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The Norfolk Tides are a Minor League Baseball team of the International League and the Triple-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles. They are located in Norfolk, Virginia, and are named in nautical reference to the city's location on the Chesapeake Bay. The team plays their home games at Harbor Park, which opened in 1993.
The Baysox were again sold in October 2006 by Comcast Spectacor to Maryland Baseball Holding, LLC. A group headed by Ken Young, who is president of Ovations Food Service and also the owner of the Norfolk Tides, the Triple-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles and the Albuquerque Isotopes, the Triple-A affiliate of the Florida Marlins.
Harbor Park is a stadium, used primarily for baseball, on the Elizabeth River, in downtown Norfolk, Virginia. Once rated the best minor league stadium by Baseball America, it is home to the Norfolk Tides Minor League Baseball team. The Tides are the Baltimore Orioles' Triple-A farm team and compete in the International League. Harbor Park ...
Tristan Gray and Ruben Cardenas homered and Durham used a five-run eighth inning to pull away from the Tides in a 10-5 victory to open the best-of-three International League Championship Series at ...
Uber-prospects Jackson Holliday and Coby Mayo homered and four pitchers combined for a three-hit shutout to lift the Tides to a 7-0 win over the Durham Bulls in the decisive third game of the ...
Built in 1969, it was the home to the Norfolk Tides (known at that time as the Tidewater Tides) until the construction of Harbor Park was completed for the Tides to play the 1993 season there. Met Park sat 6,200, and was located near the end of the primary runway of the Norfolk International Airport .
Norfolk Tides W: Richmond Braves & Rochester Red Wings E [136] 1996 Columbus Clippers W: 3–0: Rochester Red Wings: Norfolk Tides & Pawtucket Red Sox E [137] 1997 Rochester Red Wings E: 3–2: Columbus Clippers W: Charlotte Knights & Pawtucket Red Sox [138] 1998 Buffalo Bisons N: 3–2: Durham Bulls S: Louisville Redbirds W & Syracuse ...
From 1970 to 1976, Norfolk served as home court (along with Hampton, Richmond and Roanoke) for the Virginia Squires regional professional basketball franchise of the now-defunct American Basketball Association (ABA). From 1970 to 1971, the Squires played their Norfolk home games at the Old Dominion University Fieldhouse.