Carlsbad Potashers Explained

Carlsbad Potashers
Firstseason:1953
Lastseason:1961
City:Carlsbad, New Mexico
Class Level:Class C (1953–1955)
Class B (1956–1957)
Class D (1958–1961)
League:Longhorn League (1953–1955)
Southwestern League (1956–1957)
Sophomore League (1958–1961)
Majorleague:Chicago Cubs (1958–1961)
Nickname:Carlsbad Potashers (1953–1961)
Ballpark:Montgomery Field (1953–1961)
Leaguenum:1
Leaguechamps:1953
Wildcardnum:3

The Carlsbad Potashers were a minor league baseball team based in Carlsbad, New Mexico. Carlsbad teams played as members of the Longhorn League from 1953 to 1955, Southwestern League in 1956 and 1957 and Sophomore League from 1958 to 1961, winning the 1953 league championship. Carlsbad played as a minor league affiliate of the Chicago Cubs from 1958 to 1961 and hosted home games at Montgomery Field.

In 1959, at Montgomery Field in Carlsbad, Potasher player Gil Carter hit a home run claimed have traveled 733 feet, possibly the longest in professional baseball history.

History

The Carlsbad Potashers began minor league play in 1953. Carlsbad teams played as members of the Class C level Longhorn League (1953–1955), the Class B level Southwestern League (1956–1957) and Class D level Sophomore League (1958–1961) during their nine seasons of play.[1] [2]

In their first season, the 1953 Potashers finished with a record of 80–52 and captured the Longhorn League Championship. The 1954 and 1959 teams lost in the league Finals[2]

The Potashers attendance was 83,462 in their first season of 1953, an average of 1,265 per game. In their last season, 1961, they drew 14,974 an average of 236 per game.[3]

Gil Carter: Possibly longest home run in history

As reported in The Sporting News, Potashers player Gil Carter hit a majestic home run at Montgomery Field in 1959:"On a hot August night in 1959, former heavyweight boxer Gil Carter smashed a pitch through Carlsbad's high-elevated air and out of Montgomery Field. The ball carried over the left field wall, soared past two city streets and landed in a peach tree. A newspaper reporter later took an aerial photo from a plane and used the picture to estimate the ball traveled 733 feet. Carter's hometown paper, The Topeka Capital-Journal, said "the blast is considered the longest home run in baseball history."[4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

The official scorer estimated the home run to have traveled 650 feet. However, aerial photographs measurements put the distance at 700–733 feet, which would make it the longest home run ever hit in professional baseball. The ball itself was signed by Carter and notes the distance of 733 feet.[9]

Gil Carter was inducted into the National Baseball Congress Hall of Fame in 2015.[10]

The ballpark

The Potashers played home minor league games at Montgomery Field. Montgomery Field had a capacity of 2,500 and dimensions of (Left, Center, Right) 340–390–340. The ballpark is no longer in existence.[11] [12]

Timeline

Year(s)
  1. Yrs.
Team Level LeagueAffiliateBallpark
1953–19553Carlsbad Potashers Class CLonghorn LeagueNoneMontgomery Field
1956–19572 Class BSouthwestern League
1958–19614 Class DSophomore LeagueChicago Cubs

Year–by–year records

Year Record Finish Manager Playoffs/Notes
195380-52 1st League Champions
1954 87-52 3rd Lost League Finals
1955 72-67 4th Thurman Tucker Lost in 1st round
1956 70-74 7th Thurman Tucker Did not qualify
1957 65-54 3rd Jodie Phipps Did not qualify
1958 55-65 5th Tony York Did not qualify
1959 72-54 2nd Lost League Finals
1960 66-64 3rd Did not qualify
1961 56-71 5th Did not qualify
[2]

Notable alumni

See also

Carlsbad Potashers players

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Carlsbad, New Mexico Encyclopedia. Baseball-Reference.com.
  2. Book: The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball . Lloyd Johnson . Miles Wolff . Third . . 2007 . 978-1932391176.
  3. Web site: Montgomery Field in Carlsbad, NM history and teams on StatsCrew.com. www.statscrew.com.
  4. Web site: Where was baseball's longest home run? A five-city mystery. 11 January 2016. Sporting News.
  5. Web site: This Day in History - MiLB.com History - The Official Site of Minor League Baseball. MiLB.com.
  6. Web site: The longest homerun in baseball history was measured at 733 ft. 5 January 2018.
  7. Web site: Elysian Fields Quarterly - The Baseball Review. www.efqreview.com.
  8. Web site: Gil Carter.
  9. Web site: Gil Carter home run baseball - Kansas Memory - Kansas Historical Society. www.kshs.org.
  10. Web site: National Baseball Congress Hall Of Fame.
  11. Web site: Chicago Cubs Minor League Affiliations and Baseball Stadium History. digitalballparks.com.
  12. Web site: Minor league baseball at Montgomery Field in Carlsbad, NM on StatsCrew.com.