Portland Mavericks

Northwest League (1973-1977)

Tombstone

Born: 1973
Died: 1977

First Game:
Last Game:

Northwest League Championships: None

Stadium

Ownership & Affiliation

Owner: Bing Russell

Major League Affiliation: Independent

 

Mavs Merch

Portland Mavericks
Flex Cap

Cultural icons from Escape From New York star Kurt Russell (son of club owner Bing Russell) to Ball Four author and former Yankees great Jim Bouton once rocked these eye-catching caps for the renegade Class A Portland Mavericks teams of the mid-70’s. 
  • Raised embroidery
  • Low crown
  • Structured fit
  • Curved bill
 
When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns a commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

Background

The Portland Mavericks. This renegade ball club existed for only five summers, but managed to leave an indelible stamp (their contemporary detractors might have said “stain”) on the landscape of minor league baseball.  The Mavs came to town in 1973 after the Beavers, Portland’s long-time entry in the Pacific Coast League, moved to Spokane, Washington.

It didn’t seem like a promising trade-off for Portland baseball fans at first.  The Beavers played triple-A baseball, just one step removed from the Major Leagues. Or at least one call up away from their woeful parent club, the Cleveland Indians, who themselves seemed a dozen steps removed from Major League Baseball during the 1970’s. Unlike all of their rivals in the single-A Northwest League, the Mavs had no Major League affiliation. They were one of the first and only viable independent clubs, signing their own players wherever they could find them.  The Mavs roster consisted of the unwanted, unwashed and washed-up, many of whom traveled from all over North America to attend owner Bing Russell’s open tryouts each June.

Russell was a long-time character actor in Westerns, best known for portraying Deputy Clem Foster on Bonanza.  His motto for the Mavs was simply “Fun” and Mavs games at Portland’s multi-purpose Civic Stadium had a circus-like atmosphere.  Russell was ahead of his time in emphasizing fun & entertainment as the primary product of minor league baseball.  It was the people’s team and Portland fans flocked to Civic Stadium in record numbers.  During the Mavs first season in 1973, the club set the all-time Class A short-season attendance mark and broke it again for each of the next two years.

Mavs Moments

  • First year Mavs manager Hank Robinson was banned from the Northwest League for assaulting an umpire.
  • 1975 Mavs player/manager Frank Peters once rotated all nine players in his Mavs lineup to a new position each inning.
  • Peters juggled his responsibilities playing for and managing the Mavs with running several nefarious nightclubs in Portland, including “Satan’s Disco”.  He became a marijuana grower in Portland in the late 1980’s and spent time in prison for sex offenses.
  • Russell appointed pro baseball’s first female General Manager in Lanny Moss in 1975 and first Asian-American GM with Jon Yoshiwara in 1977. (oddly, the 22-year old Yoshiwara was also a Mavs’ utility infielder that summer)
  • The club (twice) signed dead-armed ex-Yankee Jim Bouton, who was more or less blackballed by organized baseball for his taboo-shattering 1970 memoir Ball Four.  Bouton ultimately made it back to the Majors after his second stint with the Mavs.
  • Bouton and Mavericks pitching coach Rob Nelson came up with the concept for Big League Chew shredded chewing gum during a lazy night in the Mavs bullpen.
  • Bing Russell’s son Kurt played for the Mavs in 1973.  The future star of Escape From New York and Miracle hit .229 in 23 games for the Mavs that summer.
  • Mavs batboy Todd Field grew up to become the Academy Award-nominated writer/director of the films Little Children and In The  Bedroom

1976 Portland Mavericks baseball program from the Northwest League

The End

Unlike virtually all other defunct ball clubs, the Mavs never folded or moved.  They were paid to go away.  In late 1977, the Pacific Coast League decided to expand back into Portland.  All of organized baseball operated under the auspices of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues.  In order for the PCL to get back into Portland, National Association President Bobby Bragan had to hammer out a settlement between the PCL and Bing Russell for rights to the Portland market.  The going compensation rate to abandon a city to a higher level league was about $25,000.  Russell demanded $206,000 and after a long winter of wrangling in various airport hotel rooms, he got every penny of it.

During the last season of Mavericks baseball in 1977, the low-level independent club drew 125,300 to see 33 games at Civic Stadium. When the Beavers, triple-A baseball and the Cleveland Indians returned in 1978, only 96,395 turned out for 69 games.

Legacy

Big League Chew – Mavs’ pitcher Rob Nelson’s substitute for chewing tobacco – has gone on to sell more than a half a billion pouches worldwide since its introduction in 1980.

In 2014, Netflix released a fantastic documentary on the Portland Mavericks called “The Battered Bastards of Baseball”.  Check out trailer below and grab it on the Netflix if you can.

 

In Memoriam

Bing Russell passed away in April 2003 at age 76.  His blueprint for running a ball club influenced both the resurgence of independent baseball leagues in the mid-1990’s and the general re-branding and revival of minor league baseball as “affordable family entertainment” in the 1980’s.

 

Portland Mavericks Video

2014 Netflix Battered Bastards of Baseball documentary trailer

 

Downloads

June 1976 Mavericks vs. Seattle Rainiers Roster Sheet

6-20-21-22-1976 Portland Mavericks vs Seattle Rainiers Roster Insert

 

6-15-1977 Mavericks vs. Eugene Emeralds Roster Sheet

 

Links

Check out this amazing blog on the history of Big League Chew at CollectingCandy.com

 

Northwest League Media Guides

Northwest League Programs

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Comments

6 Responses

  1. We had the pleasure of watching the movie yesterday. Thank you for sharing such a wonderful story. My husband was a long time ball player & he was thoroughly enthralled with the story, the journey & the joys this group brought back to baseball.

    Thanks again for sharing such a wonderful story.

  2. Wow! What a fantastic story.
    I just watched the film and was so inspired.

    Thanks for your page about the Mavericks here.

    I’d love to know more, see more memorabilia, etc.

  3. Hi! This is Lanny Moss, and will soon celebrate my 70’th birthday. I truly enjoyed the video which has captured the time period we were in. Bing was an amazing man! He encouraged us all to believe in ourselves and to give the very best of ourselves to our dreams and to each other. Did you know he was a film actor and one of his favorite roles was the Music Man? I recently had the pleasure of meeting up with former Mav’s players (thank you Carren Woods). It was an honor!

    1. Lanny, hi! I’m Melanie, the girl to whom you entrusted Cub. He lived a great life, and it was so great to see him in the documentary. I’ve always been grateful you let him come to our farm. I hope you’re well!

      All the best,
      Melanie (Clark) Bloom
      Mount Vernon, WA

  4. My husband played against the Mavericks in an exhibition game in 1977. I sure wish I could find the name of the opposing team. I am looking for a mention to Chris Nielsen. If anyone could help that would be great.

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