The Calgary Vipers
are a professional baseball team based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. They are a member of the North Division of the independent Golden Baseball League. From the 2005 season to the present, the Vipers have played their home games at Foothills Stadium. Previously, the Vipers played in the Northern League from 2005–2007.
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CALGARY VIPERS TICKETS
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Franchise History
Calgary had been served by the
Triple-A Calgary Cannons of the
Pacific Coast League (PCL) for 18 years until the team relocated to
Albuquerque, New Mexico in 2002. The
Calgary Outlaws played half a season in 2003 in the
independent Canadian Baseball League before the league folded, leaving the city without professional baseball in 2004.
[1] The college level
Calgary Dawgs of the
Western Major Baseball League also began play in 2003.
The
Northern League announced on April 3, 2004 that it was expanding to Alberta, granting new franchises to
Edmonton and Calgary. The Calgary franchise was to be owned by a pair of Japanese businessmen, Hiro Masawa and Naoto Higuchi, and incorporated as Calgary Baseball LLC.
Due to the distance between the Alberta franchises and the Northern League's base in the midwest United States, the two teams were required to pay a
C$60,000 annual travel subsidy to offset the costs for the other teams to fly into the city.
Northern League (2004-2007)
Calgary Baseball LLC had promised to significantly renovate the aging
Foothills Stadium as part of an ambitious plan for the team.
[2] However, little movement was seen with the franchise, causing the league to investigate the status of the team in November, 2004. A month later, on December 10, commissioner
Mike Stone announced that he had revoked the franchise, stripping Calgary Baseball LLC of its ownership.
On February 11, 2005 the league sold the franchise to
Winnipeg businessman Jeffrey Gidney. He had less than three months before the start of play to hire staff, sign players and name the team.
[3] The team quickly named themselves the Vipers, and began signing players.
Despite the short time frame, the Vipers managed to build a quality team on the field, finishing second in the Northern division in both halves of the season. They played the first game in franchise history, on the road against the
Sioux City Explorers on May 20, 2005, losing 7–3.
[4] They won their first game the following night, defeating the Explorers 12–2.
[5] The team played its first game at home on May 27, defeating the
Joliet Jackhammers 9–8 in 11 innings.
[6]
Off the field, the Vipers finished last in attendance, averaging just over 1100 fans. However, crowds slowly improved as the season went on and the Vipers grew from a bare bones operation, and as the weather improved following a month of June that featured record amounts of rainfall.
On June 13, 2006, a string of bean balls in the first two innings touched off two major brawls between the Vipers and their provincial rivals, the
Edmonton Cracker-Cats. After Edmonton's
Greg Morrison was hit by a Calgary pitch for the fourth time in five games, the Cracker-Cats responded by throwing at two Calgary players. The resulting melee was so violent that the umpires sent both teams off the field, and suspended the game for over an hour to consult with league officials. When the Cracker-Cats refused to return to the field afterward, the game was declared a forfeit and the Vipers were awarded a 9-0 victory.
[7]
The league came down hard on both teams, as both managers and seven players were suspended a total of 79 games.
[8] Morrison blamed Calgary manager
Mike Busch for the incident, believing that Busch continues to hold a grudge after both Morrison, and another former Viper,
J.P. Fauske defected to the Cracker-Cats after leaving the Vipers after a falling out with the Calgary manager late in the 2005 season.
[9]
The Vipers finished first in their division in the first half of 2007 with a record of 29–19, and qualified for the playoffs for the first time. During the season, outfielder
Darryl Brinkley became the first minor league baseball player of the modern era to achieve a .400
batting average. Brinkley was named the Independent League Player of the Year by
Baseball America
.
[10]
In the playoffs, they faced the second half winning
Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks in the North Division championship.
[11] The Vipers defeated the RedHawks 9–4 in the first game of the series to win their playoff debut,
[12] en route to a three game sweep of Fargo as they won the pennant and earned a berth in the Northern League Championship Series.
[13] The Vipers won the first game of the final series against the
Gary SouthShore RailCats, 7–6, on a two-run, walk-off home run by
Carlos Duncan.
[14] The teams traded wins in the first four games, forcing the series to a decisive fifth game. The RailCats won the game, and the championship, 5–1.
[15]
Leaving the Northern League
The playoff run would prove to be the team's last hurrah in the Northern League, as both the Vipers and Edmonton Cracker Cats announced that they were leaving the league after failing to post $1 million performance bonds.
[16] Both teams jumped to the
California based
Golden Baseball League.
Golden Baseball League (2008-present)
The Vipers have been making headlines since moving to the GBL. They suggested that former
National Hockey League star
Theoren Fleury was considering playing for the Vipers. The former
Calgary Flame took batting practice with the team, and threw out the first pitch at their home opener.
[17]
Then, the Vipers traded pitcher
John Odom to the
Laredo Broncos of the
United Baseball League for ten bats. Odom was unable to enter Canada and was turned away at the Canadian border due to an unspecified criminal charge on his record.
[18] The Vipers intended to auction the bats off to raise funds for their
Snakes and Batters
charity fund, however they were instead sold to
Ripley's Believe it or Not for $10,000.
[19]
On September 5, 2008, the Vipers won the GBL North Division Championship outright by sweeping the Cracker-Cats 3 games to 0. On September 14, they lost the best-of-five GBL Championship Series to the
Orange County Flyers 3 games to 2.
Year-by-year record
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| First Half
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| Second Half
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| Overall
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Season
| Division
| W-L
| Finish
| W-L
| Finish
| W-L
| Win%
| Playoffs
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2005
| NL North
| 25–22
| 2nd
| 26–22
| 2nd
| 51–44
| .537
| Did not qualify
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2006
| NL North
| 19–29
| 4th
| 23–25
| 3rd
| 42–54
| .438
| Did not qualify
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2007
| NL North
| 29–19
| 1st
| 21–27
| 3rd
| 50–45
| .526
| Won North Division pennant (3–0 FM) Lost championship series (2–3 Gary)
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2008
| GBL North
| 26–18
| 1st
| 19–24
| 2nd
| 45–42
| .517
| Won North Division pennant (3–0 Edm) Lost championship series (2–3 OC)
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2009
| GBL North
| 26–13
| 1st
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| Qualified for playoffs
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See also
- List of baseball teams in Canada
References
- Indy ball won't burn locals, vows prez
- Calgary owners take strike three
- Ball rolling for club
- Franchise opens books with loss
- Vipers strike back in Iowa
- Vipers open with a hit
- winnipegsun.com - Baseball - Battle of Alberta, baseball style
- http://www.northernleague.com/news/?id=4453
- edmontonsun.com - Other Sports - Basebrawl
- Baseball America honours Vipers star
- Vipers hope for playoff jump
- Vipers strike first at home
- Vipers sweep Hawks to advance to final
- Duncan delivers dramatics
- Terrific pitching derails Viper hopes
- Golden opportunity ushered in by Mr. 400, Calgary Vipers, Accessed May 31, 2008
- Theo Fleury to play in minor league baseball game, tsn.ca, Accessed May 31, 2008
- Calgary Vipers minor leaguer traded for 10 baseball bats, Yahoo! Sports, Accessed May 31, 2008
- Minor leaguer traded for 10 bats seeks redemption, Yahoo! Sports, Accessed May 31, 2008