Altoona Curve

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For current information on this topic, see
2008 Altoona Curve season
Altonna Curve
Founded in 1998
Altoona, Pennsylvania

Team Logo

Cap Insignia
Class-Level
  • Double-A (1998-Present)
Minor League affiliations
Major League affiliations
Name
  • Altoona Curve (1998-Present)
Ballpark
Minor League titles
League titles
Division titles 2004
Owner(s)/Operated by: Curve Baseball LP
Manager: Tim Leiper
General Manager:

The Altoona Curve are a minor league baseball team based in Altoona, Pennsylvania, named after nearby Horseshoe Curve (but also alluding to the curveball, a kind of pitch). The team, which plays in the Eastern League, is the Double-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates major-league club. The Curve play in Blair County Ballpark, located in Altoona; it was opened in 1999 and seats 7,210 fans.

The Curve is currently managed by Tim Leiper.

The Altoona Curve hosted the Eastern League All-Star Game at Blair County Ballpark on July 12, 2006, before a standing-room-only crowd of 9,308.

Contents

[edit] History

The Altoona Curve franchise began when Arizona and Tampa Bay were both awarded major-league franchises in 1998. The addition of these two teams had a domino effect through baseball with the expansion of not only the major leagues, but throughout minor-league baseball as well. With this expansion, AA baseball received two new teams to begin play in the 1999 season. The Erie SeaWolves were already an established minor-league team with outstanding short-season attendance, and were quickly awarded one of the new franchises. The second spot in the new, larger Eastern League looked to be headed to Springfield, Massachusetts, but city native Bob Lozinak, developer Tate DeWeese, and a group of Pennsylvania lawmakers rallied to get the final spot, making a formal presentation to league officials on October 5, 1997. The proposal received unanimous support and Altoona won the other franchise.

Groundbreaking on Blair County Ballpark took place on March 7, 1998, and the franchise was formally awarded in April. In June of that year, the "Curve" nickname was selected over several other proposals, including Lake Monsters, Ridge Runners, and the Altoona Fish.

The next step for the start of the Altoona Curve was to find a major league affiliate. The Erie SeaWolves had already had several successful seasons in the Pirates' organization, as a short-season single-A affiliate. In the end, however, the Pirates chose Altoona for their AA affiliate.

The Altoona Curve began their first season on the road at the Reading Phillies on April 9, 1999. Their first game was suspended by rain and completed the next day as part of a doubleheader. That first game was a 6-2 loss, but the Curve scored their first-ever victory in the second game, beating Reading 6-4. A few days later, on April 15, the Curve christened Blair County Ballpark by defeating the Bowie Baysox 6-1 in front of a crowd of 6,171.

On April 2, 2002, Lozinak and DeWeese sold the franchise to a collective headed by Pittsburgh attorney Chuck Greenberg. Among the partners in the collective are Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis and NHL star Mario Lemieux. The first season under new ownership was the most successful to date, performance-wise as well as economically. During August of that year, the Pirates signed on for another four-year development agreement through the 2006 season.

During the 2003 season, the Curve made the Eastern League playoffs for the first time, and followed that up with two more appearances in 2004 and 2005. Their performance on the field has led to increased numbers in the stands, and the Curve increased attendance for five consecutive years before dipping by just a few thousand in 2005.

Following the 2004 season, General Manager Todd Parnell was honored as the Eastern League Executive of the Year, and the franchise won the Larry MacPhail Trophy for the best promotional effort (on and off the field) in all of Minor League Baseball.

On April 2, 2006—their fourth anniversary as owners—Greenberg and his group announced an additional four-year extension on the development agreement with the Pirates, keeping the Curve's affiliation intact through at least the 2010 season.

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] Season records

(Place listed is finish in Southern Division)

[edit] Playoff appearances

[edit] Current roster

Altoona Curve roster
view  talk  edit
Players Coaches/Other
Pitchers
Catchers

Infielders

  • 19 Victor Alvarez
  • 13 Luis Cruz
  • 26 Jason Delaney
  •  3 Melvin Dorta
  • 41 Brian Finegan
  •  5 Shelby Ford †
  •  6 Jack Wilson *

Outfielders

  • 10 James Boone †
  • 23 Brad Corley
  • 55 Jonel Pacheco
  •  2 Pedro Powell
  • 14 Anthony Webster
Manager
  • 29 Tim Leiper

Coaches

  •  7 Brandon Moore (hitting)
  • 38 Brad Holman (pitching)


† Disabled list
* On Pittsburgh Pirates 40-man roster
‡ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
Roster updated 2008-05-23
Transactions

[edit] External links

Languages