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Charlotte Knights - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charlotte Knights

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charlotte Knights
Founded in 1976
Fort Mill, South Carolina

Team Logo

Cap Insignia
Class-Level
  • Triple-A (1993-Present)
  • Double-A (1976-1992)
Minor League affiliations
Major League affiliations
Name
  • Charlotte Knights (1989-Present)
  • Charlotte Orioles (1976-1988)
Ballpark
Minor League titles
League titles 1980, 1984, 1993, 1999
Division titles 1993, 2006
Owner(s)/Operated by: Don Beaver, Bill Allen
Manager: Marc Bombard
General Manager: Dan Rajkowski

The Charlotte Knights are a minor league baseball team representing Charlotte, North Carolina. The team, which plays in the International League, is the AAA affiliate of the Chicago White Sox of the American League. The Knights currently play in Knights Stadium, located in Fort Mill, South Carolina; a suburb of Charlotte. However, plans are underway for the team to move to a new stadium in downtown Charlotte.

Contents

[edit] History

Professional baseball in Charlotte dates to 1901, with the formation of the Charlotte Hornets. They were an independent team until 1937, when the Washington Senators, now the Minnesota Twins, purchased the team. The Hornets would remain affiliated with the Senators/Twins for 35 years. In 1940, Calvin Griffith, the son of Senators owner Clark Griffith and future owner of the Senators/Twins, built a 3,200-seat park in Charlotte's Dilworth neighborhood, Calvin Griffith Park. It would be the home of Charlotte baseball for the next half-century.

After several years on the lower rungs of the minor league totem pole, the Hornets joined the Class A South Atlantic League in 1954. They had previously been members of the South Atlantic League in the 1920s. The South Atlantic League became a AA league in 1963 and renamed itself the Southern League in 1964. In 1972, the team renamed itself the Charlotte Twins. Minnesota dropped its affiliation after the 1972 season. Unable to link up with a new team, the Twins disbanded.

The current incarnation of Charlotte baseball began in 1976, when wrestling promoter Jim Crockett, Jr. bought the Asheville Orioles, the AA affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles, and renamed them the Charlotte Orioles. Griffith Park was fixed up and renamed Jim Crockett, Sr. Memorial Park (popularly known as Crockett Park). The team, popularly known as the O's, won Southern League titles in 1980 and 1984. Eventual major-league superstars Eddie Murray (the O's original first baseman in 1976), Cal Ripken (1980) and Curt Schilling (mid-1980s) played for the O's.

In March of 1985, Crockett Park (mostly wood-framed) was destroyed by a massive fire after a high school baseball game. An investigation revealed that the cause of the fire was arson. The Crockett family built a 5,500-seat makeshift stadium immediately afterward, which served as the O's home for three years. In 1989, George Shinn, founder of the NBA Charlotte Hornets, bought the team from the Crockett family. Later in the year, he renamed the team the Knights and switched the team's affiliation to the Chicago Cubs.

The team moved to Knights Castle, a temporary 8,000 seat stadium located on Deerfield Drive in Fort Mill, South Carolina near the construction site of Knights Stadium. The stadium was built for the 1989 season and was demolished following the final game that year to make room for Knights Stadium in Fort Mill in 1990.[1]

In 1993, Charlotte acquired an International League franchise as the AAA affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. This expansion team took the Charlotte Knights name, with the former AA Knights of the Southern League relocating to Nashville, Tennessee and ultimately Mobile, Alabama to become the current Mobile Bay Bears. The new AAA Knights, led by future major-league stars Jim Thome and Manny Ramírez, won the International League title in 1993. Much of the core of that team, including manager Charlie Manuel, played a role in the Indians' World Series teams of 1995 and 1997.

For the 1996-1997 seasons, the Knights were the AAA affiliate of the Florida Marlins. Before the 1998 season, Shinn sold the Knights to N.C. businessman Don Beaver, who negotiated a AAA affiliation agreement with the Chicago White Sox. The Knights won another International League title in 1999 as the White Sox' top affiliate. Notable former Knights under the White Sox affiliation include current Angels pitcher Jon Garland and White Sox position player Joe Crede. This agreement has recently been extended to ensure that professional baseball will remain in the Charlotte area for many years to come.

Recently, the Charlotte City Council and Mecklenburg County Commission approved a land-swap agreement which, barring potential legal action, will permit construction of a new AAA-sized stadium in downtown Charlotte. If built, it will be located near Bank of America Stadium, home of the Carolina Panthers. The team's attendance has sagged in recent years, and it was hoped that bringing the Knights back to the city would increase attendance.

[edit] Affiliations

[edit] Titles

  • Charlotte Hornets - North Carolina League Championship 1902, 1916, 1923
  • Charlotte Hornets - Piedmont League Championship 1931, 1938
  • Charlotte Hornets - Tri-State League Championship 1946, 1947, 1952
  • Charlotte Hornets - Southern League Championship 1971
  • Charlotte O's - Southern League Championship 1984
  • Charlotte Knights - Governors' Cup, International League Championship 1993
  • Charlotte Knights - Governors' Cup, International League Championship 1999

[edit] Current roster

Charlotte Knights roster
view  talk  edit
Players Coaches/Other
Pitchers
Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches


† Disabled list
* On Chicago White Sox 40-man roster
‡ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
Roster updated 2008-06-14
Transactions

[edit] Alumni

[edit] As the Hornets

[edit] As the O's

[edit] As the Knights

[edit] Coaches

[edit] References

  1. ^ Brown, Gord. DigitalBallparks.com. 31 January 2008.

[edit] External links



Flag of South Carolina
This box: view  talk  edit
Sports teams based in South Carolina
Baseball CL: Myrtle Beach Pelicans, SAL: Charleston RiverDogsGreenville Drive
Football AIFA: Carolina SandsharksFlorence Phantoms
Hockey ECHL: Columbia InfernoSouth Carolina Stingrays
Soccer USL-1: Charleston Battery
College athletics
(NCAA Division I)
Charleston SouthernClemsonCoastal CarolinaCollege of CharlestonFurmanPresbyterianSouth CarolinaSouth Carolina StateThe CitadelUSC UpstateWinthropWofford


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