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==History==
==History==
The Lakewood BlueClaws were founded in 2001, but the franchise itself was founded in 1987 as the [[Fayetteville Generals]]. The team played as the Generals from 1987-1996. The team was later renamed the [[Cape Fear Crocs]] for the 1997 season. The team played as the Crocs from 1997 to 2000. While known as both the Fayetteville Generals and Cape Fear Crocs, the team played their home games at [[J. P. Riddle Stadium]] in [[Fayetteville, North Carolina]] from 1987-2000. The Cape Fear Crocs were then relocated to [[Lakewood Township, New Jersey]] to become the Lakewood Blue Claws. The Phillies' previous [[South Atlantic League]] affiliate was based in [[Kannapolis, North Carolina]], and known as the '''Piedmont Boll Weevils''' from [[1995]] to [[2000]]. The Piedmont Boll Weevils are now known as the [[Kannapolis Intimidators]]. Prior to that, the Phillies affiliate was based in [[Spartanburg, South Carolina]].
The Lakewood BlueClaws were founded in 2001, but the franchise itself was founded in 1987 as the [[Fayetteville Generals]]. The team played as the Generals from 1987-1996 and were affiliated with the [[Detroit Tigers]] for those ten seasons as the Generals. The team was later renamed the [[Cape Fear Crocs]] for the 1997 season and switched affiliations with the [[Montreal Expos]]. The team played as the Crocs from 1997 to 2000 and were with the Expos for those three seasons as the Crocs. While known as both the Fayetteville Generals and the Cape Fear Crocs, the team played their home games at [[J. P. Riddle Stadium]] located in [[Fayetteville, North Carolina]] from 1987-2000. The Cape Fear Crocs were then relocated to [[Lakewood Township, New Jersey]] to become the Lakewood Blue Claws. The Phillies' previous [[South Atlantic League]] affiliate was based in [[Kannapolis, North Carolina]], and known as the '''Piedmont Boll Weevils''' from [[1995]] to [[2000]]. The Piedmont Boll Weevils are now known as the [[Kannapolis Intimidators]] and are currently affiliated with the [[Chicago White Sox]]. Prior to that, the Phillies affiliate was based in [[Spartanburg, South Carolina]].
==Fan support==
==Fan support==
Since their arrival in [[New Jersey]], the BlueClaws have been a success at the gate. In each of their first five seasons, they have averaged over 6,500 fans per game. On August 26, 2002, in a game against the [[Hickory Crawdads]] which the BlueClaws won 3-0, attendance was a South Atlantic League record 13,003. The BlueClaws have led the South Atlantic League in either average or total attendance every year, and became the fastest team in South Atlantic League history to reach the 2 and 3 million fan attendance mark. On August 24, 2009, Phillies pitcher Brett Myers threw a scoreless inning in a rehab assignment on the same day a seven year old from [[Toms River, New Jersey]] became the 4 millionth fan in team history. This box office success comes in the absence of great success on the field. In their first five seasons, the BlueClaws failed to qualify for the playoffs. Their overall record topped the .500 mark for the first time in [[2004]].
Since their arrival in [[New Jersey]], the BlueClaws have been a success at the gate. In each of their first five seasons, they have averaged over 6,500 fans per game. On August 26, 2002, in a game against the [[Hickory Crawdads]] which the BlueClaws won 3-0, attendance was a South Atlantic League record 13,003. The BlueClaws have led the South Atlantic League in either average or total attendance every year, and became the fastest team in South Atlantic League history to reach the 2 and 3 million fan attendance mark. On August 24, 2009, Phillies pitcher Brett Myers threw a scoreless inning in a rehab assignment on the same day a seven year old from [[Toms River, New Jersey]] became the 4 millionth fan in team history. This box office success comes in the absence of great success on the field. In their first five seasons, the BlueClaws failed to qualify for the playoffs. Their overall record topped the .500 mark for the first time in [[2004]].

Revision as of 03:34, 24 August 2011

Lakewood BlueClaws
File:LakewoodBlueClaws.PNG File:BlueClaws.PNG
Team logo Cap insignia
Minor league affiliations
ClassSingle-A
LeagueSouth Atlantic League
DivisionNorthern Division
Major league affiliations
TeamPhiladelphia Phillies (2001-Present)
Previous teamsMontreal Expos (1997-2000)
Minor league titles
League titles 2 (2006, 2009, 2010)
Division titles 3 (2006, 2009, 2010)
Team data
NameLakewood BlueClaws (2001-Present)
BallparkFirstEnergy Park (2001-Present)
Previous parks
J. P. Riddle Stadium (1987-2000)
General managerGeoff Brown
ManagerChris Truby

The Lakewood BlueClaws are a minor league baseball team affiliated with the Philadelphia Phillies. They are based in Lakewood Township, New Jersey. They play in the Class A South Atlantic League. Their home field is FirstEnergy Park.

History

The Lakewood BlueClaws were founded in 2001, but the franchise itself was founded in 1987 as the Fayetteville Generals. The team played as the Generals from 1987-1996 and were affiliated with the Detroit Tigers for those ten seasons as the Generals. The team was later renamed the Cape Fear Crocs for the 1997 season and switched affiliations with the Montreal Expos. The team played as the Crocs from 1997 to 2000 and were with the Expos for those three seasons as the Crocs. While known as both the Fayetteville Generals and the Cape Fear Crocs, the team played their home games at J. P. Riddle Stadium located in Fayetteville, North Carolina from 1987-2000. The Cape Fear Crocs were then relocated to Lakewood Township, New Jersey to become the Lakewood Blue Claws. The Phillies' previous South Atlantic League affiliate was based in Kannapolis, North Carolina, and known as the Piedmont Boll Weevils from 1995 to 2000. The Piedmont Boll Weevils are now known as the Kannapolis Intimidators and are currently affiliated with the Chicago White Sox. Prior to that, the Phillies affiliate was based in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

Fan support

Since their arrival in New Jersey, the BlueClaws have been a success at the gate. In each of their first five seasons, they have averaged over 6,500 fans per game. On August 26, 2002, in a game against the Hickory Crawdads which the BlueClaws won 3-0, attendance was a South Atlantic League record 13,003. The BlueClaws have led the South Atlantic League in either average or total attendance every year, and became the fastest team in South Atlantic League history to reach the 2 and 3 million fan attendance mark. On August 24, 2009, Phillies pitcher Brett Myers threw a scoreless inning in a rehab assignment on the same day a seven year old from Toms River, New Jersey became the 4 millionth fan in team history. This box office success comes in the absence of great success on the field. In their first five seasons, the BlueClaws failed to qualify for the playoffs. Their overall record topped the .500 mark for the first time in 2004.

All told, in their first eight seasons, the BlueClaws have topped 10,000 fans at a game twice, including 10,027 on August 29, 2008. They have gone over 9,000 fans 13 different times, and have exceeded the 8,000 mark 81 times.

Each season a group of fans choose one person on the BlueClaws to cheer for, and in 2008, these fans chose third baseman Travis "Moose" Mattair. These fans, who called themselves "Mooseketeers" in reference to Mattair's childhood nickname, cheered loudly for both Mattair and the team in general. They are known for displaying homemade signs and jerseys, and their novelty moose hats were a regular fixture at FirstEnergy Park throughout the 2008 season.

Other developments

On September 1, 2004, Ryan Howard became the first former BlueClaw to play in the major leagues, playing first base for the Phillies in a 7-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves at Citizens Bank Park.

He played for the BlueClaws in the 2002 season. In 2005, he was named the National League Rookie of the Year, and in 2006 he was named the National League Most Valuable Player. In May 2007, while on the 15-day disabled list, Ryan Howard played two rehab games with the BlueClaws after suffering a hamstring injury. Each game drew over 8,000 fans and helped push the BlueClaws to a new team attendance record for the month of May.

The 2008 World Champion Philadelphia Phillies featured several former BlueClaws on their roster. Former NL MVP Ryan Howard was with the BlueClaws in 2002. World Series MVP Cole Hamels was with Lakewood in 2003, and starting catcher Carlos Ruiz was a member of the original Lakewood BlueClaws roster, in 2001.

One key member of the 2008 Phillies was Joe Blanton, acquired through a trade with the Oakland Athletics. In exchange the Phillies sent over three minor leaguers, including two former BlueClaws in Adrian Cardenas (2007) and Josh Outman (2006).

Recently, the BlueClaws announced via their blog (blog.blueclaws.com) that Darryl Strawberry would be appearing at FirstEnergy Park to sign autographs on August 1.

On February 17, 2009, the Lakewood BlueClaws announced that instead of doing just Monday Kids Eat Free presented by ShopRite, they will be doing Kids Eat Free every game of the 2009 season. All children under the age of 12 will be presented with a voucher for a free hot dog, bag of chips, and fountain drink as they enter the gates.

The team offers a post-game fireworks show after every Friday home game, and at the ballpark, and seniors eat free every Tuesday night. Thursday nights are "Thirsty Thursdays," with discounted beverages and live music all night.

During the 2009 season, the Blueclaws announced that the team would adopt a new logo, color scheme, and uniforms. These changes are expected to be made for the 2010 season

Records

Season Records

Season Affiliation Manager First Half Record Second Half Record
2001 Phillies Greg Legg 28-42, 7th place North 32-37, 5th place North
2002 Phillies Jeff Manto 33-36, 6th place North 36-34, 5th place North
2003 Phillies Buddy Biancalana 22-47, 8th place North 35-34, 3rd place North
2004 Phillies P.J. Forbes 31-36, 7th place North 39-30, 3rd place North
2005 Phillies P.J. Forbes 25-45, 6th place North 31-38, 7th place North
2006 Phillies Dave Huppert 37-32, 4th place North 47-23, 1st place North
2007 Phillies Steve Roadcap 33-32, 3rd place North 36-33, 2nd place North
2008 Phillies Steve Roadcap 38-32, 3rd place North 42-28, 2nd place North
2009 Phillies Dusty Wathan 42-26, 1st place North 36-32, 4th place North
2010 Phillies Mark Parent 42-28, 1st place North 42-27, 1st place North

Post-Season Records

The BlueClaws won the 2006 South Atlantic League Championship on September 15, first defeating the Lexington Legends in the Northern division final, two games to none, then defeating the Augusta GreenJackets in a dramatic 5-0 victory, winning the championship series three games to one.

In 2009, the BlueClaws won the South Atlantic League Championship by first defeating the Kannapolis Intimidators 9-0 and winning the series by two games to none in the Northern Division final . In the championship round, the Blue Claws defeated the Greenville Drive 5-1 in game four and then taking the series three games to one.

In 2010, the BlueClaws won both halves of the season. They became the first team to do so and win the championship, defeating Hickory 2 games to 1 in the Northern Division Final and the Greenville Drive 3 games to 1 in a rematch series.

It was announced that the Phillies had extended their affiliation agreement through 2014.

Alumni

Ownership

The team is part-owned by New-Jersey-born Joe Plumeri. He is Chairman & CEO of Willis Group Holdings, and also owns the Trenton Thunder.[1][2][3]

Roster

Players Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 39 Brandon Beckel
  • 30 Ethan Chenault
  •  7 Trey Dillard
  • 20 Jake Eddington
  • 38 Jaydenn Estanista
  • 44 Alex Garbrick
  • 22 Estibenzon Jimenez
  • 34 Wen-Hui Pan
  • 31 Luke Russo
  • 37 Casey Steward
  • 18 Paxton Thompson
  • 21 Braydon Tucker
  • 28 Danny Wilkinson

Catchers

  •  3 Ryan Leitch

Infielders

  •  8 Pierce Bennett
  • 15 Diego Gonzalez
  • 26 Felix Reyes
  • 17 Bryan Rincon
  •  4 Bryson Ware

Outfielders

  •  6 Emaarion Boyd
  •  9 Hendry Mendez
  • 14 Troy Schreffler
  •  2 Jordan Viars

Designated hitters

  • 41 Luis Caicuto

Manager

  • 11 Greg Brodzinski

Coaches

  • 35 Brad Bergesen (pitching)
  • 23 Matt Ellmyer (pitching)
  • 33 Beth Greenwood (development)
  • 24 Adam Lind (hitting)
  • 16 Orlando Munoz (coach)

60-day injured list

  • 24 Erubiel Armenta
  • 98 Nathan Karaffa (full season)
  • 90 Alex Rao (full season)

7-day injured list
* On Philadelphia Phillies 40-man roster
~ Development list
# Rehab assignment
∞ Reserve list
‡ Restricted list
§ Suspended list
† Temporarily inactive list
Roster updated October 28, 2024
Transactions
→ More rosters: MiLB • South Atlantic League
Philadelphia Phillies minor league players

References

  1. ^ "Board of Directors". willis.com. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  2. ^ Dave Fairbank (March 21, 2009). "Plumeri warmly reflects on decade". Daily Press. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  3. ^ Gregory J. Volpe (July 24, 2000). "In Lakewood, They're Coming Before its Built". The Press of Atlantic City. Retrieved July 16, 2010.

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