Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The team's 1991 single-season attendance of 1,240,951 remains a Minor League Baseball record. [11] Buffalo Bisons hosting Nashville Sounds for their final game at War Memorial Stadium, August 1987. The Cleveland Indians replaced the Pittsburgh Pirates as Major League Baseball affiliate of the Buffalo Bisons prior to the 1995 season. [12]
The Thruway Cup is an annual competition between Minor League Baseball's Buffalo Bisons, Rochester Red Wings, and Syracuse Mets of the International League.The Cup standings are compiled from the games the teams play against each other through the course of the regular season.
This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse, meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute), it is hidden apart from its title bar; if not, it is fully visible.
The Buffalo Bisons were a professional Triple-A minor league baseball team based in Buffalo, New York that was founded in 1886 and last played in the International League from 1912 to 1970. Over the course of their existence, the Bisons won the Junior World Series three times (1904, 1906 and 1961).
Printable version; In other projects ... The 1890 Buffalo Bisons baseball team was a member of the short lived Players' League, ... though several box scores [4] [1] ...
The Bisons played their games at Riverside Park (1879–1883) and Olympic Park (1884–1885) in Buffalo, New York. The NL Bisons are included in the history of the minor-league team of the same name that still plays today; it is thus the only NL team from the 19th century that both still exists and no longer plays in Major League Baseball.
Baseball: International League . Buffalo Bisons (Buffalo, New York; Rochester Red Wings (Rochester, New York) Basketball: The Basketball League (TBL) Rochester Kingz (Rochester, New York) American Basketball Association (ABA) Buffalo eXtreme (Buffalo, New York) Football: National Football League (NFL) Buffalo Bills (Buffalo, New York) Ice hockey:
Buffalo began hosting professional baseball in 1877, when the Buffalo Bisons of the League Alliance began play at Riverside Park. [2] Over the next century, the city hosted major and minor league teams including the Buffalo Bisons (IA, 1878, 1887–1888), Buffalo Bisons (NL, 1879–1885), Buffalo Bisons (PL, 1890), and the Buffalo Blues (FL, 1914–1915). [2]