Southern Illinois Miners

Southern Illinois Miners
Team logo Cap insignia
League Frontier League (West)
Location Marion, Illinois
Ballpark Rent One Park
Year founded 2007
League championships 1 (2012)
Division championships 4 (2010, 2014, 2015, 2016)
Former name(s) Southern Illinois Miners (2007-present)
Colors Black, Silver, White, Gold
                   
Retired numbers
  1. 13 (Ryan Bird)
  2. 31 (Joey Metropoulos)
Ownership Jayne Simmons
Manager Mike Pinto
General Manager John Wilson
Media WHET 97.7 FM, Marion Daily Republican, The Southern Illinoisan
Website southernillinoisminers.com

The Southern Illinois Miners are a professional baseball team based in Marion, Illinois. The Miners are a member of the West Division of the independent Frontier League. Since 2007, the Miners have played their home games at Rent One Park.

The "Miners" name refers to the Southern Illinois region's history of coal mining.[1]

The Miners' games are broadcast on four Withers radio stations as part of the Southern Illinois Miners Radio Network. The flagship station is 97.7 WHET-FM in Marion. The Miners radio broadcaster and media relations director is Jason Guerette. The Miners won their first Frontier League Championship in 2012.

History

The city of Marion had not hosted any professional baseball team since the departure of the Marion Indians after the 1948 season. The Indians played for only two seasons in the class D Illinois State League.[2]

John Simmons, an Illinois lawyer, proposed the Marion ballpark originally for an affiliated professional minor league baseball team, but that request was rejected by the Midwest League. However, Simmons remained interested in bringing professional baseball to Marion, so he petitioned several independent leagues for membership. In August 2006, Marion was officially announced as an expansion franchise of the Frontier League, to begin play in 2007. The region's close proximity near existing teams made Southern Illinois a natural fit for the Frontier League.[3]

2007 Inaugural Season

The Miners began their inaugural season on May 23, 2007 on the road against the Gateway Grizzlies, with the franchise's first home run hit by Tim Dorn that same night. Six days later, they would play their first home game against the Evansville Otters, winning 9-6 in front of a crowd of 6,251. The team set a new Frontier League attendance record by hosting 259,392 fans (the prior record was 217,500 set by Gateway in 2004). The Miners also became the first team in Frontier League history to average over 5,000 fans per game for a season (5,086). Southern Illinois Miners fans also contributed heavily to supporting their lead mascot Big John to become the record-setting overall winner of the Best Logo in Minor League Baseball, awarded April 2, 2008 by CNBC following their largest online poll ever.[4]

2008 Season: First Playoff Appearance

After going 49-47 in their first season, the Miners made their first playoff appearance in 2008. Led by postseason all-star outfielder Joey Metropoulos (who hit .315 with 20 home runs and 66 RBIs) and Frontier League Pitcher of the Year Ryan Bird (who went 13-3 with a 2.48 ERA and league-best 152 strikeouts), Southern Illinois went 58-38, making the postseason as a wild card entrant. On September 8, they won their first playoff game in team history, defeating the Windy City ThunderBolts 4-2 at home. They ultimately fell in the Division Series round to the eventual league champion ThunderBolts in four games.

2010 Season: Record-Setting Winning Streak, All-Star Game, First Division Title

The 2010 Season was historic season for the Miners as they set a Frontier League record with a 20-game winning streak from June 9 - June 28, and with 64 total wins tied the record for second-most wins in a season in league history. That year, Rent One Park hosted its first-ever Frontier League All-Star Game, with the Miners sending 10 players to the midseason showcase while sporting a 39-9 record at the all-star break. Thanks to a league-best 64-32 overall record, they also claimed their first-ever division title and made their second playoff appearance,[5] falling in a hotly-contested five-game series to the River City Rascals three games to two.

2012 Season: First Frontier League Championship

After again making the postseason in 2011 with a 58-38 record[6] but again falling to River City in the Division Series, Southern Illinois made the playoffs as a wild card entrant at 55-39, finishing one win ahead of Windy City and the Schaumburg Boomers.[7] The Miners would face the Traverse City Beach Bums, who finished with the league's best record at 64-32, in the division series round. In Game 1 on the road, the Miners shut out the Beach Bums 1-0 behind a solo home run by postseason all-star outfielder Javier Herrera (acquired in a trade with the Rockford RiverHawks earlier in the season) and eight shutout innings from ace right-hander David Harden. In the second game, Traverse City scored three runs in the first inning and led 4-0 in the sixth before the Miners came back with three runs in the sixth and a game-tying RBI single by Cory Harrilchak in the eighth inning. With the score still tied at 4-4 in the 10th inning, outfielder Ken Gregory hit a go-ahead solo home run, which eventually proved to be the winning run in a 5-4 Miners extra-inning victory. Southern Illinois would complete the sweep of the favored Beach Bums by winning Game 3 at home 4-3, sending the club to their first-ever Frontier League Championship Series.

2012 Frontier League Championship Series

In the Championship Series, the Miners took on the Florence Freedom, who had beaten the Gateway Grizzlies in a five-game series three games to two. Again, the Miners opened the series on the road, and again they took the first two games of the series. In Game 1, trailing 1-0 in the third inning, Southern Illinois got back-to-back home runs by catcher Chris Anderson (a two-run shot) and second baseman Cannon Lester to take a 3-1 lead. Florence would rally to tie the score with two runs in the sixth, but two Freedom errors in the seventh brought home the eventual winning run. The Miners added an RBI double in the eighth by Gregory to complete the scoring as they won 5-3.

In Game 2, Southern Illinois used home runs from Gregory, Lester and shortstop Jake Kaase to jump out to a 5-2 lead after six innings. Florence made it a one-run game with a two-run seventh inning, but the Miners responded with four runs in the eighth, including a three-run home run by outfielder Chad Maddox, to pull away and win 9-4.

Florence denied the Miners a clean sweep of the postseason with a slim 4-3 victory in Game 3 at Rent One Park, setting up Game 4 on September 16, 2012 at home. After taking a 3-0 lead thanks to a three-run fourth inning that included a two-run blast by Maddox, Florence rallied to tie the game with two runs in the seventh and one run in the eighth. The game remained knotted at 3-3 into extra innings, with neither team being able to break through until the bottom of the 12th. With the bases loaded and two outs, Kaase drew a walk from Florence's Brent Choban to force in the championship-winning run as the Miners claimed their first league title in team history. Lester, who hit .500 (8-for-16) with two doubles, two home runs and three RBIs in the series, was named the Championship Series MVP.

2014-present: Continued Success

After the Miners missed the playoffs in 2013 for the first time since 2009, Southern Illinois finished with a 60-36 record in 2014,[8] clinching the East Division title on September 3 (the second-to-last day of the regular season) with a road victory over the Lake Erie Crushers. It was the second divisional championship in team history. That year, they also retired #31 for 2009 Frontier League MVP Joey Metropoulos, the first retired number in team history. Ace left-hander Matt Bywater won the team's second Frontier League Pitcher of the Year award.

In 2015, the Miners finished with the second-best record in team history, going 63-33 to finish with the league's best record.[9] They also won their second-straight East Division championship, clinching it in memorable fashion on August 30 thanks to a walk-off, two-run home run by third baseman Steve Marino against Traverse City. Right-handed starter Adam Lopez went 10-0 with a 1.86 ERA to become the second-straight Miners hurler to win the league's Pitcher of the Year award. The Miners also retired #13 for all-time wins and strikeouts leader Ryan Bird in 2015, the second retired number in team history.

In 2016, the Miners celebrated their 10th anniversary season with more on-field success, with a second-straight 63-33 regular season.[10] They won their third-straight division championship (this time in the West Division) by 7 1/2 games over the second-place Evansville Otters, becoming the second team in Frontier League history to win three straight division titles (after the 2005-07 Washington Wild Things) and the first team in league history to win 60 or more games in three consecutive seasons.

Team Honors

The Miners have won the Frontier League Organization Of The Year award three times in their history (2007, 2009, 2010).

Southern Illinois has finished with a winning record in each of their ten seasons from 2007–present, representing a Frontier League record.

The team has sent a total of 57 players to the league's All-Star game in ten seasons, with 15 postseason all-stars in their history including three Pitchers of the Year (2008- Ryan Bird, 2014- Matt Bywater, 2015- Adam Lopez), one league Most-Valuable Player (2009- Joey Metropoulos) and one Rookie of the Year (2016- Shane Kennedy).

In addition, the Miners have had 45 former players signed by Major League Baseball organizations. Three former Miners (Tanner Roark, Clay Zavada and Brandon Cunniff) have made it all the way to the major leagues.

Current roster

Southern Illinois Miners roster
Active (24-man) roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 39 Zach Cooper
  • 12 Chris DeBoo
  • 33 Adam Lopez
  • 27 Rich Mascheri
  • 10 Jarett Miller
  • 43 Evan Mott
  • 19 Dyllon Nuernberg
  •  1 Nick Palacios
  • 17 Jake Pannunzio
  • 18 Corey Sessions
  • 34 Rick Teasley
  • 40 Kyle Tinius
  • 21 Brooks Trujillo
 

Catchers

  • 22 Toby DeMello
  •  6 Riley Moore

Infielders

  • 28 Alex De Leon
  •  2 Julius Gaines
  • 11 Shane Kennedy
  • 14 Steve Marino
  • 25 Willi Martin

Outfielders

  • 24 Brandon Cummins
  • 15 Nolan Earley
  •  7 Aaron Gates
  • 23 Craig Massey
  •  8 Kurt Wertz, Jr.
 

Manager

  •  3 Mike Pinto

Coaches

  • -- Chris Colwell (assistant)
  • 37 John Lakin (assistant)
  • -- Steve McInerney (trainer)
  •  9 Roy Perez (bullpen catcher)
  • 20 Ralph Santana (hitting)
  • 30 Preston Vancil (pitching)

Disabled list
‡ Inactive list
§ Suspended list

Roster updated September 10, 2016
Transactions

Notable Miners

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.