Salem-Keizer Volcanoes

Last updated
Salem-Keizer Volcanoes
SalemKeizerVolcanoesLogo.PNG SalemKeizerVolcanoesCapLogo.PNG
Team logoCap insignia
Minor league affiliations
ClassIndependent (from 2021)
Previous classes Class A Short Season (1997–2020)
League Mavericks Independent Baseball League (from 2021)
Previous leagues
Northwest League (1997–2020)
Major league affiliations
Previous teams San Francisco Giants (1997–2020)
Minor league titles
League titles (5)
  • 1998
  • 2001
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2009
Division titles (7)
  • 1998
  • 2001
  • 2003
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2008
  • 2009
Team data
NameSalem-Keizer Volcanoes (1997–present)
ColorsGray, lava red, obsidian, burnt gold, white
     
MascotCrater
Ballpark Volcanoes Stadium (1997–present)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Jerry Walker [1]
Manager Tony Torcato

The Salem-Keizer Volcanoes are a baseball team located in Keizer, Oregon, who are charter members of the Mavericks Independent Baseball League, a four-team league entirely based in the Salem Metropolitan Statistical Area and playing all their home games at Volcanoes Stadium. [2] From 1997 to 2020, they were members of Minor League Baseball's Northwest League as the Class A Short Season affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. With the reorganization of baseball after the 2020 season, the Volcanoes were not offered a player development license with any Major League Baseball club, though the Volcanoes promised to continue play in 2021, a promise they kept in forming the Mavericks League.

Contents

History

The Volcanoes history begins in Bellingham, Washington where the franchise played for eighteen season as an affiliate of the Seattle Mariners. In 1994, Seattle shifted their affiliation to Everett, who had been a long time San Francisco Giants farm club. Bellingham swapped parents with Everett and adopted their parent club's name to become the Bellingham Giants. Bellingham had long struggled with attendance and its facility failed to meet league standards. Efforts to secure funding for facility improvements in Bellingham were unsuccessful. [3] In 1996, Bellingham Giants co-owners Jerry Walker and William Tucker announced that they were moving the franchise to Keizer, Oregon, a city of 22,000 people located immediately north of Salem.

Keizer had striven to assert itself as an independent, thriving city for 12 years since the former Salem suburb had become an incorporated municipality. City officials, led by Mayor Dennis Koho, and civic leaders worked toward getting a new baseball stadium located and built in Keizer. The area had lacked a suitable facility for pro baseball since the early 1960s, when the Salem Dodgers vacated historic Waters Field (which burned down in 1966).

Area fans chose the nickname "Volcanoes" in a contest. The new franchise was designated as a "Salem-Keizer" team, despite its location, in order to incorporate both the history and the prestige of the larger city and state capital. The Volcanoes continued their player development contract with the San Francisco Giants, a relationship that continued through 2020.

In their inaugural season of 1997, the Volcanoes posted a record of 40–36 and finished third in the south division standings. The 1998 season was a banner year for Salem-Keizer. The Volcanoes finished the year at 43–33, tied with the Southern Oregon Timberjacks. In a one-game play-off the Volcanoes bested the Timberjacks to earn the south division title. Salem-Keizer defeated the Boise Hawks in the best-of-three series en route to a Northwest League championship.

In 2001, the Volcanoes won the south division title. The team went on to sweep the Boise Hawks in the championship series to claim their second Northwest League crown. The Volcanoes won the Freitas Award as the best short-season Class A baseball franchise. The Volcanoes celebrated their 10th season in Salem-Keizer by ending the regular season with a league record 55 victories, a league record. The team set franchise records of most consecutive games won with 12 and most runs in an inning (10), in the seventh inning of a 19–3 rout of the Canadians on August 30. In that game, catcher Adam Witter hitting the team's first ever cycle. The Volcanoes capped the 2006 season by defeating the Boise Hawks, three games to one, winning the league championship. Salem-Keizer broke their own record for wins in a season, finishing the season with a 57–19 mark, a .750 overall record; the best in baseball that year. They won their second consecutive championship in a row by defeating the Tri-City Dust Devils, three games to one. The team was honored with the Best Short-Season and Best Overall Team in the 2007 Minor League Baseball Awards.

The Volcanoes finished 2008 with third consecutive west division title. In an effort to three-peat as Northwest League champions, the team came up short a dropped the championship series to the Spokane Indians. Salem-Keizer posted a 49–27 record to win its fifth straight division title. Led by a pitching staff that recorded a 0.69 ERA over the four-game set, the Volcanoes defeated the Tri-City Dust Devils to with the league championship. In the first decade of the new millennium the Volcanoes made an unprecedented six postseason appearances, winning four Northwest League championships.

In 2013, the Volcanoes won the south division title, but lost to Boise in the division series. After a five-year drought, Salem-Keizer returned to the postseason in 2019 by winning the first half south division. The Volcanoes were defeated in the division series by the eventual league champion Hillsboro Hops.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 Minor League Baseball season was cancelled. Following the cancelled season, Major League Baseball took direct control of Minor League Baseball. The Northwest League was elevated to the High-A classification and contracted to six teams. The Volcanoes were not extended an invitation to continue as a franchise affiliated with a major league organization. The team, however, has plans to continue in some other form, such as collegiate summer baseball or independent baseball, in 2021. [4] The team was one of 22 teams slated to join the MILB "Copa de Diversion" in 2020, playing under the identity "Campesinos de Salem-Keizer." [5]

On January 26, 2021, the team announced the formation of a new professional independent league called the Mavericks League. It is a four-team league consisting of the Volcanoes and Campesinos de Salem-Keiser (founding members), as well as two returning teams from the past, the Salem Senators (founded in the 1940s) and the Portland Mavericks (founded in the 1970s). [6]

Ballpark

The Volcanoes play at Volcanoes Stadium located in Keizer, Oregon. The facility was built in less than a year, in time for the debut of the Volcanoes, on a tract of land adjacent to Interstate 5 just northwest of the Keizer interchange. The stadium seats 4,252. In 1999, the American Institute of Architects honored the Volcanoes with a design award for the stadium.

Volcanoes Stadium also hosts all five of Oregon's state high school baseball championship games. In 1998, the University of Oregon football team played its spring Green-White game in the stadium in early May. [7]

Baseball in the Salem Area

The Salem-Keizer area has been home to professional baseball since 1940, when the Salem Senators (an homage to Salem's role as Oregon's capital) were formed as a member of the Western International League (WIL). When the WIL reformed into the current Northwest League (NWL) in 1955, the Senators were a charter member of the new circuit. The Salem franchise played as the Senators until 1960, when it became a Class A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers and adopted the parent club's nickname. The Salem Dodgers continued to play until the 1965 season, after which the franchise was dormant for 17 years.

In 1977, former Stockton Ports owner/manager Carl Thompson purchased the Salem franchise and put it back on the field as an NWL member and Dodgers farm club. The revived Senators played until after the 1981 season, when the California Angels became the team's parent club.

The 1982 Angels captured the first NWL championship by a Salem-area franchise, and became the first NWL champion with a losing regular-season record, a distinction which lasted until 2005.

The Salem Angels shifted their major-league affiliation and nickname back to the Dodgers after the 1987 season. The Dodgers played in Salem for two seasons, with future major-league star Mike Piazza on the team's 1989 roster.

In 1990, owners moved the Salem Dodgers to Yakima, Washington, mainly due to lack of adequate facilities. The Salem club had played its home games at the Chemeketa Community College field, which lacked a grandstand, permanent concession stands and other amenities. It would be seven years before pro baseball returned to the Salem-Keizer metropolitan area.

Season-by-season record

SeasonPDC Division Finish Wins Losses Win% Post-seasonManagerAttendance
Salem-Keizer Volcanoes
1997 SFG South3rd4036.526 Shane Turner 136,836
1998 SFG South1st4333.566Defeated Southern Oregon in division play-off 1-0
Defeated Boise in championship series 2-0
Keith Comstock 133,980
1999 SFG South3rd3739.487 Frank Reberger 124,627
2000 SFG West3rd3640.474 Fred Stanley 125,409
2001 SFG West1st5125.671Defeated Boise in championship series 3-0Fred Stanley115,340
2002 SFG West3rd4135.539Fred Stanley122,334
2003 SFG West1st4333.566Lost to Spokane in championship series 3-0 Joe Strain 119,556
2004 SFG West3rd3739.487Joe Strain118,929
2005 SFG West2nd4531.592 Steve Decker 108,418
2006 SFG West1st5521.724Defeated Boise in championship series 3-1Steve Deceker118,622
2007 SFG West1st5719.750Defeated Tri-City in championship series 3-1Steve Decker118,722
2008 SFG West1st4036.526Lost to Spokane in championship series 3-1 Tom Trebelhorn 112,425
2009 SFG West1st4927.645Defeated Tri-City in championship series 3-1Tom Trebelhorn106,590
2010 SFG West4th3145.408Tom Trebelhorn96,219
2011 SFG West4th3442.474Tom Trebelhorn105,973
2012 SFG West4th3244.421Tom Trebelhorn101,785
2013 SFG South1st4729.618Lost to Boise in division series 2-0Tom Trebelhorn98,024
2014 SFG South3rd3838.500Gary Davenport95,083
2015 SFG South4th3937.513Kyle Haines85,851
2016 SFG South4th3242.432Kyle Haines80,469
2017 SFG South4th2947.382Jolbert Cabrera81,011
2018 SFG South2nd3640.474Hector Borg72,094
2019 SFG South2nd4630.605Lost to Hillsboro in division series 0-2Mark Hallberg80,833
Division winnerLeague champions

Notable alumni

Since 1997, 84 former Volcanoes have played in the major leagues. Two former Volcanoes also played in the inaugural 2006 World Baseball Classic: Joe Nathan (U.S.) and Jonathan Sánchez (Puerto Rico).

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References

  1. "Salem-Keizer Volcanoes Staff Directory". MiLB.com. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  2. "Volcanoes announce creation of new independent baseball league". Salem-Keizer Volcanoes. Minor League Baseball. January 26, 2021. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  3. "Minor League contraction: Inside Salem-Keizer's fight vs. MLB for survival".
  4. "MLB realignment eliminates short-season baseball, but Volcanoes will play in 2021". Salem-Keizer Volcanoes. Minor League Baseball. December 9, 2020. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  5. "Volcanoes Make Major Announcement".
  6. "Volcanoes announce creation of new independent baseball league". Salem-Keizer Volcanoes. Minor League Baseball. January 26, 2021. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  7. Clark, Bob (May 3, 1998). "UO starters shine against the reserves". Eugene Register-Guard. p. 1G.
Preceded by Northwest League franchise
1997–2020
Succeeded by
Contracted