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Charleston Dirty Birds

American professional baseball team

Charleston Dirty Birds

Summary

American professional baseball team

FieldValue
nameCharleston Dirty Birds
founded1987
cityCharleston, West Virginia
logoCharleston Dirty Birds logo.svg
uniformlogoDirty Birds cap.png
class levelIndependent (2021–present)
past class levelClass A (1987–2020)
current leagueAtlantic League (2021–present)
divisionSouth
past leagueSouth Atlantic League (1987–2020)
pastmajorleague{{plainlist
leaguenum1
leaguechamps1990
divnum9
divisionchamps1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1997 • 2007 • 2008 • 2013 • 2015 • 2024
nicknameCharleston Dirty Birds (2022–present)
pastnames{{plainlist
colorsBlack, blue, orange, yellow, gray
mascotDusty
ballparkGoMart Ballpark (4,500)
pastparksWatt Powell Park (1987–2004)
ownerAndy Shea
gmBen Blum
managerP. J. Phillips
website
firsthalfnum5secondhalfnum=8firsthalfchamps=1991 • 1992 • 1997 • 2004 • 2007secondhalfchamps=1990 • 1991 • 1997 • 2008 • 2013 • 2015 • 2021 • 2024
  • Seattle Mariners (2019–2020)
  • Pittsburgh Pirates (2009–2018)
  • Milwaukee Brewers (2005–2008)
  • Toronto Blue Jays (2001–2004)
  • Kansas City Royals (1999–2000)
  • Cincinnati Reds (1990–1998)
  • Chicago Cubs (1988–1989)
  • West Virginia Power (2005–2021)
  • Charleston Alley Cats (1995–2004)
  • Charleston Wheelers (1987–1994)

The Charleston Dirty Birds are an American professional baseball team based in Charleston, West Virginia. They are a member of the South Division of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, a partner league of Major League Baseball. The Dirty Birds have played their home games at GoMart Ballpark since 2005.

Team history

Before current era (1910–1983)

Main article: Charleston Charlies

The history of professional baseball in Charleston, dates back to , and a team known as the Charleston Statesmen of the long-forgotten Class D Virginia Valley League. In , the Statesmen moved to the Class D Mountain State League, and then folded after that year. A new team, the Charleston Senators was formed in 1914 and lasted three seasons in the Class D Ohio State League. In , a new Senators team joined the Class C Mid-Atlantic League as an affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds. This team lasted until . In , the Senators were reformed as a member of the Class A Central League. In , the city was granted a franchise in the Triple-A American Association. At first, this team was affiliated with the Chicago White Sox, then the Detroit Tigers, and finally the Washington Senators. In , the Charleston Senators won the American Association championship. The franchise ceased operations after the season.

In , the city had no team, but the Triple-A International League San Juan Marlins, affiliated with the St. Louis Cardinals, moved to the city but on May 19 the team was deemed not financially viable. In , the Charleston Indians, affiliated with the Cleveland Indians, moved to the city in the Class-A Eastern League, and in that league was elevated to Double-A. The team folded after the season.

Baseball returned to the city in with the Charleston Charlies of the Triple-A International League. The Charlies played in the International League from 1971 to 1983. The team had previously been the Columbus Jets. The Charlies were affiliated with the Pittsburgh Pirates, Houston Astros, Texas Rangers, and finally the Cleveland Indians. The team won the International League championship in and . The Charlies left for Maine following the season, and, after relocating to Moosic, Pennsylvania in 1989, the team is now known as the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders.

Today, the Dirty Birds sell nostalgic "throwback" merchandise from the Pittsburgh-affiliated era of the Charlies, which is generally considered the pinnacle of baseball in the city.

Charleston Wheelers (1987–1994)

In , the city resumed minor league baseball after a three-year absence. The new team was first called the Charleston Wheelers, so named for the city's history of stern- and side-wheeled boats. The Wheelers began as a co-op team, with players from several Major League Baseball franchises including the Los Angeles Dodgers, Detroit Tigers, Chicago White Sox, Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, and Atlanta Braves.

In 1988, the franchise became the Chicago Cubs' third full-season Class A franchise (the other two being Peoria in the Midwest League and Winston-Salem in the Carolina League). The only two players on that 1988 squad to reach the Major Leagues were SS Alex Arias and C Matt Walbeck.

Trevor Hoffman pitching in relief for the San Diego Padres closing out a game against the Chicago Cubs at Petco Park on June 4, 2008.
Trevor Hoffman, pitching in relief for the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on June 4, 2008, played for the Charleston Wheelers in 1990 and 1991.

Hall of Famer Trevor Hoffman began his professional career as an infielder with Charleston, then the Single-A affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds. Over his first 103 games, he struggled offensively, batting just .212 with 23 runs batted in. Due to his limited success at the plate, Hoffman was converted to a pitcher in 1991 on the recommendation of Charleston manager Jim Lett. The transition ultimately set the stage for his Hall of Fame career as a reliever.

The Wheelers won the Class A South Atlantic League championship in , the only league title for the franchise. By that point, they had changed affiliation to the Cincinnati Reds. SAL Northern Division championships followed in 1991 and 1992, with the Wheelers losing the championship series both years.

In late , the Wheelers were purchased from then-owner Dennis Bastien by a conglomerate of local owners led by Charleston businessman Michael Paterno.

Charleston Alley Cats (1995–2004)

The Charleston Alley Cats were established in 1995 as a Class A South Atlantic League affiliate, initially for the Cincinnati Reds. The team was managed in its inaugural season by Razor Shines, in what would become the first year of a managerial career that extended through 2015. That 1995 squad finished with a 77–65 record, placing fourth in the league's North Division. Notably, future Major League pitcher Brett Tomko made his professional debut with the Alley Cats, posting a 1.84 ERA over nine appearances, including seven starts.

Alex Rios]], 2× All-Star and World Series champion, played for the Charleston Alley Cats in 2001.

The Alley Cats made their first postseason appearance in 1997 after finishing first in the North Division with a 76–62 record. The club's success that season was driven by a talented core that included right-handers Buddy Carlyle—who would go on to appear in 150 Major League games over nine seasons—and José Acevedo, along with catcher Jason LaRue, both of whom later reached the Major Leagues.

After the 1997 season, the Alley Cats did not return to the playoffs until their final year of existence in 2004. The franchise spent the 1999 and 2000 seasons as a Kansas City Royals affiliate before joining the Toronto Blue Jays organization in 2001. In their final season, the 2004 Alley Cats went 84–56, powered by strong performances from right-handed pitchers Tom Mastny and Shaun Marcum, along with slugger Ryan Roberts. Despite their success, they did not win the league championship, as the Hickory Crawdads defeated the Capital City Bombers in the South Atlantic League Finals.

During their 10-year run and affiliation with three different Major League clubs, the Alley Cats featured numerous players who later reached the Major Leagues. Notable alumni include Alex Rios, Jeremy Affeldt, Erik Kratz, and Brandon League.

West Virginia Power (2005–2021)

Prior to the season, they adopted the West Virginia Power name. To quote the team's announcement following their decision to change the team name:

"West Virginia is and will continue to be recognized as one of the leading energy providers for the country. The energy production from coal, natural gas, and hydro-electric sources, combined with the fact that Charleston serves as the center for the state's political and economic powers led us to the name of the team. We felt it was extremely important that the name reflect the entire region and are excited about the tremendous marketing opportunities that will go along with the name."

language=en}}</ref>

The West Virginia Power played their inaugural game at Appalachian Power Park in April 2005, a stadium named in recognition of the state's diverse energy industry. The team hosted the Hagerstown Suns on April 14, 2005, securing an 8–3 victory before a crowd of 5,354 fans. The game marked the official opening of the new ballpark, which was considered one of the premier new facilities in Minor League Baseball at the time.

From the team's inaugural season in 2005 through the end of 2008, the West Virginia Power served as the Class A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers. During this period, the club drew strong attendance, with fans coming to see future Major League players such as Yovani Gallardo, Ryan Braun, Michael Brantley and Alcides Escobar. The Power won the South Atlantic League Northern Division titles in both 2007 and 2008, but fell short of a championship—losing the 2007 league title series to the Columbus Catfish in a three-game sweep, and dropping the 2008 championship series to the Augusta GreenJackets.

[[Gregory Polanco]] with the West Virginia Power in 2012.

In 2009, the Power hosted the South Atlantic League All-Star Game. The Home Run Derby was won by Power first baseman and All-Star Calvin Anderson. The All-Star Game itself drew a sellout crowd to Appalachian Power Park.

The franchise again hosted the 2019 South Atlantic League All-Star Game on Tuesday, June 18, at Appalachian Power Park, marking the second time the franchise hosted the league's mid-summer classic since 2005, with the first occurring in 2009.

In conjunction with Major League Baseball's reorganization of the minors after the 2020 season, the Mariners opted to discontinue their affiliation with West Virginia, leaving them in need of a new affiliate for 2021. It was later confirmed that the Power would be dropped from affiliated baseball, with the team stating its intent to continue playing for 2021 and beyond in another league.

On February 24, 2021, the team announced that it had been sold to a new ownership group led by Andy Shea, also owner of the Power's former South Atlantic League rivals the Lexington Legends. The Power joined the Legends in the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, an independent MLB Partner league, for the 2021 season and beyond.

As of January 20, 2023, 102 former Power players have made their MLB debut.

Charleston Dirty Birds (2021–present)

On September 28, 2021, the team officially changed their name to the Charleston Dirty Birds, a reference to canaries once used to detect poisonous gases in the state's coal mines. Charleston won the second-half Southern Division championship, but fell short in the playoffs, losing to the eventual league champion Lexington Legends in the decisive third game of their playoff series.

On Sunday, July 20, 2025, against the Long Island Ducks, the Charleston Dirty Birds tied a professional baseball record by hitting 10 home runs in a single game. The feat matched a mark last achieved by the Toronto Blue Jays on September 14, 1987, against the Baltimore Orioles. Charleston's 12-inning slugfest ended in a 17–16 victory, fueled by a power surge from James Nelson (2 HR), Keon Barnum (2 HR), Chad Sedio (2 HR), Alsander Womack (2 HR), Zach Daniels, and Joseph Rosa. The offensive outburst helped the Dirty Birds rally multiple times and ultimately secure the dramatic extra-inning win.

2025 Dirty Birds roster

Source

Traditions

"The Toastman"

Rod Blackstone, better known to fans as "The Toastman", is a beloved fixture at Charleston Dirty Birds baseball games in West Virginia. His quirky tradition began during the 1990 season, when, at a friend's suggestion, he started attending Charleston Wheelers games at the old Watt Powell Park. What began as a casual outing soon turned into a longstanding ballpark legend.

In 1992, the team's owner took notice of Blackstone's growing presence and enthusiasm, telling him: "I love that cheer and you need to make toast in the stands. You can sit down front and we'll plug in a toaster." That moment officially launched what would become one of minor league baseball's most unique and enduring fan traditions.

Rod Blackstone, AKA, the &quot;Toast Man&quot; at Appalachian Power Park, July 2010. Blackstone sits behind home plate during home games and heckles the opposing team's players with a chant of &quot;You Are Toast&quot;. He then throws toast into the crowd.

Today, Blackstone occupies a front-row aisle seat in Section 107 behind home plate, where he's become a central part of the game-day experience. Known for his homemade signs and crowd-leading chants, he energizes the stadium and adds a personal, community-driven touch to every home game.

What truly sets Blackstone apart, however, is his signature toast toss—literally. Each time a visiting batter strikes out, Blackstone hurls slices of toast into the crowd to celebrate. Staying true to his nickname, the toast is made fresh at the stadium. He brings loaves of bread from home and toasts them during the game using a small metal patio table outfitted with a toaster. The team even installed a dedicated electrical outlet near his section, making the ritual a permanent and cherished part of the ballpark's culture.

Season-by-season records

Charleston Wheelers (South Atlantic League)YearRegular SeasonPostseasonManagerRecordWin %FinishRecordWin %ResultMLBSubtotals562–554.5047–6.6361 SAL ChampionshipsCharleston AlleyCats (South Atlantic League)YearRegular SeasonPostseasonManagerRecordWin %FinishRecordWin %ResultMLBSubtotals622–765.4483–4.4290 SAL ChampionshipsWest Virginia Power (South Atlantic League)YearRegular SeasonPostseasonManagerRecordWin %FinishRecordWin %ResultMLBSubtotals1055–1006.5127–11.3890 SAL ChampionshipsTotals2,242–2325.49117–21.4471 League Championship
Hal Dyer66–73.4752nd (Northern)co-op
Brad Mills51–86.3725th (Northern)Cubs
Greg Mahlberg58–76.4336th (Northern)Cubs
Jim Lett77–66.5383rd (Northern)5–01.000Won semifinals vs Fayetteville Generals, 2–0
Won SAL Championship vs Savannah Cardinals, 3–0Reds
P. J. Carey
Dave Miley92–50.6481st (Northern)0–3.000Lost SAL Championship vs Columbia Mets, 0–3Reds
P. J. Carey77–64.5462nd (Northern)2–3.400Won semifinals vs Spartanburg Phillies, 2–0
Lost SAL Championship vs Myrtle Beach Hurricanes, 0–3Reds
Tom Nieto76–64.5432nd (Northern)Reds
Tom Nieto65–75.4645th (Northern)Reds
Razor Shines77–65.5423rd (Northern)Reds
Donnie Scott
Tommy Thompson58–84.4084th (Northern)Reds
Barry Lyons76–62.5512nd (Northern)3–2.600Won First Round vs Cape Fear Crocs, 2–0
Lost Semifinal vs Delmarva Shorebirds, 1–2Reds
Barry Lyons44–96.3144th (Northern)Reds
Tom Poquette61–80.43313thRoyals
Joe Szekely53–80.39814thRoyals
Buddy Biancalana51–87.37016thBlue Jays
Paul Elliott61–79.43615thBlue Jays
Mark Meleski57–76.42912thBlue Jays
Ken Joyce84–56.6003rd0–2.000Lost Semifinal vs Capital City Bombers, 0–2Blue Jays
Ramon Aviles60–78.4356th (Northern)Brewers
Mike Guerrero74–62.5443rd (Northern)Brewers
Jeff Isom82–54.6031st (Northern)2–4.333Won Semifinal vs Hickory Crawdads, 2–1
Lost SAL Championship vs Columbus Catfish, 0–3Brewers
Jeff Isom77–62.5543rd (Northern)3–3.500Won Semifinal vs Lake County Captains, 3–0
Lost SAL Championship vs Augusta GreenJackets, 0–3Brewers
Gary Green67–70.4894th (Northern)Pirates
Gary Green65–74.4686th (Northern)Pirates
Gary Robinson69–69.5005th (Northern)Pirates
Rick Sofield61–79.4366th (Northern)Pirates
Michael Ryan82–58.5861st (Northern)1–2.333Lost Semifinal vs Hagerstown Suns, 1–2Pirates
Michael Ryan54–81.5866th (Northern)Pirates
Brian Esposito87–52.6261st (Northern)1–2.333Lost Semifinal vs Hickory Crawdads, 1–2Pirates
Brian Esposito71–68.5115th (Northern)Pirates
Wyatt Toregas69–67.5074th (Northern)Pirates
Wyatt Toregas71–62.5343rd (Northern)Pirates
Dave Berg69–70.4694th (Northern)Mariners

Atlantic League of Professional Baseball (2021–present)

West Virginia Power/Charleston Dirty Birds (Atlantic League)YearRegular SeasonPostseasonManagerRecordWin %FinishRecordWin %ResultMLBSub-
totals288–3404–60 ALPB
ChampionshipsNote: * On September 28, 2021, the team officially changed their name to the Charleston Dirty Birds.
*Mark Minicozzi58–623rd (South)1–2Lost Semifinal vs
Lexington Legends, 1–2Independent
Billy Horn53–795th (South)Independent
Billy Horn56–703rd (South)Independent
P. J. Phillips69–573rd (South)3–4Lost Atlantic League Championship vs
York Revolution, 0–3Independent
P. J. Phillips52–725th (South)Independent
Won League Championship

GoMart Ballpark

Watt Powell Park located in the Kanawha City neighborhood of Charleston. Originally opened on April 28, 1949, the ballpark remained in use until 2004 and seated approximately 4,500 fans.

West Virginia Power vs. Lexington Legends at GoMart Ballpark on June 12, 2010

The Dirty Birds now play their home games at GoMart Ballpark, located on the east edge of downtown Charleston. Formerly known as Appalachian Power Park, the ballpark opened on April 14, 2005, and features seating for 4,500 spectators. It has twice hosted the South Atlantic League All-Star Game—first in 2009 and again in 2019 showcasing top minor league talent from across the league.

Notable alumni

Several former Charleston players went on to achieve success at the Major League level, including All-Star selections, major awards, and Hall of Fame inductions.

[[Ryan Braun]], the 2011 National League Most Valuable Player and a six-time MLB All-Star, played for the West Virginia Power in 2005 while in the Milwaukee Brewers organization.
[[Michael Brantley]], pictured during his tenure with Cleveland, played for the West Virginia Power in 2006 and 2007.
  • Jeremy Affeldt (1999) 3× World Series champion (2010, 2012, 2014)
  • Elvis Alvarado (2019)
  • Josh Bell (2012–13) MLB All-Star (2019)
  • Michael Brantley (2006–07) 5× MLB All-Star (2014, 2017–2019, 2021); World Series champion (2022)
  • Ryan Braun (2005) 6× MLB All-Star (2008–2012, 2015); 2007 NL Rookie of the Year; 2011 NL Most Valuable Player
  • Lorenzo Cain (2006) 2× MLB All-Star; ALCS MVP (2014); World Series champion (2015); Gold Glove Award (2019)
  • Rodolfo Castro (2018)
  • Tony Cogan (2000)
  • Carlos Corporán (2005)
  • Oneil Cruz (2017–18)
  • Elías Díaz (2011–12) MLB All-Star (2023)
  • Robinzon Díaz (2004)
  • Brendan Donnelly (1995) MLB All-Star (2003)
  • Alcides Escobar (2005) MLB All-Star (2015); ALCS MVP (2015); World Series champion (2015); Gold Glove Award (2015)
  • Yovani Gallardo (2005) MLB All-Star (2010); 1× Silver Slugger (2010)
  • Mat Gamel (2005–06)
  • Logan Gilbert (2019) MLB All-star (2024)
  • Jimmy Gobble (2000)
  • Taylor Green (2007)
  • Robbie Grossman (2009)
  • Ke'Bryan Hayes (2016)
    Gold Glove Award (2023)
  • Trevor Hoffman (1990–91) 7× MLB All-Star (1998–2000, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2009); 2× NL saves leader (1998, 2006); 2nd all time in career saves (601); National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (2018)
  • Clay Holmes (2013) 2× All-Star (2022, 2024)
  • Norris Hopper (1999-00)
  • Hernán Iribarren (2005)
  • Danny Jackson (1990) 2× All-Star
  • JaCoby Jones (2014)
  • Jarred Kelenic (2019)
  • Mitch Keller (2016) MLB All-Star (2023)
  • Matt LaPorta (2007)
  • Jason LaRue (1996–97)
  • Brandon League (2003) MLB All-Star; Pitched a combined no-hitter on June 8, 2012
  • Jonathan Lucroy (2008) 2× All-Star; 1× Silver Slugger (2014)
  • Starling Marte (2009) 2× All-Star (2016, 2022); 2× Gold Glove (2015, 2016)
  • Martín Maldonado (2007) Gold Glove Award (2017); World Series champion (2022)
  • Shaun Marcum (2004)
  • Austin Meadows (2014) MLB All-Star (2019)
  • Kevin Newman (2015)
  • Gregory Polanco (2012)
  • Scott Pose (1990)
  • Cal Raleigh (2019) MLB All-star; Gold Glove (2024); Home Run Derby winner (2025)
  • Ryan Roberts (2004)
  • Pokey Reese (1992) 2× Gold Glove Award (1999, 2000); World Series Champion (2004)
  • Pablo Reyes (2015)
  • Alex Ríos (2001) 2× MLB All-Star (2006, 2007); World Series champion (2015)
  • Julio Rodríguez (2019) 3× All-Star (2022, 2023, 2025); (2022) AL Rookie of the Year; (2022) AL Most Valuable Player
  • B. J. Ryan (1998) 2× All-Star (2005, 2006)
  • Ángel Salomé (2005)
  • Austin Shenton (2019)
  • Hunter Strickland (2014) 2× World Series champion (2014, 2019)
  • Jameson Taillon (2011)
  • Joe Thatcher (2006)
  • Brett Tomko (1995)
  • Cole Tucker (2015–16)
  • Dan Wilson (1990–91) MLB All-Star (1996)
  • Yaramil Hiraldo (2023) Bold currently active in MLB

National Baseball Hall of Fame alumni

The following former Charleston players—spanning all teams past and present—were later inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame:

PlayerTeamYear(s) in CharlestonPositionAll-Star SelectionsNotable achievements
[[File:Trevor Hoffman 02.jpgthumb]]Trevor HoffmanCharleston Wheelers1990–1991RHP7× (1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2009)National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (2018)
• 2× NL saves leader (1998, 2006)
• 601 career saves (2nd all time)
• 2× NL Rolaids Relief Man Award (1998, 2006)
[[File:Dave Parker Oakland A's.jpgthumb]]Dave ParkerCharleston Charlies1973RF/DH7× (1977, 1979–1981, 1985, 1986, 1990)National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (2025)
• NL MVP (1978)
• 3× Gold Glove (1977–1979)
• 3× Silver Slugger (1985, 1986, 1990)
• 2× NL batting champion (1977, 1978)
• NL RBI leader (1985)
• 2× World Series champion (1979, 1989)
[[File:Jim Bunning - Detroit Tigers - 1959.jpgthumb]] Jim BunningCharleston Senators1956RHP9× (1957, 1959, 1961–1964, 1966)National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (1996)
• AL wins leader (1957)
• 3× Strikeout leader (1959, 1960, 1967)
• Pitched a perfect game on June 21, 1964
• Pitched a no-hitter on July 20, 1958
[[File:DSC00551 Tony La Russa.jpgthumb]]Tony La RussaCharleston Charlies1974INFNone• **National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (Manager)
(2014)**
• 3× World Series champion (1989, 2006, 2011)
• 4× Manager of the Year (1983, 1988, 1992, 2002) • Second in major league history in victories as a manager (2,884)
[[File:Jim Kaat 1965.jpgthumb]]Jim KaatCharleston Senators1960LHP3× (1962, 1966, 1975)• **National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee
(2022)**
• 16× Gold Glove Award (1962–1977)
• World Series champion (1982)
• AL wins leader (1966)

† Did not play for the current franchise but played in Charleston under a different franchise.

Charleston Baseball Hall of Fame

Class of 2007

  • Rod "The Toastman" Blackstone
  • Jim Bunning
  • Trevor Hoffman
  • Dave Parker
  • Willie Randolph
  • Wheeler Bob

Class of 2008

  • Dave Augustine
  • Don Cook
  • John Dickensheets
  • Joe Nuxhall
  • Michael Paterno

Class of 2009

  • Cal Bailey
  • Ryan Braun
  • Art Howe
  • Tommy John
  • Tony La Russa
  • Jim Lett
  • Kent Tekulve

Class of 2011

  • Bob Levine
  • Timothy Pollitt

Class of 2014

  • Omar Moreno
  • Watt Powell

Class of 2015

  • 1990 Charleston Wheelers

Class of 2017

  • Lanny Frattare
  • Bruce Kison
  • "Rowdy Alley"

Class of 2018

  • Paul Nyden

Franchise records

  • Win–loss record entering 2025: :* all-time (including Charleston Senators, Marlins, Indians, and Charlies) :* franchise total (1987–present) :* as the Charleston Dirty Birds (2021–present)
  • League titles all-time: (1914, 1932, 1963, 1977, 1990)
  • Most wins in a season: 92 (1991)
  • Most losses in a season: 96 (1998)
  • Longest winning streak: 0 games (June 5–17, 2022)
  • Longest losing streak: 0 games (August 1–10, 2023)
  • Pitcher with most wins in a season: Austin Coley (2015) and John Ray (1991) – 16 wins
  • Hitter with most home runs in a season: Keon Barnum (2024) – 41 home runs

Individual Offensive Records (1987-pres)

Career Hits

RankPlayerSeason(s)Hits
1Edwin Espinal2014, 21–22293
2Bobby Perna1991–1992264
3Rodney Medina2002–2004259
4Mike Snyder2001–2002239
T-5Raul Tablado2001–2003221
T-5Maikel Jova2001–2003221

Career Home Runs

RankPlayerSeason(s)Home Runs
1Keon Barnum202441
2Bobby Bradley202330
3Edwin Espinal2014, 21–2225
T-4Mark Snyder2001–200224
T-4Rogelio Noris2010–201124
T-4Stephen Chapman200724
7JaCoby Jones201423
T-8Jason Parsons1996–199723

South Atlantic League records

  • Six home runs in one inning by the Power vs. the Lexington Legends – South Atlantic League record
  • Ten combined home runs in one game vs. the Lexington Legends (seven by the Power) – South Atlantic League record

Baseball records

  • Hit 10 home runs in a single game on July 20, 2025, against the Long Island Ducks, tying the professional baseball record originally set by the 1987 Toronto Blue Jays.

References

References

  1. (September 12, 2023). "BEN BLUM NAMED DIRTY BIRDS' GENERAL MANAGER".
  2. (November 13, 2023). "P.J. Phillips to manage Dirty Birds in 2024".
  3. Scala, Nick. (September 28, 2021). "Charleston Baseball Team Rebranded as Dirty Birds". Charleston Gazette-Mail.
  4. "Trevor Hoffman".
  5. Verducci, Tom. (July 27, 2018). "From shortstop to shutdown closer: Trevor Hoffman's unlikely journey to Cooperstown".
  6. "Razor Shines Minor League Statistics & History".
  7. "1995 South Atlantic League (A) Standings".
  8. "Brett Tomko Minor League Statistics".
  9. "1997 South Atlantic League (A) Standings".
  10. "Buddy Carlyle Stats".
  11. "Jason LaRue Stats".
  12. "José Acevedo Stats".
  13. "Charleston, West Virginia Baseball History".
  14. "2004 Charleston Alley Cats Statistics".
  15. "South Atlantic League 2004 Season Overview".
  16. "Charleston Alley Cats Alumni".
  17. "West Virginia Power Logos History".
  18. https://www.milb.com/west-virginia-power/ballpark/ballpark-history
  19. https://www.milb.com/west-virginia-power/ballpark/ballpark-history
  20. https://www.milb.com/west-virginia-power/ballpark/ballpark-history
  21. Cooper, J.J.. (November 19, 2020). "2021 Minor League Affiliation Chart".
  22. Scala, Nick. (December 9, 2020). "West Virginia Power among 11 minor league teams not invited back for 2021 season".
  23. (February 24, 2021). "Atlantic League Welcomes West Virginia Power".
  24. (February 24, 2021). "Power announces new league, ownership for 2021".
  25. "All-Time Roster – Dirty Birds Baseball".
  26. Young, Matt. (July 23, 2025). "Dirty Birds hit 10 Home Runs to tie professional baseball record".
  27. BROWN, ZACH. (July 22, 2025). "Charleston Dirty Birds match baseball record with 10 home runs in single game".
  28. https://dirtybirdsbaseball.com/pages/2025-dirty-birds-roster
  29. Hill, Benjamin. "'Toastman' a ballpark icon in West Virginia".
  30. Lawrence, Chris. (August 3, 2017). "Celebrating 25 years of toasting in Charleston".
  31. Hill, Benjamin. "'Toastman' a ballpark icon in West Virginia".
  32. "Appalachian Power Park History".
  33. "2019 media guide – Charleston Dirty Birds".
  34. "2019 media guide (alt) – Charleston Dirty Birds".
  35. https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/leaders/t-cc10807
  36. https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/leaders/t-wp15339
  37. https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/leaders/t-wp15339
  38. https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/leaders/t-cc10807
  39. https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/leaders/t-cw10828
  40. BROWN, ZACH. (July 22, 2025). "Charleston Dirty Birds match baseball record with 10 home runs in single game".
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