Bangor Blue Ox
Bangor Blue Ox | |
---|---|
Location | Orono, Maine |
Ballpark | Larry Mahaney Diamond |
Year founded | 1996 |
Year disbanded | 1997 |
Former league(s) | Northeast League (1996–97) |
Colors | Blue, White |
The Bangor Blue Ox were a minor league baseball team based in Bangor, Maine. The team played in the Northeast League (now the Can-Am League). The Northeast League was an independent baseball league and as such none of its teams had an affiliation with Major League Baseball. The team existed from 1996 to 1997 and played its home games at Larry Mahaney Diamond on the campus of the University of Maine in Orono, Maine.
History
When the Northeast League was formed and played its first season in 1995 it was a 6 team league with all six teams being located in the State of New York. After the first season only 3 of the six original teams would return for a second season. The league wanted to expand into New England and it chose Bangor and West Warwick, Rhode Island as two new teams for the 1996 season. The Blue Ox and the Northeast League had hoped that moving a team to the city would lead Bangor to build a new ballpark for the team. In the meantime the Blue Ox would play their home games at Mahaney Diamond on the University of Maine campus.
The Blue Ox would have a fairly successful season in their first year, finishing 3rd in the league with a 46-33 record. They would be led by former Major Leaguer, Oil Can Boyd, who at age 36 was attempting a comeback. Boyd would finish the season at 10-0 with a 3.22 ERA.[1] In 1997 the Northeast League would take on 2 new teams and expand to 8 overall. The Blue Ox would finish the season at 40-43, which was only good enough for 6th place. At the end of the 1997 season it was clear that the new baseball field would not be built by the city in the near future. Although Mahaney Diamond was a very suitable college baseball field it was simply not designed to be a permanent minor-league park. The team was sold to new ownership and moved to Quebec City following the 1997 season. Today the former Blue Ox franchise is known as the Quebec City Capitales.[2]
References
- ↑ http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=11674
- ↑ http://www.funwhileitlasted.net/2014/03/05/1996-1997-bangor-blue-ox/