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The Naranjeros played in the Estadio de la Casa del Pueblo that was later renamed to Estadio Fernando M. Ortiz. [ 4 ] Hermosillo repeated the feat of winning the league championship twice in a row in the 1960–61 and 1961–62 seasons, both times under manager Virgilio Arteaga.
It is home to the Naranjeros de Hermosillo of the Mexican Pacific League. The stadium opened as the Estadio Sonora opened in 2013 and replaced the Estadio Héctor Espino as the home ballpark of the Naranjeros. On 7 February 2023, Governor Alfonso Durazo announced that the stadium would be renamed in honor of Fernando Valenzuela. [2]
Naranjeros de Hermosillo.415 1972–73 Sandy Madera: Cañeros de Los Mochis.413 2009–10 Eduardo Arredondo: Algodoneros de Guasave.406 2010–11 Home runs: Ronnie Camacho: Rieleros de Empalme: 27 1963–64 Bobby Darwin: Naranjeros de Hermosillo: 27 1971–72 Héctor Espino: Naranjeros de Hermosillo: 26 1972–73 RBIs: Héctor Espino ...
On 22 May 2023, a modification for the final phase was announced at the owners assembly in Toluca; reducing the clubs from twelve to ten. [3] The number of clubs qualifying for the quarter-finals was increased from four to six while the teams qualifying for the reclassification was reduced from six to four.
Naranjeros de Hermosillo roster. Players: Coaches: Pitchers. 54 Raúl Barrón; 75 Aníbal Cervantes; 46 Danis Correa; 62 Cristian Garza; ... updated on 21 October 2023
The final Naranjeros game at the stadium was a 7–2 playoff loss to the Tomateros de Culiacán on 6 January 2013. [3] The stadium served as the first home venue of the Cimarrones de Sonora from 2013 to 2015. The Diablos de Hermosillo of the Liga Norte de México used the stadium as their temporary home venue in 2015, and the Coyotes UTH ...
Los Mochis achieved this on 7 January 1969 by defeating Naranjeros de Hermosillo 6–3 in the final round robin. The team was managed by Benjamín Valenzuela. [4] In 1983–84, Los Mochis won their second LMP championship and classified for the first time in the team's history to the Caribbean Series.
Durazo debuted with the Naranjeros de Hermosillo of the Mexican Pacific League (LMP) in 1997–98 and won the Rookie of the Year award after hitting .321 with seven home runs and 28 RBIs. [14] [15] He played 14 of his 15 LMP seasons with Hermosillo, batting .310 to go with 546 hits, 94 home runs, and 339 RBIs in 494 career games. [15]