Yonkers Hoot Owls
Yonkers Hoot Owls | |
---|---|
Information | |
Location | Yonkers, New York |
Ballpark | Fleming Field |
Founded | 1995 |
Disbanded | 1995 |
League championships | None |
Former name(s) | Yonkers Hoot Owls |
Former league(s) |
|
Colors | Black, White |
Ownership | Adele Leone |
Manager | Paul Blair |
The Yonkers Hoot Owls were a minor league baseball team based in Yonkers, New York, playing in the independent Northeast League (now the Can-Am League.) The team existed just one season in 1995 and played its home games at Fleming Field in Yonkers.
History
When the NEL was formed with six teams (all in New York State), it desired to have a presence in or near New York City; however, a proposed team in Mount Vernon, New York never got off the ground. The league then turned to Adele Leone, a literary agent and Richard Monaco, a writer. Although it was the fourth-most populous city in New York, Yonkers had not hosted pro ball since having a Class C team in the Hudson River League in 1907. Leone and the Northeast League would immediately start their short relationship off on the wrong foot: she wanted to call the team the Blue Bandits, but the league, who had already come up with the Hoot Owls name and logo for the abortive Mount Vernon team, forced her to name them the Yonkers Hoot Owls.
Unable to find a professional-quality stadium in Yonkers, Leone made plans for the Hoot Owls to play their home games at Fleming Field. The field, which has been called "the worst stadium ever in the history of professional baseball",[1] was essentially a city park. It had concrete slab seating, no permanent concessions, no permanent restrooms, no dugouts and no permanent lighting (Leone would spend thousands of dollars of her own money to install lights for the field). Even more incredibly, the field had no infield grass, making the Owls possibly the only professional baseball team in history to play their home games on an all-dirt infield. Also, since there was very little parking around the field, Leone paid for off-site parking with shuttle bus service to and from the field.[2]
The seating would cause financial problems for the team from the very beginning: Fleming Field could only comfortably seat about five hundred, with potential overflow seating of maybe another three to five hundred. Even if the team sold out every game, they would still be close to last in the league in attendance. As it would turn out, overflow crowds in Yonkers were never a problem, especially since general admission tickets were a pricey six dollars.
The broadcast facilities were nonexistent. WFAS Radio broadcast from a card table at the top of the bleachers with Ryan Patrick and Mike Hayes calling the action. If it rained they had to throw a tarp over their equipment. The phone line they broadcast on was attached to a nearby tree and "when lightning struck you could hear the crackle in the headsets. I thought I was going to get electrocuted." reported Hayes.[citation needed]
1995 season
Former All-Star Major Leaguer Paul Blair was named the manager of the club. Most of the players, however, were local residents in their late teens and early twenties; only a handful had any professional experience. The only recognizable face on the team was former Cincinnati Reds outfielder Leo Garcia, seven years removed from his last major league contest (for Yonkers, he batted just .158 in 25 games). One of the Owls' few good players, Pete Bifone,[3] quit the club in disgust in July, taking his .329 batting average with him.
Throughout the season, the Hoot Owls received little to no fan support, drawing only about 5,000 fans for the entire season, or less than 200 per game. Also, Leone was unable to gain support from local businesses; the outfield walls were nearly empty of advertisements, as were the game programs.
In the end, Yonkers would end the 1995 season with a disastrous 12-52 record, dead last in the six-team league, 37 games out of first place.[4] It was the worst record of any pro baseball club (major, minor or independent) in 1995, and one of the worst by any team in modern times.
Leone had no choice but to fold the team after the 1995 season; Yonkers' spot in the NEL was taken by Bangor, Maine in 1996.