Thursday, July 21, 2011

Ready to rumble

Maybe it was the heat. Maybe it was the game. Whatever it was, something made tempers flare Wednesday in Avon, Ohio during a game between the Lake Erie Crushers and the Rockford RiverHawks (the Wild Things' opponent tonight).

According to the Chronicle-Telegram, a benches-clearing brawl started in the third inning after Lake Erie had already forged a big lead. Lake Erie’s Evan Sharpley (recently picked up after being released by Traverse City) was walked on four inside pitches by Rockford starter Joe Scumaci while the Crushers had already forged a big lead. Sharpley and Rockford catcher Carlos Dominguez -- they were involved in a home-plate collision an inning earlier -- then got into an argument. Sharpley tackled Dominguez and the benches cleared. Five players were ejected. You can expected some suspensions.

Here is a link to the story. Make sure you check out the photos from the brawl. They have more than 70.

Read the story here.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

You thought the Wild Things had it bad ...

Here are two stories about the Rockford RiverHawks' bus trip home from Evansville Ind., Sunday night. Players and coaches talk about getting hot around the all-star break, but this isn't what they mean.

Read the first story here.

Read the followup story here.

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Saturday, April 2, 2011

Riverhawks owner: Rockford returning to Frontier League

The Rockford Riverhawks are returning to the Frontier League.

Riverhawks owner Dave Ciarrachi told WREX-TV in Rockford that the team will leave the North American Baseball League and play in the Frontier this season. The switch comes on the heels of Chris Hanners, owner of the Chillicothe Paints during their days in the Frontier, joining the Riverhawks' ownership group. He replaces longtime Riverhawks owner Kurt Carlson.

The Riverhawks are returning to the league in which they played from 2002 through 2009.

Ciarrachi told the television station that the North American Baseball League recently had two teams pull out, and with five road trips on the schedule that require air travel, which is an added expense, the RiverHawks decided to leave the league.

"Collectively the move back to the Frontier League made a lot of good business sense," Ciarrachi told WREX. "The league provides us with good financial stability."

Hanners is expected to take over Carlson's duties on the business side. Carlson still owns Road Ranger Stadium, home of the RiverHawks.

Carlson, by the way, is the brother of Cheap Trick drummer Bun E. Carlos.

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Friday, April 1, 2011

Is Rockford the 12th team?

Let's face it, the Kalamazoo Kings have no plans to play in the Frontier League in 2011.

Never did.

That much became obvious when the Kings let their employees go last fall, closed the office, didn't sell season sponsorships for 2011 or sign coaches and players. Who knows what Kings owner Bill Wright was trying to accomplish when he told the Kalamazoo Gazette in mid-February "I’m not leaning towards playing."

Wright knows he's not going to field a team. The rest of the Frontier League knows the Kings won't be around for spring training in May. Commissioner Bill Lee knows it, too.

So why is Kalamazoo still on the schedule? How can a baseball league go ahead with an odd number of teams? Why didn't Lee give Kalamazoo a drop-dead date to announce it's intention to play or "go dark" this season? Will the Frontier League revive the Midwest Sliders and have a travel team as its 12th club?

That's a lot of questions. And because I asked 'em, I'll get the first crack at playing Answer Man. Here goes:

Kalamazoo is still on the schedule because, well, you need a 12th team. Some team is going to play Kalamazoo's schedule. It just won't be the Kings. That Kalamazoo was even on the schedule in the first place, without a commitment from its owner to field a team, makes no sense. Those at the league office must have felt having a schedule with a bogus team at least helped the other 11 clubs in their efforts to start selling tickets and securing ballpark dates.

Obviously, the Frontier League can't have a season with 11 teams. There are two alternatives: the traveling Midwest Sliders or bring in a team from another league.

That leads us to a story by ballparkdigest.com. The website reported Thursday that a group with ties to the Prospect League's Chillicothe Paints (formerly of the Frontier League) is negotiating to purchase the Rockford RiverHawks (formerly of the Frontier League) and move them from the North American Baseball League back to the Frontier.

A quick background: Rockford joined the Frontier League in 2002 and played through 2009. Last year, the RiverHawks defected and joined the Northern League, with its no-age-limit rule and higher salary cap. Though the switch helped both leagues -- each had an odd number of teams before the move -- there were some hard feelings among Frontier League owners toward Rockford's ownership.

To make a long story short, Rockford was one of the three remaining Northern League teams that joined forces several months ago with the struggling Golden League and struggling United League to form the NABL. One of those former NL teams (the cash-strapped Schaumburg Flyers) are no more. The other, the Lake County Fielders, don't have a completed stadium.

The NABL has problems and they are great. It has teams ranging from Calgary to Maui to San Angelo, Texas. Only Rockford and Lake County (Ill.) are in the midwest. Travel is going to be wildly costly for Rockford, if the league even makes it to opening day. Selling the club solves many potential problems for Rockford's owners.

According to ballparkdigest.com, the NAL recently circulated a new 10-team schedule that does not include Rockford. The RiverHawks were supposed to have a news conference last Thursday to discuss their schedule in the NABL. I was told that event was postponed until Monday.

Expect that news conference to either be scrapped again or held to announce the RiverHawks are being sold and moving back to the Frontier League. Let's assume the latter happens. It would create some minor problems and solve many big ones.

Rockford, of course, would inherit Kalamazoo's schedule and play in the East Division. The RiverHawks also would have to trade or release many of its players because they're over the FL's age limit. According to the RiverHawks' website, Rockford has 23 players signed. They would have to get rid of 11 because of the Frontier League's age rules.

That leaves the problem of what to do with the 20 players whose options were exercised during the winter by Kalamazoo. The scenarios that make the most sense would be to declare those players free agents or hold a dispersal draft. Transferring them to Rockford makes no sense.

Then again, what has made sense this offseason in the Frontier League?

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Friday, October 22, 2010

Report: Rockford, Joliet to Frontier League

According to the website ballparkdigest.com, the Rockford RiverHawks will be returning to the Frontier League in 2011 and will be bringing the up-for-sale Joliet JackHammers with them.

Rockford and Joliet were two of the four teams remaining in the Northern League earlier this month after half of that league switched to the American Association. The idea of the Northern League continuing as a four-team circuit appears to be dead.

These moves would leave two former Northern teams, the Schaumburg Flyers and Lake County Fielders, without a home.

Rockford's return to the Frontier League would seem easy, considering the RiverHawks spent eight years in the FL before switching to the Northern League for the 2010 season. Joliet's move is more complicated. The JackHammers are up for sale. Joliet City Manager Tom Thanas, who is working on the sale as the lease holder of the ballpark, has been in contact with two potential buyers. Thanas told WJOL Radio there will be a Frontier League team in Joliet next year.

One group that is reportedly interested in buying the Joliet franchise is headed by former Chicago Cubs pitcher Milt Pappas. My guess is whoever buys the team won't pay the JackHammers' debt to the city but will pay off vendors who are owed money. Thus, the Frontier League team in Joliet won't be named the JackHammers.

The chances of Schaumburg and Lake County joining the Frontier League appear to be slim. According to the Chicago Tribune, the Flyers owe the city of Schaumburg more than $903,000 for use of its stadium and tens of thousands more to vendors.

The fate of Lake County remains a mystery. The Fielders, who were a Northern League expansion team last season and are partly owned by actor Kevin Costner, had problems with the construction of their ballpark and began the year as a traveling team. The Fielders are managed by former Frontier League player and manager Fran Riordan.

The report by ballparkdigest.com conflicts a report by Schaumburg TribLocal that quoted Northern League commissioner Clark Griffith as saying "We're not going to be four teams. We’re going to be six or eight."

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Monday, October 11, 2010

Four turn down Frontier League

According to ballparkdigest.com, the eight-team Northern League split today with four teams joining the American Association and four others (Joliet, Lake County, Rockford and Schaumburg) turning down an offer to join the Frontier League. The remaining four teams also spurned an offer to join their former rivals in the American Association.

The four remaining teams -- each located in Illinois -- will comprise the new Northern League and the its commissioner will seek expansion opportunities. According to the website, there are financial reasons for the two teams to remain in the Northern League -- it's seen by some owners as the best way to preserve franchise values at a time when Joliet and Schaumburg are up for sale -- and some logistical arguments to running a league in which all four teams are in close proximity, which cuts travel costs. As mentioned in an earlier post, Joliet and Schaumburg are deep in debt.

I'm not sure how you can run a league with only four teams. Four teams is not a league. Heck, it's not even a division.

So, for now, a 16-team Frontier League in 2011 is not a possibility. It will be interesting to see if the four-team Northern League even makes it to opening day, and you can be sure the Frontier League will be watching.

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Friday, October 9, 2009

Cleaning out the notebook


A few random notes and thoughts about the Wild Things and Frontier League teams, both current and past:

The synthetic turf issue for Consol Energy Park should be settled as early as this week, and that has nothing to do with Pennsylvania finally having a budget. Though nothing has been decided, the Wild Things are considering several options, one of which is starting the turf project before the end of October and finishing it early in the spring when the weather breaks. In this scenario, all the work under the rubber chips can be done in the fall, with the playing surface installed in the spring. The only problem would be it jeopardizes the early part of California University's schedule.

* The expansion Normal CornBelters have hired former major league infielder Hal Lanier as their first manager. Lanier played 10 seasons (1964-73) with the San Francisco Giants and New York Yankees and played against the Pirates in the 1971 NLCS.

The hiring of Lanier, 67, can be considered a coup for the CornBelters. Lanier manged the Houston Astros (186-88) and was the National League Manager of the Year in 1986.

In recent years, Lanier has managed in the independent leagues, first with Winnipeg and Joliet in the Northern League and Sussex in the Can-Am League. He put together highly competitive teams in Winnipeg and guided Sussex to the league championship in 2008.

When Lanier took over at Joliet in 2005, he replaced former Wild Things manager Jeff Isom.

* You have to wonder about the state of the Kalamazoo Kings. Kalamazoo has been at the bottom of the Frontier League's attendance chart for several years. If you throw out Midwest because it was playing in a temporary home, Kalamazoo was last in attendance this year, averaging 1,469 fans per game. This despite the Kings winning the East Division title.

The Kings reportedly lost more than $100,000 in 2006 and were on pace to match that total in 2007. That's when owner Bill Wright said he was committed to keeping the Kings in Kalamazoo through the 2008 season.

It's 2009 and things haven't gotten any better in Kalamazoo. Earlier this year, Wright told the Kalamazoo Gazette that it takes $500,000 a year to run the team and break even, something that hasn't happened since 2001.

You wonder how long Wright, an owner of several car dealerships, will keep the Kings in Kalamazoo.

"I can make it work forever, but I'm not going to forever with that attendance," he said. "You can only pour so much heart into something, and when you only have two-or three-hundred fans in the seats on a Monday and 1,000 on a Friday, it's very disheartening."

* The Rockford RiverHawks left the Frontier League after the 2009 season and joined the Northern League, which has no age restrictions and a significantly larger salary cap. You have to wonder if that was such a smart idea after the RiverHawks recently made a pitch for relief on their taxes.

Lawyers for the team wrote letters to the Rockford School District, Winnebago County and the Rockford Park District, among others, seeking tax breaks.

"Without the abatement, Park Stadium LLC stands to potentially lose (Road Ranger Stadium) to foreclosure and the community stands to lose a resource,” attorney Aaron Szeto wrote in a letter to School District officials seeking an abatement of the more than $25,000 the stadium pays to the district in property taxes.

According to Rockford Register-Star and Winnebago County records, the stadium has a fair market value of $1.4 million and in 2008 owed $38,245.32 in property taxes. The School District’s $25,622 was by far the highest share of that bill.

Kurt Carlson, majority owner of the RiverHawks and Road Rangers Stadium, said a Chicago bank that gave him and his partners money to build and operate the ballpark most likely won’t renew their loan.

“We were told it’s not likely, so we’re looking at all funding options,” he said. Carlson stated he and his partners will subsidize the team and the stadium for about $250,000 this year.

“On average it’s about $500,000 a year, and it was as high as $800,000 when we first started out because we did a lot of advertising and promotions,” he said.

Road Ranger Stadium is the only minor-league stadium among seven in Illinois that is privately owned and was built without public dollars. Rent One Park in Marion, which opened in 2007, received $3 million in state tax dollars.

* Former Wild Things first baseman Ernie Banks was named a second team all-star on Baseball America's all-independent team. Banks was one of four Frontier Leaguers to make the two-team squad. Rockford outfielder Jason James and Southern Illinois designated hitter/outfielder Joey Metropoulos were named to the first team. Banks and Lake Erie pitcher Paul Fagan were on the second team.

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

Northern League raiding Frontier League?


It seems the Northern League has declared war on the Frontier League.

Earlier this month, the Northern League enticed the Rockford RiverHawks to switch leagues beginning in 2010. At the time, it appeared it was a move that would help both leagues. The Northern League, which is adding an expansion franchise next year, was stuck at seven teams. The Frontier League, which is adding the Normal (Ill.) CornBelters next season, was going to have an unworkable 13 teams. Rockford switching leagues was seen as a way to give both leagues even-numbered teams.

But according to ballparkdigest.com, the Northern League is not content with one former Frontier League franchise. Representatives of the Northern League have contacted owners of the Windy City ThunderBolts about changing leagues and have offered the same deal given to Rockford: $250,000 up front, a waiver on travel-team fees and a limit on long Western road trips.

There is no word yet if the ThunderBolts are considering the move, but the website reports that the Northern League is worried that Winnipeg, Fargo-Moorhead and Kansas City will leave for the American Association. If that happens, the expansion franchise, Rockford and Windy City would give the Northern six teams, each located in the Chicago area.

Read the story here.

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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Rockford leaving Frontier League

This is a couple of day old, but I haven't seen the stories linked anywhere on the FL site. The Rockford RiverHawks, who joined the Frontier League in 2002 (the same year as the Wild Things) have announced they will move to the independent Northern League next year. The announcement came less than two weeks after the RiverHawks hosted the Frontier League's All-Star game.

The Northern League has a larger salary cap ($105,000) than the Frontier League ($72,000).

"The Frontier League understands economically where we are coming from and where we want to go,” said Rockford general manager and vice president Josh Olerud. “Obviously, with how we’ve been growing, it’s a step back for them. But it sounds like there are new teams interested in that league as well, so it won’t hurt them too much.”

Losing Rockford solves the odd-numbered team problem for the FL. With Normal, Ill., coming into the league, it will be back at 12 teams for 2010.

Read the story here.

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