Walla Walla Padres Explained

Walla Walla Padres
Firstseason:1973
Lastseason:1982
City:Walla Walla, Washington
Division:North (1977–1982)
South (1975–1976)
East (1974)
Ballpark:Borleske Stadium
Leaguenum:2
Divnum:4
Owner:Patricia Nelly (1976-1982)
Verne Russell (1970-1975)
Colors:Brown, gold, white

The Walla Walla Padres were the primary name of a minor league baseball team in the northwest United States, located in Walla Walla, Washington. Named after their parent club, the Padres were members of the Class A short-season Northwest League for ten years, from 1973 through 1982.

History

In 1969, with the expansion of Major League Baseball, Walla Walla sought the prospect of bringing professional baseball to the community. On January 12, 1969 it was announced that the Walla Walla Valley Baseball Club had officially been awarded membership into the Northwest League[1] The franchise played three seasons as an affiliate of the Philadelphia Phillies until 1971. In 1972, in an odd arrangement, the club played as an affiliate of Triple-A Pacific Coast League Hawaii Islanders. Following the season, Walla Walla signed a player development contract with the San Diego Padres, who had previously partnered with Tri-City.

Adopting the namesake of their parent club, Walla Walla became the Padres.[2] In their first season affiliated with the Padres, Walla Walla won the league title in 1973.[3] The Padres claimed the Northwest League crown again in 1976,[4] defeating the fabled Portland Mavericks two games to one in the championship series. Walla Walla sought a third title in 1979,[5] [6] [7] but fell to the Central Oregon Phillies.

After years of declining attendance the franchise was sold following the 1982 season to New Jersey-based Big Six Sports.[8] The new ownership group promptly moved the club west to Richland, rebranded them as the Tri-Cities Triplets, and signed a player development contract with the Texas Rangers. The San Diego Padres shifted their NWL affiliate to Spokane, which had just lost its Triple-A team to Las Vegas. Professional baseball continued in Walla Walla with the independent Blue Mountain Bears in 1983, but after one season, they moved west and became the Everett Giants in 1984.

Early Walla Walla Baseball

The history of baseball in the Walla Walla Valley dates back to the late 19th century. The Walla Walla Walla Wallas of the Pacific Interstate League played in 1891. The Walla Wallas continued play in the 1908 Inland Empire League and the 1902 Inland Empire League team played with the nickname "Sharpshooters". In 1912 the Western Tri-State League was formed with the Walla Walla Bears playing in the circuit for three season before disbanding.[9] [10]

Ballpark

Walla Walla teams played at Borleske Stadium, located at 409 West Rees Avenue in Walla Walla, Washington. The stadium is still in use today.[11]

Season-by-season record

SeasonPDCDivisionFinishWinsLossesWin%Post-seasonManagerAttendance
Walla Walla Padres
1973SDPNorth1st5129.638League champion by virtue of best recordCliff Ditto33,259
1974SDPEast2nd4737.560Cliff Ditto28,295
1975SDPSouth2nd4831.608Cliff Ditto25,662
1976SDPSouth1st4626.639Defeated Portland in championship series 2-1Cliff Ditto28,971
1977SDPAffiliate2nd4127.603Cliff Ditto27,272
1978SDPNorth2nd4524.652Cliff Ditto51,488
1979SDPNorth1st4030.571Lost to Central Oregon in championship series 2-1Curt Daniels20,358
1980SDPNorth3rd3534.507Curt Daniels 15,188
1981SDPNorth3rd2941.414Bill Bryk28,909
1982SDPNorth3rd3238.457Jim Skalen18,771
Division winner League champions

Notable players

Two future hall of famers played for the team: shortstop Ozzie Smith (1977) and outfielder Tony Gwynn (1981). Their NWL batting averages were .301 for Smith and .331 for Gwynn.

Other future major leaguers included Joe McIntosh (1974–1975), Eric Show (1978), Ron Tingley (1977–1978), Bob Geren (1979–1980), Mark Parent (1979), Greg Booker (1981), John Kruk (1981), Jimmy Jones (1982), Gene Walter (1982) and Mitch Williams (1982). Geren and Parent both became managers with different teams (Geren with the Oakland A's of MLB and Parent with the Chico Outlaws of the Golden Baseball League).

Notable alumni

Baseball Hall of Fame alumni

Other notable alumni

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: It's Official! Pro Baseball in Walla Walla!. 2020-09-20. en.
  2. News: Padres switch . Spokane Daily Chronicle . (Washington). Associated Press . September 14, 1972 . 37 .
  3. News: Northwest League standings: final . Ellensburg Daily Record . (Washington). September 1, 1973 . 4.
  4. News: Walla Walla wins NWL . Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press . September 7, 1976 . 6C.
  5. News: Phils brace for shot at NWL title . The Bulletin . (Bend, Oregon) . staff and wire reports . August 31, 1979. 13.
  6. News: NWL season reduced to 3 games . The Bulletin . (Bend, Oregon). Pritchett . John . September 1, 1979. 12.
  7. News: Phillies win themselves a flag . The Bulletin . (Bend, Oregon). Welch . Bob . September 4, 1979. 15.
  8. Web site: Skip. Nichols. NWL approves owner for Walla Walla team. 2020-07-20. newspaperarchive.com. en.
  9. Web site: Pacific Interstate League (No Classification) Encyclopedia and History. Baseball-Reference.com.
  10. Web site: 1891 Walla Walla Walla Wallas Statistics. Baseball-Reference.com.
  11. Web site: 2014-08-19. Walla Walla Sweets Baseball: History. https://web.archive.org/web/20140819023027/http://wallawallasweets.com/stadium/history/. dead. 2014-08-19. 2020-07-20.