Fort Mill, South Carolina | Knights Stadium | 10,002 | ||||
| Durham Bulls | Tampa Bay Rays | Durham, North Carolina | Durham Bulls Athletic Park | 10,000 | ||||
| Gwinnett Braves | Atlanta Braves | Lawrenceville, Georgia | Gwinnett County Ballpark | 10,099 | ||||
| Norfolk Tides | Baltimore Orioles | Norfolk, Virginia | Harbor Park | 12,067 | ||||
| Columbus Clippers | Cleveland Indians | Columbus, Ohio | Huntington Park | 10,000 | ||||
| Indianapolis Indians | Pittsburgh Pirates | Indianapolis, Indiana | Victory Field | 15,500 | ||||
| Louisville Bats | Cincinnati Reds | Louisville, Kentucky | Louisville Slugger Field | 13,131 | ||||
| Toledo Mud Hens | Detroit Tigers | Toledo, Ohio | Fifth Third Field | 10,300 |
Before the Season
Affiliation changes
Before the 2009 season, three IL teams signed player development contracts (PDC) with different parent clubs.
The Columbus Clippers signed a four-year PDC with the Cleveland Indians through 2012 on September 18, 2008. The Clippers had previously been affiliated with the Washington Nationals for two years after ending their 28-year partnership with the New York Yankees. The Indians become the Clippers' third affiliate in four years.
The Syracuse Chiefs signed a two-year PDC with the Washington Nationals through 2010 on September 20, 2008. The Chiefs had previously been affiliated with the Toronto Blue Jays since 1978 and had been the only Triple-A affiliate in Toronto's history.
The Buffalo Bisons signed a two-year PDC with the New York Mets through 2010 on September 21, 2008. The Bisons had previously been affiliated with the Cleveland Indians for 14 seasons, winning three league championships (2 in the IL, 1 in the AA). The Bisons adopted a new logo and the Mets' team colors as their own to reflect the new partnership.
Team changes
After 43 seasons and 5 Governor's Cup championships, the Richmond Braves moved to Lawrenceville, Georgia becoming the Gwinnett Braves. One factor in the franchise's decision to relocate was reportedly a failure to reach an agreement on building a new ballpark in Richmond.
New stadiums
The Columbus Clippers moved from Cooper Stadium to Huntington Park in Columbus' Arena District. The stadium, which cost $56 million and will seat 10,000, opened on April 18 as the Clippers hosted their rival Toledo Mud Hens. Columbus-based bank holding company Huntington Bancshares Inc. bought the stadium's naming rights $12 million over 23 years.
The newly relocated Gwinnett Braves (formerly Richmond Braves) moved into Gwinnett Stadium in Lawrenceville, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta. The 10,000 seat stadium is a focal point of a planned mixed-use entertainment district and opened on April 17 as the Braves host the Norfolk Tides. As of February 2009, the naming rights to the stadium have not been sold.
Regular season
Opening Day
April 9 is the Opening Day of the 2009 International League season. The following games are scheduled:
- Gwinnett Braves @ Charlotte Knights
- Rochester Red Wings @ Syracuse Chiefs
- Pawtucket Red Sox @ Buffalo Bisons
- Toledo Mud Hens @ Indianapolis Indians
- Columbus Clippers @ Louisville Bats
- Norfolk Tides @ Durham Bulls
- Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees @ Lehigh Valley IronPigs
All-star game
The 2009 Triple-A All-Star Game was the 22nd meeting between all-stars of the International and Pacific Coast leagues, with the game taking place on July 17 at PGE Park in Portland, Oregon. For the twelfth time, the International League would field a team of its best players to compete against the host Pacific Coast League's best players. The International League would even up the All-Star Game series, with a 6-5 win over the Pacific Coast League all-stars. The PCL held a six games to five lead over the IL before the game.
Standings
| International League - North Division | W | L | Pct. | GB |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees | 81 | 60 | .574 | — |
| Syracuse Chiefs | 76 | 68 | .528 | 6½ |
| Lehigh Valley IronPigs | 71 | 73 | .493 | 11½ |
| Rochester Red Wings | 70 | 74 | .486 | 12½ |
| Pawtucket Red Sox | 61 | 82 | .427 | 21 |
| Buffalo Bisons | 56 | 87 | .392 | 26 |
| International League - South Division | W | L | Pct. | GB |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Durham Bulls | 83 | 61 | .576 | — |
| Gwinnett Braves | 81 | 63 | .563 | 2 |
| Norfolk Tides | 71 | 71 | .500 | 11 |
| Charlotte Knights | 67 | 76 | .469 | 15½ |
| International League - West Division | W | L | Pct. | GB |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Louisville Bats | 84 | 58 | .592 | — |
| Toledo Mud Hens | 73 | 70 | .510 | 11½ |
| Indianapolis Indians | 70 | 73 | .490 | 14½ |
| Columbus Clippers | 57 | 85 | .401 | 27 |
y-division champion
x-wild card winner
League leaders
Batting Champions
| Stat | Player | Total |
|---|---|---|
| AVG | Jordan Brown | .336 |
| Home run | Shelley Duncan | 30 |
| Run batted in | Shelley Duncan | 99 |
| Run | Shelley Duncan | 85 |
| Hit | Jesus Feliciano | 154 |
| Stolen base | Drew Stubbs | 46 |
Pitching Champions
| Stat | Player | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Win | Justin Lehr | 13 |
| Loss | Charlie Zink | 15 |
| Earned run average | Carlos Torres | 2.39 |
| Strikeout | Carlos Carrasco | 148 |
| Innings pitched | Wade Davis | 158.2 |
| Save | Luis Valdez | 27 |
Playoffs
The 2009 International League playoffs will take place at the conclusion of the regular season in September.
| seed-width = 25 | team-width = 150 | score-width = 25
| RD1-seed1 = N | RD1-team1=Scranton/Wilkes-Barre | RD1-score1=3 | RD1-seed2 = WC | RD1-team2=Gwinnett | RD1-score2=1
| RD1-seed3 = W | RD1-team3=Louisville | RD1-score3=2 | RD1-seed4 = S | RD1-team4=Durham | RD1-score4=3
| RD2-seed1 = N | RD2-team1=Scranton/Wilkes-Barre | RD2-score1=0 | RD2-seed2 = W | RD2-team2=Durham | RD2-score2=3
References
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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