California League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

California League
California League logo
Sport Baseball
Founded 1941
No. of teams 10
Country(ies) Flag of the United States United States
Most recent
champion(s)
San Jose Giants
Official website Official Website

The California League is a Class A Advanced minor league baseball league which operates throughout the state of California. Before 2002, it was classified as a "High-A" league, indicating its status as a Class A league with the highest level of competition within that classification, and the fifth step between Rookie ball and the Major Leagues. Although Minor League Baseball, the umbrella organization for Minor Leagues that are affiliated with Major League Baseball, has eliminated the distinction between High-A and other full-season A leagues, most Major League teams still use such leagues as a standard promotion step. A few draftees, generally early-round draftees with college experience, will be assigned to a High-A team upon signing a professional contract, but generally players will not arrive at this level until their third or fourth year of professional play.

The league was founded in 1941, and contained teams in Anaheim, Bakersfield, Fresno, Merced, Riverside, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara and Stockton. The following year, as a result of World War II, the league dropped to four teams, then ceased operations altogether. It came back in 1946, adding teams in Visalia, San Jose and Ventura by 1947. Reno, Nevada joined the league in 1955 and continued as a member for 37 years.

All of the current teams are playing in stadiums that have been built or extensively renovated since 1990. League attendance continues to increase each season, with over one million fans attending games per year. The league is divided into a Northern Division and a Southern Division.

Contents

[edit] Current teams

Division Team MLB Affiliation City Stadium Capacity
Northern Bakersfield Blaze Texas Rangers Bakersfield, California Sam Lynn Ballpark 3,500
Modesto Nuts Colorado Rockies Modesto, California John Thurman Field 4,000
San Jose Giants San Francisco Giants San Jose, California San Jose Municipal Stadium 4,200
Stockton Ports Oakland Athletics Stockton, California Banner Island Ballpark 5,300
Visalia Oaks Arizona Diamondbacks Visalia, California Recreation Park 3,000
Southern High Desert Mavericks Seattle Mariners Adelanto, California Stater Bros. Stadium 3,808
Inland Empire 66ers of San Bernardino Los Angeles Dodgers San Bernardino, California Arrowhead Credit Union Park 5,000
Lake Elsinore Storm San Diego Padres Lake Elsinore, California Lake Elsinore Diamond 7,866
Lancaster JetHawks Boston Red Sox Lancaster, California Clear Channel Stadium 6,860
Rancho Cucamonga Quakes Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Rancho Cucamonga, California The Epicenter 6,200

[edit] Current team rosters

[edit] Champions:

[edit] Complete team list (1941-42, 1946-present)

  • Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (1966-present, as Lodi Crushers in 1966-69; as Lodi Padres in 1970-71; as Lodi Orions in 1972; as Lodi Lions in 1973; as Lodi Orioles 1974-75; as Lodi Dodgers in 1976-83; as Lodi Crushers in 1984; as Ventura County Gulls in 1986; as San Bernardino Spirit in 1987-92)
  • Reno Silver Sox (1947-64, as Ventura Yankees in 1947-49; as Ventura Braves in 1950-52; as Ventura Oilers in 1953; as Channel Cities Oilers in 1954-55; moved to Reno during 1955 season; as Reno Oilers in 1955; became Reno Silver Sox during 1955 season)
  • Riverside Reds (1941)
  • Salinas Packers (1941-42, 1946-1958, as Santa Barbara Saints in 1941-42; as Santa Barbara Dodgers in 1946-53)
  • Salinas Indians (1946-65, as Visalia Cubs in 1946-56; as Visalia Redlegs in 1957-59; as Visalia A's in 1960-61; as Visalia White Sox in 1962, as Salinas Mets in 1963-64)
  • Salinas Angels (1946-80, as Stockton Ports in 1946-72; as Salinas Packers in 1973-75), team merged with Salinas Angels 1976.
  • San Bernardino Stars (1941)
  • San Jose Giants (1988-present)
  • San Jose Bees (1983-1987)
  • San Jose Expos (1982)
  • San Jose Missions (1979-1981) (Pacific Coast League 1977-1978)
  • San Jose Bees (1962-1976)
  • San Jose Pirates (1958)
  • San Jose JoSox (1956-1957)
  • San Jose Red Sox (1947-1955)
  • San Jose Owls (1942)
  • Stockton Flyers (1941)
  • Stockton Ports (1978-present, as Stockton Mariners in 1978; as Stockton Ports in 1979-99; as Mudville Nine in 2000-01)
  • Visalia Mets (1962-75, as Santa Barbara Rancheros in 1962-63; as Santa Barbara Dodgers in 1964-67)
  • Visalia Oaks (1962-1992 & 1995-present; as Central Valley Rockies in 1993-94)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links