1979 West Haven Yankees baseball program from the Eastern League

West Haven Yankees

Eastern League (1972-1979)

Tombstone

Born: 1972 – The Manchester Yankees relocate to West Haven, CT
Moved
: November 1979 (Lynn Sailors)

First Game: April 21, 1972 (L 4-1 @ Pawtucket Red Sox)
Last Game: September 1, 1979 (W 8-4 @ Bristol Red Sox)

Eastern League Champions: 1972, 1976, 1977 & 1979

Stadium

Quigley Stadium (4,500)11977 West Haven Yankees Program

Branding

Mascot: Yankee Frankie (1978-1979)

Ownership & Affiliation

Owners:

Major League Affiliation: New York Yankees

Attendance

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Source: The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball (3rd ed.), Lloyd Johnson & Miles Wolff, 2007

 

Background

West Haven, Connecticut hosted the Double-A farm club of the New York Yankees for eight summers from 1972 through 1979.  During this era West Haven served as an training ground for future Major League skippers Bobby Cox (1972), Doc Edwards (1973-1974) and Stump Merrill (1978-1979).

The Yankees rich farm system treated local fans to a number of future stars as they passed through Quigley Stadium on their way to The Show during the 1970’s, including:

  • Pitcher Doc Medich (1972)
  • Pitcher Scott McGregor (1973)
  • Second baseman Damaso Garcia (1977)
  • First baseman Willie Upshaw (1977)
  • Relief pitcher Ron Davis (1978)
  • Pitcher Dave Righetti (1979)
  • Center fielder Willie McGee (1979).

West Haven also featured not one but two future American League Cy Young Award winners during this stretch in Ron Guidry (1974) and LaMarr Hoyt (1975-1976).

The job of minor league farm teams is to develop talent for the parent club.  Winning ballgames is a secondary consideration, but the West Haven teams of the 1970’s were the class of the Eastern League on the field.  The Yankees won Eastern League titles in 1972, 1976, 1977 and 1979 during their eight-year stay.

1978 West Haven Yankees baseball program

Off Field Struggles

Off the field was another matter.  The 1970’s were something of a nadir for minor league baseball generally.  During West Haven’s 1976 championship season, only 23,000 fans came out to watch the club’s 70-odd home games, belying the notion that everybody loves a winner.  Attendance improved to 75,000 annually by 1979, but the club had continual trouble with dilapidated 4,000-seat Quigley Stadium.  In fact, Quigley, built in 1947, wasn’t even the nicest ballpark in town.  That honor belonged to Yale Field which had no lights at the time and therefore was unsuitable for minor league ball.

Lloyd Kern, who owned the team with Robert Zeig from 1977-1979, recalls arguments with West Haven city employees in the midst of ballgames over when to turn on Quigley’s dim stadium lights in the twilight.  At the end of the 1979 season, the Yankees pulled out and shifted their Double-A farm club to Nashville in the Southern League.

The End

Kern and Zeig quickly reached a new deal with the Seattle Mariners. They announced plans to change the name of the team to the West Haven Sailors, in honor of their new nautical-minded patrons.  But the first-time baseball owners were growing fed up with the nickle-and-dime attitude of West Haven city officials.

The Mariners would never set sail in West Haven.  Kern and Zeig pulled up stakes in November 1979 and moved to Fraser Field in Lynn, Massachusetts. The club became the Lynn Sailors for the summer of 1980. Meanwhile, the Oakland A’s shifted their Double-A farm club in Waterbury, Connecticut across the state for the 1980 season. The West Haven Whitecaps were saddled with the wreckage of Oakland’s farm system during the death wheeze of the Charlie O. Finley regime. The club finished with the second worst record in all of minor league baseball in 1980.  It was a long way to fall for Connecticut fans who were spoiled by Yankees prospects and championship runs for most of the 1970’s.  The A’s left at the end of the 1982 season. Minor league baseball never returned to Quigley Stadium.

The Eastern League franchise that once was the West Haven Yankees still exists today.  After stops in Lynn, Vermont and Canton, Ohio, the club plays on today as the Akron RubberDucks, a Double-A affiliate of the Cleveland Indians.

Quigley Stadium’s wooden grandstand was deemed unsafe and demolished in 1987.  In the early 1990’s, Yale Field installed lights. Eastern League baseball returned to West Haven in the form of the New Haven Ravens, who played a decade at Yale from 1994-2003.

1979 West Haven Yankees Front Office

 

Voices

“West Haven would not upgrade the lighting system at the park on a timely basis or improve our clubhouse facilities. Lynn was willing to put in a new lighting system and do some upgrades at the ballpark. Unfortunately, there were no other alternatives at the time.”

Lloyd Kern, West Haven Co-Owner (2011 FWiL Interview)

 

West Haven Yankees Shop

 

 

Downloads

2011 FWiL interview with former West Haven Yankees owner Lloyd Kern

 

Links

Eastern League Media Guides

 

Eastern League Programs

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Comments

3 Responses

  1. I bought the West Haven Yankees the night before opening day in 1975. The club was sold to Kern and Zeig after the end of the 1976 season.

  2. Donald Gervais played for the West Haven Yankees in the early 1970’s. Do you have any information on this?
    Also did Ron Guidry ever play for a short time with the West Haven Yankees before moving up to AAA?

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