River City Rascals
{{Short description|American professional baseball team}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2022}}
{{Infobox baseball team
|name = River City Rascals
|founded = 1993
|city = O'Fallon, Missouri
|ballpark = CarShield Field
|logo = RC Rascals.PNG
|cap_logo = RC Rascals cap.PNG
|league = Frontier League
|division =
|former_leagues =
|former_names = {{plainlist|
- River City Rascals (1999–2019)
- Zanesville Greys (1993–96)
}}
|nicknames =
|uniform =
|folded=2019
|retired_numbers =
|colors = Black, cardinal, ecru
{{color box|#000}} {{color box|#710713}} {{color box|#B8AB84}} {{color box|#fff}}
|former_ballparks =
|league_champs = 3 (1993, 2010, 2019)
|division_champs = 6 (1993, 2000, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014)
|owner = PS&J Professional Baseball
| general_manager = David Schmoll
|manager =
|media =
|website = {{URL|rivercityrascals.com/}}
}}
The River City Rascals were a professional baseball team based in O'Fallon, Missouri, in the United States. The Rascals were a member of the West Division of the Frontier League, which is not affiliated with Major League Baseball. From the 1999 season to 2019, the Rascals played their home games at CarShield Field.
History
= Zanesville Greys =
The franchise began in 1993 as one of the original six teams of the independent Frontier League with teams from Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia.{{cite web|work=Frontier League|url=http://www.frontierleague.com/history.php|title=Frontier League History|access-date=May 26, 2011}} The Greys played in Zanesville, Ohio, at Gant Municipal Stadium, a historic 4,000-seat multipurpose stadium built in 1940. The Greys were the first professional baseball team to play in Zanesville since 1950 and the Zanesville Indians.{{cite web|work=www.digitalballparks.com|url=http://www.digitalballparks.com/Frontier/Gant.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060217084430/http://www.digitalballparks.com/Frontier/Gant.html|url-status=usurped|archive-date=February 17, 2006|title=Gant Memorial Stadium|access-date=May 26, 2011}}
The Greys won both halves of the 1993 season and defeated the Ohio Valley Redcoats in the playoffs to become the first champions of the Frontier League.{{cite web|work=Tim's Unofficial Frontier League History Pages|url=http://flhistory.gofreeserve.com/ZanesvilleGreys.htm|title=Zanesville Greys History|access-date=May 27, 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110809141224/http://flhistory.gofreeserve.com/ZanesvilleGreys.htm|archive-date=August 9, 2011}} Zanesville had five players hit over .300 as well as solid pitching; Kyle Shade was named Frontier League MVP and Tom Crowley was named Most Valuable Pitcher. The Greys also led the league in attendance with an average of 1,000 fans per game.
Despite a 35–28 record in the 1994 season, the team finished in third place in the North Division behind Ohio Valley and Erie Sailors. The team returned to the playoffs in 1995 after a season characterized by solid pitching and baserunning. Despite only recording 12 home runs, the Greys led the league with 137 stolen bases. Zanesville swept the Newark Buffaloes two games to none in the Division Championship Series before falling to the Johnstown Steal in the Frontier League Championship Series. Closing pitcher, Don Wolfe was named League MVP and Playoff MVP in 1995. Wolfe had a league-leading 21 saves during the 1995 season.
Zanesville pitching was again strong in the 1996 season. The Greys were led by Matt Baxter with a 9–2 record and 2.47 ERA while the bullpen was led by Terry Pearson, who recorded 20 saves and a .50 ERA and stuck out 43 batters in 36 innings while only walking eight batters for the entire season. Pitching was not enough to make the playoffs and the team finished third in the FL East Division.
Although the team had a winning record in each of the three seasons in Zanesville, the franchise fell into financial trouble. This was partially due to the Greys' market being one of the smallest in the league with a population around 25,000. The franchise was inactive during the 1997 and 1998 seasons.
= River City Rascals =
On Tuesday, October 27, 1998, O'Fallon, Missouri, Mayor Paul Renaud announced the new name of the team to be the "River City Rascals".{{cite news | first=Nordeka | last=English | title=No Trouble: River City Rascals Coming to Minor League Home | page=St. Charles sec. 1 | date=October 29, 1997 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} Initial ownership of the Rascals consisted of a local group headed by Ken Wilson.{{cite news | first=Joe | last=Lyons | title=Rascals Getting Down to Business | page=St. Charles Sec. 1 | date=March 22, 1999 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}}
The Rascals began play in 1999 in the Western Division of the Frontier League under manager Jack Clark, pitching coach Greg Mathews, and first-base coach Dick Schofield Jr., all previous Major League Baseball players.{{cite web|work=Tim's Unofficial Frontier League History Pages|url=http://flhistory.gofreeserve.com/RiverCityRascals.htm|title=River City Rascals History|access-date=May 27, 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711104029/http://flhistory.gofreeserve.com/RiverCityRascals.htm|archive-date=July 11, 2011}} The first game played was on Wednesday, June 2, 1999, on the road against the Cook County Cheetahs of Crestwood, Illinois. Pitcher Joey Pipes pitched a complete game in losing by a score of 1–0.{{cite news | first=Joe | last=Lyons | title=Rascals Head for Home after 1-3 Road Start | page=St. Charles Sec. 6 | date=June 8, 1999 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} The first home game was played on Tuesday, June 8, 1999, at T.R. Hughes Ballpark at the Ozzie Smith Sports Complex in front of an overflow crowd of 4,173 (3,500 seat capacity). The Rascals beat the Dubois County Dragons by a score of 6-5 by rallying from a 5–1 deficit with William Black scoring on Tim Still's sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth inning.{{cite news | first=Joe | last=Lyons | title=Rascals Win Home Debut in a Thriller | page= Sports Sec. D1 | date=June 1999 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} This was the first minor league baseball game in Missouri since 1955. Under Clark, a former St. Louis Cardinals slugger,{{cite news | first=Joe | last=Lyons | title=Clark Returns as Manager | page= Sports Sec. D5 | date=January 21, 1999 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} the team led the Frontier League in home runs, however only two pitchers had ERAs under 5.00. The move of the franchise from Zanesville to O'Fallon saw a major increase in attendance. The team averaged more than 150,000 fans in 1999 and set new franchise records in 2000 and again in 2002. The Rascals were named Frontier League Organization of the Year in 1999 and 2000; and Pat Daly was named Executive of the Year in 1999 followed by Matt Jones in 2002.
Clark left after the 1999 season to join the Los Angeles Dodgers as a hitting coach.{{cite news|last=Staff|work=St. Louis Post Dispatch|url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SL&p_theme=sl&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB05207068F25AB&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|title=Clark won't return as Rascals' manager|date=January 4, 2000|access-date=May 27, 2011}} He was replaced by Neil Fiala, who led the team to a West Division title in 2000 before losing in the first round of the playoffs to the Evansville Otters. The team just missed making the playoffs again in 2001, being eliminated on the last day of the season. The season was highlighted by outfielder Mike Robertson's 30-game hitting before being signed by the Boston Red Sox organization. Fiala resigned after the 2002 season and was replaced by former major-league catcher Marc Hill. Hill resigned after underperforming in the first half of the 2003 season and was replaced midseason by pitching coach Randy Martz.
Former pitcher Josh Kinney who played for the Rascals in 2001 (21 innings, 18 strikeouts, 1.71 ERA) became the first Rascal player, and second in franchise history, to make it to the Major Leagues. His contract was purchased from the Memphis Redbirds on July 2, 2006, by the St. Louis Cardinals where he appeared out of the bullpen during the 2006 regular season. His first major league pitch (July 3, 2006) was hit for a home run by Atlanta Braves left fielder Ryan Langerhans; Kinney finished the 2006 season winning a championship ring with the Cardinals as 2006 World Series Champions.{{cite web |title=Former Rascal Pitches in World Series; Josh Kinney Pitches for Cardinals |url=http://www.rivercityrascals.com/cgi-bin/archive/news.cgi?id=4 |website=River City Rascals |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070325013639/http://www.rivercityrascals.com/cgi-bin/archive/news.cgi?id=4 |archive-date=March 25, 2007 |date=October 27, 2006}}
In 2005 the team auctioned off a "one-day professional contract" on eBay. Mark Skorlich, a 41-year-old Californian, won the auction with a $9,050 winning bid.{{cite news |title=California man wins bidding to play in minors |url=https://www.espn.com/minorlbb/news/story?id=2056487 |access-date=November 16, 2023 |work=ESPN |agency=Associated Press |date=May 9, 2005 |language=en}} The proceeds were donated to the local chapter of the United Way in nearby St. Louis. Coach Randy Martz started Skorlich in center field and the newly minted "pro" made a long throw from the right-center field gap into the cut-off man, but he saw no other action in the field. Local and national news outlets covered the story with the game being a sell-out.{{citation needed|date=November 2023}}
Following the 2006 season the franchise was acquired by the group PS and J Professional Baseball Club, LLC headed by Steve Malliet, an experienced minor league executive in both affiliated and independent baseball.{{cite news | first=Joe | last=Lyons | title=New owner is anxious to take over Rascals | page=Metro Sec. B4 | date=August 2, 2006 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} After declining attendance and a number of seasons without a winning record Malliet hired former Cincinnati Reds farmhand Toby Rumfield as the Rascals' manager for the 2007 season.{{cite news | last=Staff | title=Rascals pick Rumfield as their new manager | page=C11 | date=October 4, 2006 | newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch}} Rumfield began remaking the team, with only a few players from the 2006 remaining on the roster. The rebuilding was not immediate and the team finished with a record of 36–60. The 2007 Rascals finished last in the league in both fielding and pitching and offense suffered after the team lost first baseman Bobby Mosby in a trade to the Northern League and outfielder Phil Laurent, who was signed by the San Diego Padres. Under Rumfield, pitching improved in 2008 and closer Mike Benacka recorded 13 saves and a 0.35 ERA in 22 games before signing with Oakland Athletics halfway through the season. The Rascals finished 4th in the West Division with a record of 47–49. Despite the improvement from 2006 Rumfield was replaced by Chad Parker, who previously managed the Macon Music of the South Coast League.
Parker continued the rebuilding process and focused on adding speed and strengthen pitching. Under Parker, seven players reached double figures in steals, led by OF Scott Houin with 35. Offense was led by Chad Maddox (.307) and Ryan Wehrle (.317), and in August, Frontier League all-star Ernie Banks was acquired from the Washington Wild Things and hit .353 on the season. The Rascals clinched a division title late in the regular season, marking the first time since 2000. In the first round of the playoffs the team defeated the Windy City ThunderBolts, the first playoff series win since 1995 in Zanesville. In the Frontier League Championship Series the Rascals won the first two games of the series before Lake Erie Crushers rallied with three straight wins.{{cite news|last=Staff|work=The Plain Dealer|url=http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2009/09/david_richardspecial_to_the_pl.html|title=First season, first place: Lake Erie Crushers win Frontier League crown with 13-10 triumph|date=September 24, 2009|access-date=May 27, 2011}} The Rascals ended the 2009 season with a franchise-record 56 wins and Parker was named Frontier League Coach of the Year.
Parker resigned following the season and was replaced by former River City pitcher Steve Brook. Brook continued the rebuilding from Parker and the team finished second in the West Division. The team won the first round playoff series against the Southern Illinois Miners and entered the Frontier League Championship Series for the second straight season, a first in franchise history. The Rascals defeated the Traverse City Beach Bums in four games and won the franchise's second championship and first as the Rascals.{{cite news|last=Staff|work=St. Louis Post Dispatch|url=https://www.stltoday.com/sports/other/article_cc3c5cf1-3230-5632-896c-69ea84033991.html|title=River City Rascals win Frontier League championship|date=September 20, 2010|access-date=May 27, 2011}}
In 2013, the Rascals and the City of O'Fallon, Missouri came to an agreement to extend their lease at TR Hughes Ballpark through the 2022 season.{{cite web| url = https://www.stltoday.com/suburban-journals/stcharles/news/new-lease-would-give-rascals-break-on-o-fallon-ballpark/article_c96fba4a-af12-5f5e-84b6-99932add2259.html| title = New lease would give Rascals break on O'Fallon ballpark rent {{!}} Local News from the St. Charles Suburban Journals {{!}} stltoday.com}} However, in October 2018 the city of O'Fallon locked the Rascals out of CarShield Field and terminated the lease, citing a lack of payment. The team's ownership disputed the claims of unpaid bills in a statement, and said it would play ball in 2019.{{cite web| url = https://www.stltoday.com/sports/baseball/river-city-baseball-locked-out-by-city-of-o-fallon/article_f53eb9a1-bb77-5602-98ba-15533beaf23e.html| title = River City baseball, locked out by City of O'Fallon, pledges return in 2019 {{!}} MLB News {{!}} stltoday.com}} The dispute was resolved with a new one-year lease in January 2019, opening a path for the Rascals season to continue as scheduled.{{cite web| url = https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/news/2019/01/17/river-city-rascals-sign-new-lease-for-city-owned.html| title = River City Rascals, city of O'Fallon reach new lease agreement - St. Louis Business Journal}}
On August 12, 2019, the team announced that they would cease operations after the 2019 season.{{Cite web|url=https://www.ksdk.com/article/news/crime/river-city-rascals-ceasing-operations-after-2019-season-ofallon-looking-for-new-team/63-343ea770-5398-48b4-802c-e0d6aa6991da|title=River City Rascals ceasing operations after 2019 season, O'Fallon looking for new team|website=KSDK|access-date=August 12, 2019}} The Rascals defeated the Florence Freedom in a decisive Game 5 winning 7-5 thus securing the 2019 Championship in their final season.
Season-by-season record
class="wikitable style="text-align:center; font-size:85%"
|align="center" bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Division Champions |align="center" bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|Frontier League Champions |
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:95%" |
rowspan=2|Season
!rowspan=2|League !rowspan=2|Division !colspan=5|Regular season !rowspan=2|Post-season !rowspan=2|Awards |
---|
Finish
!Wins !Win% !GB |
align="center" colspan="11" bgcolor="000000" style="color:white"|Zanesville Greys |
align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"| 1993
|align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"| FL |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| West |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| 1st | 35 | 17 | .673 | — |align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"|Won FLCS vs. Ohio Valley Redcoats 2-0 |1993 Kyle Shade, Most Valuable Player |
1994
| FL | North | 3rd | 35 | 28 | .548 | 6.5 | | |
1995
| FL | — | 3rd | 37 | 31 | .544 | 8.5 | Won first round vs. Newark Buffaloes 2–0. | Don Wolfe, Most Valuable Pitcher |
1996{{cite news |title=1996 Frontier League (FL) Minor League Baseball Standings |url=https://www.statscrew.com/minorbaseball/standings/l-FRON/y-1996 |access-date=April 23, 2023 |work=StatsCrew.com |language=en}}
| FL | East | 3rd | 41 | 33 | .554 | 7.0 | | |
align="center" colspan="11" bgcolor="000" style="color:#B8AB84"|River City Rascals |
1999
| FL | West | 5th | 39 | 45 | .464 | 5 | | |
2000
| FL |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| West |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| 1st | 46 | 36 | .561 | — |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| Lost in first round vs. Evansville Otters 2–0. | Ryan Bauer, Most Valuable Pitcher |
2001
| FL | West | 2nd | 46 | 38 | .548 | 2 | | |
2002
| FL | West | 4th | 39 | 45 | .464 | 13 | | |
2003
| FL | West | 4th | 43 | 47 | .478 | 8 | | |
2004
| FL | West | 3rd | 51 | 43 | .543 | 6.5 | | Chris Klosterman, Frontier League All Star |
2005
| FL | West | 4th | 42 | 52 | .447 | 10 | | |
2006
| FL | West | 5th | 40 | 56 | .417 | 9 | | |
2007
| FL | West | 3rd | 36 | 60 | .375 | 29.5 | | |
2008
| FL |West | 5th | 47 | 49 | .490 | 13 | | |
2009
| FL |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| West |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| 1st | 56 | 38 | .596 | — |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| Won in first round vs. Windy City ThunderBolts 3–0. | Chad Parker, Manager Of the Year |
align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"| 2010
|align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"| FL | West | 2nd | 57 | 38 | .600 | 6.5 |align="center" style="background: #FFCCCC"|Won first round vs. Southern Illinois Miners 3-2 | |
2011
| FL |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| West |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| 1st | 68 | 27 | .716 | — |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| Won in first round vs. Southern Illinois Miners 3–1. | |
2012
| FL |West | 4th | 45 | 50 | .474 | 11.5 | | |
2013
| FL |West | 3rd | 50 | 46 | .521 | 9 | |Danny Canela, Rookie of the Year |
2014
| FL |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| West |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| 1st | 61 | 36 | .629 | — |align="center" style="background: #FFE6BD"| Won in first round vs. Washington Wild Things 2–1. |Taylor Ard, Frontier League All Star |
2015
| FL |West |2nd | 56 | 40 | .583 | 5 | Defeated Florence Freedom 6–5 in preliminary round. |Taylor Ard, Most Valuable Player |
2016
| FL |West |2nd | 49 | 47 | .510 | 14 | |Josh Ludy, Frontier League All Star |
colspan=5 rowspan=4|Totals
!Wins !Losses !Win% !colspan=3| |
127
!93 !.577 !colspan=3|All-time Zanesville Greys record (1993–1996) |
869
!804 !.519 !colspan=3|All-time River City Rascals record (1999–2016) |
30
!26 !.536 !colspan=3|All-time franchise postseason record |
Greys/Rascals in Major League Baseball
- Justin Christian (River City 2003–04) most recently pitched in the Tampa Bay Rays system. He played for the New York Yankees in 2008, and the San Francisco Giants in 2011–2012.{{Cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/chrisju01.shtml|title=Justin Christian Stats|website=Baseball-Reference.com|language=en|access-date=August 12, 2019}}
- Josh Kinney (River City 2001) most recently pitched in the Pittsburgh Pirates system. He pitched for St. Louis Cardinals in 2006 and 2008–2009, the Chicago White Sox in 2011, and Mariners in 2012.{{Cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/kinnejo01.shtml|title=Josh Kinney Stats|website=Baseball-Reference.com|language=en|access-date=August 12, 2019}}
- Terry Pearson (Zanesville 1995–96) pitched for the Detroit Tigers in 2002.
- Joe Thatcher (River City 2004–05) pitched for the San Diego Padres from 2007 to 2013, the Arizona Diamondbacks 2013–2014, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 2014, and the Houston Astros in 2015.
Sources
{{Reflist|35em}}
External links
- [http://www.rivercityrascals.com/ River City Rascals]
{{Frontier League}}
{{Missouri Sports}}
{{O'Fallon, Missouri}}
Category:Former Frontier League teams
Category:Baseball teams established in 1993
Category:Baseball teams disestablished in 2019
Category:1993 establishments in Missouri
Category:Professional baseball teams in Missouri
Category:Sports in Greater St. Louis