Great Lakes Loons Explained

Great Lakes Loons
Founded:1982
City:Midland, Michigan
Misc:Based in Midland since
Class Level:High-A (2021–present)
Past Class Level:Class A (1995–2020)
Current League:Midwest League (1995–present)
Division:East Division
Majorleague:Los Angeles Dodgers (2007–present)
Pastmajorleague:
Nickname:
Colors:Desert red, metallic black, Green Bay green, cool gray, white
Ballpark:Dow Diamond (2007–present)
Pastparks:
Mascot:Lou E. Loon (2007–present)
Rall E. Camel (2012–present)
Doodle the Eagle (2003–2006)
Rally Cat (1995–2002)
Leaguenum:2
Divnum:1
Firsthalfnum:2
Owner:Michigan Baseball Foundation
Manager:Jair Fernandez
Gm:Chris Mundhenk[1]

The Great Lakes Loons are a Minor League Baseball team of the Midwest League and the High-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers.[2] They are located in Midland, Michigan, and play their home games at Dow Diamond, which opened in April 2007.

History

The Midwest League came to Battle Creek, in 1995 after the franchise formerly known as the Madison Hatters moved. The team was first known as the Battle Creek Golden Kazoos. Due to a trademark dispute and general fan dissatisfaction with the name (which is a nickname for the nearby city of Kalamazoo), the name was changed to the Michigan Battle Cats on March 9, 1995.

The team was affiliated with the Boston Red Sox (1995–98) and Houston Astros (1999–2002). The team changed its name to the Battle Creek Yankees after becoming an affiliate of the New York Yankees in 2003. The Tampa Bay Devil Rays took over affiliation of the team after the 2004 season, and the team name was changed to the Southwest Michigan Devil Rays.

In January 2006, the Devil Rays were sold to the non-profit Michigan Baseball Foundation and relocated to Midland, Michigan, in 2007. The team was renamed the Great Lakes Loons. A lack of interest from the Battle Creek community was the main reason for the move. Reduced ticket prices (even a night when fans were actually offered a dollar to come to that night's game) failed to pique the interest of local residents.

Naming rights for the Loons' stadium were purchased by Dow Chemical, which is headquartered in Midland. The company named the stadium "Dow Diamond." Ground was broken on the stadium on April 11, 2006, with construction taking 367 days to complete. In September 2006, the team announced its new affiliation with the Los Angeles Dodgers. In November 2006, the Loons named Lance Parrish as the team's first manager since the move to Michigan's Tri-City Area. The first home game was played on April 13, 2007.

After nine seasons in Midland, the Loons went through an overhaul of their logos and brand to give the franchise a fresh, updated look heading into its 10th season in 2016.[3]

On September 18, 2016, the Loons clinched their first Midwest League championship following a 9–8 victory over the Seattle Mariners-affiliated Clinton LumberKings.[4] The Loons won the championship series 3–1, following three-game series victories over the Bowling Green Hot Rods (Tampa Bay Rays) and West Michigan Whitecaps (Detroit Tigers) in the previous rounds. The Loons were managed by Gil Velazquez.

The Loons have hosted the Midwest League All-Star Game on two occasions (2008 and 2017).

On August 23, 2019, the Loons hosted their largest crowd ever of 6,671 people.[5]

In conjunction with Major League Baseball's restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Loons were organized into the High-A Central.[6] In 2022, the High-A Central became known as the Midwest League, the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization.[7]

Season-by-season records

Michigan Battle Cats (1995–2002)
Season Record Finish Manager Playoffs
1995 75–62 4th Lost League Finals
1996 60–78 11th
1997 70–67 4th Lost in 1st round
1998 79–61 2nd (t) Lost in 1st round
1999 76–62 3rd Lost in 1st round
2000 82–56 2nd League Champs
2001 82–55 3rd Lost in 1st round
2002 79–61 4th Lost in 1st round
Battle Creek Yankees (2003–2004)
Year Record Finish Manager Playoffs
2003 73–64 3rd Lost in 2nd round
2004 71–68 9th Mitch Seoane (13–18) / Bill Mosiello (58–50)
Southwest Michigan Devil Rays (2005–2006)
Year Record Finish Manager Playoffs
2005 72–67 4th (t) Lost in 1st round to SB
2006 62–77 12th
Great Lakes Loons (2007–present)
Year Record Finish Manager Playoffs
2007 57–82 5th
2008 54–85 6th
2009 81–59 2nd Lost in 2nd round to FW
2010 90–49 1st Lost in 2nd round to LC
2011 72–67 4th
2012 67–73 6th
2013 67–72 5th Lost in 1st round to SB
2014 66–73 4th
2015 68–69 7th Lost in 1st round to LAN
2016 65–75 6th League Champions
2017 69–70 5th
2018 60–77 6th Lost in 1st round to WM
2019 58–794th Lost in 2nd Round to SB

Mascot

Lou E. Loon is the team mascot and Ambassador of Fun for the team. He's an energetic bird who loves to dance at home games and make public appearances. The kids' play area at the diamond is named Lou E.'s Lookout in his honor. He often leads fans in his signature cheer, the "Funky Feather", which won "Best In-Game Promotion of the Year" in 2009 for Minor League Baseball.

"Rall E. Camel" was introduced as the team's second mascot in April 2012. He is an honorary deputy ambassador of mischief and is an ostensibly goofy addition to the staff of the Great Lakes Loons.

Notable Great Lakes Loons alumni

2-time World Series MVP (2020, 2023)

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chris Mundhenk Named Great Lakes Loons President & General Manager. milb. April 6, 2021. March 7, 2022.
  2. Web site: Club Information. Great Lakes Loons. Minor League Baseball. February 12, 2019.
  3. Web site: New Great Lake Loons logo evokes summertime in Michigan. Chris Creamer's SportsLogos.Net News and Blog : New Logos and New Uniforms news, photos, and rumours. en-US. 2018-12-05.
  4. Web site: Loons win 2016 Midwest League title. Stephen. Eric. 2016-09-18. True Blue LA. 2018-12-05.
  5. Web site: Great Lakes Loons Set Single-Game Attendance Record. 26 August 2019.
  6. Web site: Mayo. Jonathan. MLB Announces New Minors Teams, Leagues. Major League Baseball. February 12, 2021. February 12, 2021.
  7. Web site: Historical League Names to Return in 2022. Minor League Baseball. March 16, 2022. March 16, 2022.
  8. Web site: Loons in the Majors.