The Charleston RiverDogs
are a Minor League Baseball team based in Charleston, South Carolina. They play in the class A South Atlantic League and are an affiliate of the New York Yankees. Their home stadium is at Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park. The majority owner is Marvin Goldklang who also owns a stake in five other minor league baseball teams throughout the country (Fort Myers Miracle, Sioux Falls Canaries, Hudson Valley Renegades, Brockton Rox, and St. Paul Saints).
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CHARLESTON RIVERDOGS TICKETS
EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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Charleston RiverDogs vs. Myrtle Beach Pelicans Tickets 4/4 | Apr 04, 2025 Fri, 7:05 PM | | Charleston RiverDogs vs. Myrtle Beach Pelicans Tickets 4/5 | Apr 05, 2025 Sat, 6:05 PM | | Charleston RiverDogs vs. Myrtle Beach Pelicans Tickets 4/6 | Apr 06, 2025 Sun, 5:05 PM | | Columbia Fireflies vs. Charleston Riverdogs Tickets 4/8 | Apr 08, 2025 Tue, 7:05 PM | | Columbia Fireflies vs. Charleston Riverdogs Tickets 4/9 | Apr 09, 2025 Wed, 7:05 PM | |
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Before the Riverdogs
Seagulls, Sea Gulls, and Gulls
Baseball can be traced in Charleston back to 1886, when the Charleston Seagulls took the field in front of only 32 people at an old high school baseball field. But over time the
Seagulls
became the
Sea Gulls
and were in full swing having great on-field play which included winning the
South Atlantic League Championship in 1907. Due to unknown reasons the Sea Gulls did not play in 1910. They did, however play in 1911, but towards the end of the season a hurricane destroyed their stadium which resulted them not playing in 1912. In 1913 a brand new facility was built for the Seagulls, named College Park. Eventually in 1919, the
Sea Gulls
became officially the
Gulls
.
Palmettos and Pals
Starting in 1920 the
Gulls
became the
Palmettos
, however, in the following year that name was shortend to the
Pals
while Charleston was promoted to "Class B". In 1922 the Pals created excitement around Charleston as they won the
South Atlantic League title, but due to unknown reasons the Pals folded at the end of the season, and that lead to a 16 year baseball drought in Charleston.
Rebels and the Return to Glory
Finally in 1940 a new team began play in the South Atlantic League known as the
Charleston Rebels
. Just two years later, in 1942 the Rebels won the
South Atlantic League Championship ending a 20 year championship drought. However, the next year the Rebels posted a losing record. 1947 started out with a bang as the Rebels were promoted to Class A and drew 184,851 fans in the season, a Charleston baseball record that stood until 1997. After all the excitement from the 1947 season, the Rebels went out and won the
South Atlantic League Championship for the second time in seven years in 1948, the last time Charleston won a championship. After that memorable season the Rebels declined and couldn't post a winning season. With fans losing interest the Rebels folded at the end of the 1953 season.
ChaSox and White Sox Experiment With Affiliation
In 1959 baseball returned to Charleston, but this time the team was affiliated with a
Major League Baseball Team, the
Chicago White Sox. The experiment failed horribly as attendance was down by more than 50% and the
White Sox
failed to post consecutive winning seasons.
New Team New League
In 1973 the
Charleston Pirates
were born, who were affiliated with the
Pittsburgh Pirates, and for the first time since 1893 were playing in a league other than the
South Atlantic League, they were in the
Western Carolinas League. As the Pirates, Charleston excelled in pitching as in 1973
John Candelaria led the league with a 10-2 record. The following year the Pirates pitcher
Randy Sealy set a team record with a 1.97 ERA. However after those promising years the Pirates set a league record by losing 22 straight games. In 1976 and 1977 the
Pirates
became the
Patriots
, but the name change still had no effect on the team's play as the team failed to post a winning record and watched attendance plunge. Finally, in 1978 the Pirates decided enough was enough and left town. By now Charleston had been given countless chances to prove that they could support a baseball team, so the city began to give up on baseball. Little, however, did Charlestonians know that commitment and tradition was just around the corner, and a bright future was in store for Charleston baseball.
The RiverDogs Are Born
Early Success As The Royals
The RiverDogs were originally formed in 1980 under the name of the
Charleston Royals
, and were a farm team of the
Kansas City Royals. In their first season as the Royals they won the South Atlantic League's Southern Division championship, but fell in the playoffs against Greensboro. Like the Pirates, the Royals were known for their pitching, because in 1981 pitcher
Jeffery Gladden led the league with a 2.09 ERA. In 1982 batting may have caught up with the pitching as pitcher
Danny Jackson led the league with a 10-1 record and slugger
Cliff Pastornicky paced the South Atlantic League with a .343 batting average. In 1983
Mark Pirruccello set a single-season team record with 25 home runs. 1984 was an exciting season for Charleston as the city hosted the all-star game in which
Tom Glavine and
Pat Borders played in. On the field the Royals went on to win the Southern Division and
Kevin Seitzer was named league MVP.
Dark Days
In 1985 the
Royals
were renamed the
Rainbows
and became affiliated with the
San Diego Padres. 1985-1987 were building years as the Rainbows improved each season under a great pitching staff until 1988 when they won the Southern Division title, but were bounced in the first round of the playoffs. The 1988 season was powered by a pitching staff whose combined ERA equaled 2.07. 1988 was the last of the "good ol' days", because starting in 1989 the team suffered eleven consecutive losing seasons. Poor play on the field translated into a
South Atlantic League record, when in 1990 pitcher
Charles Thompson registered seventeen losses. 1994 saw the final name change as the
Rainbows
became the
RiverDogs
. Despite the name change, the losing continued. 1997 saw the RiverDogs leave their 84-year-old College Park stadium and move into the brand-new 5,500-seat stadium,
Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park. The team also began its eight year affiliation with the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 1997. The move to the "Joe" helped to spur a rise in total attendance, as the team set a record with an increase in over 100,000 fans over just season year. Finally, in 2000 the 'Dogs posted their first winning season since 1988. Despite missing the
playoffs the RiverDogs continued posting losing seasons until 2003.
Great Play and Return to the Playoffs
2003 saw the beginning of a new era as the RiverDogs played well on the field and posted a winning season for the first time since 2000. In 2004 the RiverDogs secured the wildcard spot in the playoffs bringing Charleston a playoff series for the first time in sixteen years. Charleston faced the hated rival Capital City in the first round, but were swept two games to none. The RiverDogs became a Class A affiliate with the
New York Yankees on
September 15,
2004. 2005 was another great season as the Riverdogs jumped out winning the first-half Southern Division Championship qualifying them for the playoffs for the first consecutive seasons in franchise history. The 2005 playoffs weren't as good to the RiverDogs as fans had hoped, because the RiverDogs fell to eventual champion the
Kannapolis Intimidators two games to none. At the end of the 2005 season, Charleston was making an attempt to attract a Class AA team by expanding their stadium by a few hundred seats. 2006 saw a good performance on the field, but no playoffs as the RiverDogs posted a 78-62 record. 2007 saw a record year for winning seasons when they finished the season with a 78-62 record and securing their fifth consecutive winning season tying a Charleston Professional Baseball record with the Sea Gulls (1914-1917, 1919) (No team in 1918). A downside to the record tying season was that the 'Dogs failed to make the playoffs for the second straight season. 2008 brought a memorable year to Charleston, as the Riverdogs recorded their final record at 80-59 bringing their sixth consecutive winning season, breaking a record for the most consecutive winning seasons (a record that stood since 1919) in Charleston baseball history. The downside to 2008 was the third straight season the Riverdogs failed to make the playoffs despite having the best record in the Southern Division, but never held the division lead at the end of each half season to claim a playoff spot. The 2009 season is in progress with the first half division race concluding in a tight finish with the Riverdogs coming up a game short to their arch-rival the
Greenville Drive with a 39-31 record at the end of first half play.
Season-by-season records
Note:
W = Wins, L = Losses''
Season
| W
| L
| Finish
| Postseason
|
1980 (Royals)
| 78
| 61
| Southern Division Champions
| WON
First Round (Spartanburg) Lost SAL Championship Series (Greensboro)
|
1981 (Royals)
| 75
| 67
| 2nd Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1982 (Royals)
| 74
| 66
| 2nd Southern Division
| Lost First Round (Florence)
|
1983 (Royals)
| 64
| 80
| 5th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1984 (Royals)
| 78
| 64
| First Half Southern Division Champions
| WON
First Round (Columbia) Lost SAL Championship Series (Asheville)
|
1985 (Rainbows)
| 63
| 69
| 3rd Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1986 (Rainbows)
| 68
| 71
| 3rd Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1987 (Rainbows)
| 85
| 53
| 5th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1988 (Rainbows)
| 72
| 68
| Southern Division Champions
| WON
First Round (Myrtle Beach) Lost SAL Championship Series (Spartanburg)
|
1989 (Rainbows)
| 46
| 96
| 3rd Southern Division
| Lost First Round (Augusta)
|
1990 (Rainbows)
| 69
| 72
| 6th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1991 (Rainbows)
| 55
| 85
| 4th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1992 (Rainbows)
| 55
| 85
| 7th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1993 (Rainbows)
| 66
| 70
| 5th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1994 (Riverdogs)
| 50
| 89
| 6th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1995 (Riverdogs)
| 50
| 89
| 7th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1996 (Riverdogs)
| 63
| 78
| 4th Central Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1997 (Riverdogs)
| 60
| 82
| 6th Central Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1998 (Riverdogs)
| 67
| 74
| 5th Central Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
1999 (Riverdogs)
| 65
| 77
| 5th Central Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2000 (Riverdogs)
| 73
| 66
| 3rd Central Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2001 (Riverdogs)
| 64
| 76
| 7th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2002 (Riverdogs)
| 60
| 76
| 7th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2003 (Riverdogs)
| 77
| 62
| 3rd Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2004 (Riverdogs)
| 76
| 63
| 2nd Southern Division
| Lost First Round (Capital City) 2-0
|
2005 (Riverdogs)
| 80
| 58
| Southern Division Champions
| Lost First Round (Kannapolis) 2-0
|
2006 (Riverdogs)
| 78
| 62
| 2nd Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
|
2007 (Riverdogs)
| 78
| 62
| 4th Southern Division
| Did Not Qualify
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2008 (Riverdogs)
| 80
| 59
| Southern Division Champions
| Did Not Qualify (Were not leading division at the end of each half season)
|
2009 (Riverdogs)
| 39
| 31
| 2nd Southern Division
| Season Still in Progress
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Cursed City and Teams
Charleston has had very little success on the field with minor league baseball. The Riverdogs in 2008 completed the most successful stretch of on the field play in Charleston's baseball history with their sixth straight winning season. This being known, Charlestonians have suggested that their baseball teams have been cursed over the years. Evidence to support this can be found in the 22 straight losses by a Charleston team in 1975, failure to post a winning season in the 1990's, as the Rainbows, in 2008 when the Riverdogs failed to make the playoffs despite having the best record in the Southern Division, and the fact that Charleston has not won a championship since 1948, bringing over 60 years of futility to Charleston baseball.
Notable players
A number of ex-RiverDogs have gone on to make a name for themselves in
Major League Baseball, including:
B.J. Upton,
Carl Crawford,
Rocco Baldelli,
Delmon Young,
Sandy Alomar, Jr. who played for the Rainbows,
Roberto Alomar who played for the Rainbows,
Carlos Baerga who played for the Rainbows,
Seth McClung,
Josh Hamilton,
Fernando Tatis,
Aubrey Huff, and
David Cone who played for the Royals.
Current Roster