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Yakima Bears
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Yakima Bears | |
| firstseason | 1990 | |
| lastseason | 2012 | |
| city | Yakima, Washington | |
| logo | YakimaBearsLogo.png | |
| uniformlogo | YakimaBearsCapLogo.png | |
| class level | Class A-Short Season | |
| division | East Division | |
| league | Northwest League | |
| majorleague | {{plainlist | |
| colors | Cardinal red, black, gray, white | |
| ballpark | {{plainlist | |
| leaguenum | 2 | |
| leaguechamps | ||
| divnum | 4 | |
| divisionchamps |
-
Arizona Diamondbacks (2001–2012)
-
Los Angeles Dodgers (1990–2000)
-
Yakima County Stadium (1993–2012)
-
Parker Field (1990–1992)
The Yakima Bears were a minor league baseball team in the northwest United States, located in Yakima, Washington. The Bears competed at the Class A Short Season level as members of the Northwest League from 1990 to 2012. Following the 2012 season, the franchise relocated to Hillsboro, Oregon, and became Hillsboro Hops.
History
After 23 summers without minor league baseball, Yakima returned to the Northwest League in 1990. The Salem Dodgers moved from Salem after the 1989 season, bringing with them their affiliation with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
In 2001, the Bears changed their affiliation to the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Relocation to Hillsboro
The Yakima Bears had been frustrated by the lack of progress on a new stadium that would meet minor league standards, even though a new stadium was built and opened in 1993 to meet similar demands, and a declining local economy. The Triple-A Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League had departed for Tucson after the 2010 season, so the Portland metropolitan area was without minor league baseball. In 2011, the city of Vancouver, Washington, presented a proposal on May 13 for a new ballpark to be built on the Clark College campus, ready to host the Yakima Bears franchise for the 2012 season.
After that deal fell through, the team received an offer sheet from Hillsboro, a suburb west of Portland, in June 2012 with plans to start play there in a new ballpark in 2013. Four months later on October 16, the team announced its upcoming move to Hillsboro and was renamed the Hillsboro Hops for the 2013 season. The Hops proceeded to win the 2014 and 2015 Northwest League championships.
The Bears were replaced one year later with the formation of the Yakima Valley Pippins of the West Coast League.
Early Yakima Baseball
The history of baseball in Yakima stretches back to 1920 with the short-lived Yakima Indians of the Class B level Pacific Coast International League. The Indians lasted only two seasons, closing in 1921 as the league became the Western International League in 1922.
Yakima entered the WIL in 1937 as the Yakima Pippins, reflecting the local area's apple-growing heritage, lasting until the 1941 season due to World War II. In 1946, as the WIL resumed play, Yakima again fielded a team, this time named the Yakima Stars, with their own team airplane. Renaming themselves the Yakima Packers for the 1948 season, the team finally settled on the Yakima Bears in 1949, lasting through the reformation of the WIL into the Northwest League, as the Bears became a charter member of the seven-team Class B NWL in the 1955 season. The team played at Parker Field, constructed in 1937 for the Pippins.
The Bears' time in the early years of the NWL were fruitful, as they won six league titles in nine years (1956, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1963, and 1964). A fire in March 1962 destroyed the wooden grandstand at Parker Field, which was quickly rebuilt. In April 1964, the team was renamed the Yakima Braves, due to an agreement with the Milwaukee Braves, their parent club since 1958. The team played as the Braves for three seasons, through 1966. The 1966 season was the first for the NWL as a short season league.
Ballparks
The Bears played at Yakima County Stadium. The park still is in use today, located at 1220 Pacific Avenue, Yakima, Washington. The stadium remains in use today and is the current home of the Yakima Pippins of the West Coast League. Prior to 1993 the Bears played at Parker Field, located at 1000 S. 12th Avenue.
Season-by-season record
| Season | PDC | Division | Finish | Wins | Losses | Win% | Postseason | Manager | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yakima Bears | |||||||||
| 1990 | LAD | North | 2nd | 36 | 40 | .474 | Jerry Royster | 71,892 | |
| 1991 | LAD | North | 1st | 44 | 32 | .579 | Lost to Boise in championship series 2-0 | Joe Vavra | 81,835 |
| 1992 | LAD | North | 2nd | 36 | 40 | .474 | Joe Vavra | 65,684 | |
| 1993 | LAD | North | 4th | 30 | 46 | .395 | John Shoemaker | 86,822 | |
| 1994 | LAD | North | 1st | 49 | 27 | .645 | Lost to Boise in championship series 2-1 | Joe Vavra | 85,483 |
| 1995 | LAD | North | 4th | 27 | 48 | .360 | Joe Vavra | 81,570 | |
| 1996 | LAD | North | 1st | 40 | 36 | .526 | Defeated Eugene in championship series 2-1 | Joe Vavra | 82,313 |
| 1997 | LAD | North | 4th | 23 | 53 | .303 | Joe Vavra | 80,003 | |
| 1998 | LAD | North | 4th | 32 | 44 | .321 | Tony Harris | 76,049 | |
| 1999 | LAD | North | 4th | 33 | 43 | .434 | Dino Ebel | 74,977 | |
| Yakima Bears | |||||||||
| 2000 | LAD | East | 1st | 41 | 35 | .539 | Defeated Eugene in championship series 3-2 | Butch Hughes | 68,905 |
| 2001 | ARI | East | 3rd | 33 | 42 | .440 | Greg Lonigro | 59,000 | |
| 2002 | ARI | East | 4th | 23 | 53 | .303 | Mike Aldrete | 56,404 | |
| 2003 | ARI | East | 2nd | 45 | 31 | .592 | Bill Plummer | 60,037 | |
| 2004 | ARI | East | 4th | 35 | 41 | .461 | Bill Plummer | 51,544 | |
| 2005 | ARI | East | 4th | 30 | 46 | .395 | Jay Gainer | 60,150 | |
| 2006 | ARI | East | 4th | 28 | 48 | .368 | Jay Gainer | 63,400 | |
| Yakima Bears | |||||||||
| 2007 | ARI | East | 4th | 33 | 43 | .434 | Mike Bell | 70,117 | |
| 2008 | ARI | East | 4th | 28 | 48 | .368 | Bob Didier | 72,207 | |
| 2009 | ARI | East | 4th | 28 | 48 | .368 | Bob Didier | 72,881 | |
| 2010 | ARI | East | 2nd | 43 | 33 | .566 | Lost to Spokane in division series 2-0 | Bob Didier | 70,695 |
| 2011 | ARI | East | 4th | 33 | 43 | .434 | Audo Vicente | 66,545 | |
| 2012 | ARI | East | 3rd | 36 | 40 | .474 | Audo Vicente | 61,895 |
| Division winner | League champions |
|---|
Notable ex-Bears
· Only people who already have a Wikipedia article may appear here. This establishes notability. · Alphabetical by last name please
- Pedro Astacio – 14-year MLB pitcher
- Dick Barrett - MLB pitcher, member of Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame
- Peter Bergeron – outfielder for Montreal Expos
- Pete Coscarart – infielder for Brooklyn Dodgers and Pittsburgh Pirates, 1941 All-Star, 1941 World Series, Brooklyn Dodgers HOF
- Matt Davidson - third baseman with Chicago White Sox
- Ryan Doherty - beach volleyball professional who played three seasons of minor league baseball in Diamondbacks system
- Wayne Franklin - MLB pitcher 2000-06
- Carlos Gonzalez – Colorado Rockies outfielder, 2010 NL batting champion, 3-time All-Star
- Matt Herges – 10-year MLB pitcher
- Koyie Hill – MLB catcher 2003-14
- Todd Hollandsworth – Rookie of the Year outfielder for Los Angeles Dodgers
- Ender Inciarte - All-Star outfielder for Atlanta Braves
- Conor Jackson – Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman
- Paul Konerko – Chicago White Sox first baseman, 6-time All-Star, 2005 World Series champion
- Ted Lilly – 14-year MLB pitcher, 2-time All-Star
- Wade Miley – Baltimore Orioles pitcher
- Scott Proctor – pitcher for three MLB teams
- Jason Repko – outfielder for three MLB teams
- Mark Reynolds – first baseman for Colorado Rockies
- Damian Rolls – MLB third baseman drafted by Los Angeles Dodgers
- David Ross - World Series Champion with Chicago Cubs and Boston Redsox
- Chad Tracy – 10-year MLB third baseman
- Dan Uggla – MLB second baseman 2006–15, three-time All-Star
- Shane Victorino – MLB outfielder 2003–15, two-time World Series champion
References
References
- "Northwest League Official Colors (1955 through present)".
- (January 16, 1990). "Sports people". Spokesman-Review.
- Rodman, Bob. (November 24, 1989). "Dodger franchise looks to Yakima". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Courtney, Ross. (May 27, 2011). "Bad news, Bears: Team takes one step closer to relocation". [[Yakima Herald-Republic]].
- Fentress, Aaron. (13 May 2011). "Single-A Yakima Bears baseball team could land in Vancouver by 2012". [[The Oregonian]].
- Theen, Andrew. (June 6, 2012). "Hillsboro sets stage for baseball's return to the Portland metro area". The Oregonian.
- (August 28, 1937). "Tacoma trims Yakima Pippins". Evening Record.
- (May 7, 1946). "Yakima Stars to move by air". Spokesman-Review.
- (October 13, 1947). "Yakima ball club becomes "Packers"". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
- May, Danny. (April 26, 1955). "Tribe, Broncs in N.W. bow tonight". Spokesman-Review.
- (September 14, 1966). "Baseball seen dead for Yakima Braves". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
- (May 25, 1960). "Deed return is asked of Yakima". Spokesman-Review.
- (September 10, 1956). "Bears divide; Chiefs take 2". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (September 7, 1958). "Yakima takes playoff". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (September 8, 1959). "Yakima winner of 2d half in photo finish style". Ellensburg Daily Record.
- (September 13, 1959). "Yakima cops NWL crown". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (September 6, 1960). "Yakima Bears win pennant, margin close". Ellensburg Daily Record.
- (September 7, 1963). "Yakima takes league honor". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
- Harvey, Paul III. (September 11, 1964). "Yakima wins NWL crown by belting Emeralds, 16-7". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (March 13, 1962). "Fire destroys ball park". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (March 14, 1962). "Yakima ballpark burns". Spokesman-Review.
- Harvey, Paul III. (August 12, 1965). "Bus, park burn but Yakima in black". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (April 5, 1964). "Yakima nine now called Braves". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (January 5, 1967). "Braves move Yakima club". Spokesman-Review.
- (November 30, 1965). "Northwest League assured for 1966". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (June 15, 1992). "Yakima approves new baseball park". Spokane Chronicle.
- Geranios, Nicholas G.. (November 23, 1991). "Minor league parks face major overhauls". Eugene Register-Guard.
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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