Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The High Wheelers signed an agreement with UC Davis to play at the university's Dobbins Stadium, which used temporary lights for the first season. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] On November 22, 2024, the team announced it would be moving to Marysville, California to play the 2025 season at Bryant Field .
Dobbins Stadium is a baseball stadium in Davis, California. It is the home field of the UC Davis Aggies baseball team [ 1 ] and the minor league baseball Yolo High Wheelers . The stadium holds 3,500 spectators and opened in 1986.
On July 9, 2011, the Dragons set a new record for most consecutive sold-out games (815 total) in all of professional sports. [20] As of the end of the 2023 season, the still-in-progress record stands at 1,507 straight games. [21] In 2011, Ballpark Digest named the Dragons the "Minor League Baseball Organization of the Year."
The Chunichi Dragons were formed in 1936 as the Nagoya Club. The franchise was acquired by the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper company in 1946. [ citation needed ] They became the "Dragons" in 1947, but experimented with a number of variations on their team name before settling on Chunichi Dragons in 1954.
The National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) is the national body that governs club baseball at colleges and universities in the United States.Club teams are different from varsity teams in that the school doesn't completely sponsor the teams' expenses and the teams are not eligible to play in the NCAA's College World Series.
The Cincinnati Reds farm system consists of seven Minor League Baseball affiliates across the United States and in the Dominican Republic.Four teams are independently owned, while the Arizona Complex League Reds, Dominican Summer League Reds, and Dominican Summer League Rojos are owned by the major league club.
The Shreveport Captains (1971–2000) and Shreveport Swamp Dragons (2001–02) were a professional minor-league baseball team based in Shreveport, Louisiana. [ citation needed ] They were affiliated with the California Angels (1971–72), Milwaukee Brewers (1973–74), Pittsburgh Pirates (1975–78) and San Francisco Giants (1979–2002).
Rather than sign, Davis opted to attend the University of Tennessee, where he played college baseball for the Tennessee Volunteers baseball team. [2] As a freshman, Davis had a .330 batting average with 13 home runs and 44 runs batted in (RBI). [3] Before his sophomore season, he was named a preseason All-American by both Baseball America and ...