Mankato Mets Baseball

Mankato Mets

Northern League (1967-1968)

Tombstone

Born: 1967
Folded: August 1968 – The Mets cancel their affiliation with Mankato

First Game: June 25, 1967 (W 5-4 vs. Sioux Falls Packers)
Last Game
: September 2, 1968 (W 11-5 @ Sioux Falls Packers)

Northern League Championships: None

Stadium

Key City Park
Opened: 1961

Ownership & Affiliation

Owner: Mankato Area Baseball Corp. (Fritz Taylor, et al.)

Major League Affiliation: New York Mets

Attendance

The Mets had the worst attendance in the Northern League in both 1967 and 1968.

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

 

Background

A short-lived Class A farm club of the New York Mets that lasted for just two seasons in the small city of Mankato, Minnesota.  Mankato was the second rung on New York’s developmental ladder, just above their rookie level Appalachian League club in Marion, Virginia.  Most of Mankato’s players were young prospects in their late teens or early twenties.

During the 1968 Northern League season, Mankato drew only “150 to 250 fans per game”, according to United Press International.  In August 1968, Mets minor league director Joe McDonald informed Mankato President Fritz Taylor that New York would not renew their affiliation agreement with Mankato after the 1968 season ended on Labor Day weekend.  This brought the short history of pro baseball in Mankato to an end after two summers of play.

5 members of the Mankato Mets went on to see Major League service time.  The players who enjoyed the most significant Major League careers were pitchers Ernie McAnally, who won 11 games as a rookie for the Montreal Expos in 1971, and Charlie Williams, who pitched in 268 Major League games from 1971 to 1978, mostly with the San Francisco Giants.

Key City Park still stands and is known today as Franklin Rogers Park.  The 1,400-seat ballpark has hosted amateur wooden bat league baseball in the Northwoods League since 1999.

 

In Memoriam

Mankato Mets President Fritz Taylor passed away on April 1, 2007 at age 90.

 

Links

Northern League Programs 1933-1971

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