Spartanburg Phillies Baseball

Spartanburg Phillies

Western Carolinas League (1963-1979)
South Atlantic League (1986-1994)

Tombstone

Born: 1963 – Western Carolinas League expansion franchise
Moved:
1995 (Piedmont Phillies)

Western Carolinas League Champions: 1966, 1967, 1972, 1973 & 1975
South Atlantic League Champions: 1988

Stadium

Duncan Park (3,000)11994 Asheville Tourists Program
Opened: 1926

Ownership & Affiliation

Owners:

Major League Affiliation: Philadelphia Phillies

 

Background

For more than three decades, Spartanburg, South Carolina was one of the first destinatons for young prospects in the Philadelphia Phillies organization.  The city’s glory days as a Phillies farm club came in the mid-1960’s.  The Spartanburg Phillies won back-to-back Western Carolinas League titles in 1966 and 1967.  The 1966 Spartanburg club, featuring a middle infield combo of Larry Bowa and Denny Doyle, had a 91-35 record and was ranked #78 in the Top 100 minor league teams of all-time as chosen by the National Association in 2001.

Off the field, Pat Williams, a young protégé of maverick promoter Bill Veeck, promoted the Spartanburg clubs of the 1960’s.  Williams ran constant promotions and local fans responded.  In 1966, Spartanburg re-wrote the single season Class A attendance record.  Williams – a young man in his mid-20’s during his time in Spartanburg – would go on to become one of the mostly highly respected chief executives in the NBA, as General Manager of the Philadelphia 76ers and the Orlando Magic in the 80’s, 90’s and 2000’s.

The Phils enjoyed another run of league dominance in the early 1970’s, winning Western Carolinas League crowns in 1972, 1973 and 1975.  But by the 1970’s, both Williams and the crowds were long gone.  Attendance at Duncan Park during the 1970’s was frequently under 500 fans per night, reflecting the broader existential crisis in minor league baseball around the country during that era.

1968 Spartanburg Phillies baseball yearbook from the Western Carolinas League

Traders, Spinners & Suns

As the 1980’s dawned, the Western Carolinas League re-branded itself as the South Atlantic League.  Spartanburg continued its long-time relationship with the Philadelphia Phillies, but starting in 1980 the team adopted a series of new names.  The ball club was known first as the Spartanburg Traders (1980-1982), then the Spartanburg Spinners (1983) and finally the Spartanburg Suns (1984-1985).  Meanwhile, in 1984, the Most Valuable Players of both the American League (Willie Hernandez) and the National League (Ryne Sandberg) were former members of the Spartanburg Phillies.

In 1986 the team took back the traditional Spartanburg Phillies name.  Two seasons later, the Spartanburg Phillies won the 1988 South Atlantic League crown. It was to be the city’s final minor league championship.

Stadium Issues & Move to Kannapolis

By the early 1990’s, Duncan Park was badly outdated. The venue no longer met the minimum Class A standards set by the National Association of Professional Baseball Clubs. Spartanburg’s attendance consistenly ranked last in the South Atlantic League by this point.  While numerous small mid-Atlantic cities were willing to help finance new ballparks to lure minor league baseball, Spartanburg didn’t show the political will to upgrade Duncan Park.  Late era owner Brad Shover entertained numerous offers for the team in the 1990’s before finally closing a deal with NASCAR team owner Larry Hedrick in late 1993.  Hedrick operated the Phillies for one lame duck season in Spartanburg in 1994 before moving the team to a new ballpark in Kannapolis, North Carolina in 199

At the time of the move in 1995, the Philadelphia Phillies and the city of Spartanburg had the 5th longest relationship between a Major League ballclub and a minor league community.  The former Spartanburg franchise plays on today as the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers.

1987 Spartanburg Phillies baseball program from the South Atlantic League

Trivia

In 1966, the Spartanburg Phils rattled off a 25-game winning streak between July 17th and August 12th.  20 of the 25 games were complete games by Phillies starters. The bullpen contributed just 17 1⁄3 innings during the entire 25-game run!

 

Spartanburg Phillies Shop

 

 

Links

Western Carolinas League Programs

South Atlantic League Media Guides

South Atlantic League Programs

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Comments

11 Responses

  1. It’s definitely odd that Spartanburg would change its name that many times while keeping the same affiliation. It’s happened very occasionally in the past, but was usually caused by affiliation switches.

    Gastonia in the Sally League went through a rather astonishing five names in six years:
    `82: Cardinals
    `83-`84: Expos
    `85: Jets
    `86: Tigers
    `87: Rangers

    Waterbury, Eastern League:
    `83: Reds
    `84: Angels
    `85: Indians

    Kinston, Carolina League:
    `85 Blue Jays
    `86 Eagles
    ’87 Indians

  2. From 1979 to 1985, the Spartanburg franchise was owned by Dr. Frank Weir, a Spartanburg physician. During this period, in response to fan input, Dr. Weir instituted several name changes for the club, from Phillies to Traders to Spinners to Suns. The attendance record and reputation of the team was revitalized for a brief period of time; however, the disrepair of Duncan Park and larger economic pressures ultimately led to further declines.

    In 1985, the franchise was sold to Robert Anderson and Lou Eliopulos, operating as the entity of Sun Sports, Inc., which filed for bankruptcy protection in 1986.

  3. I’m writing a book with former Spartanburg manager Led Elia. He told me a story in 1975 when he removed his team from the field in he first inning of a game at Winston-Salem when the clown prince if baseball, Max Patkin was scheduled.

    Subsequent newspaper searches for the story have turned up nothing. I’m hoping you or someone else can shed some light on that game! It’s hilarious and the baseball world doesn’t know about it. Please help!

    1. Hey Gary,

      I didn’t have any luck either, checking on Newspapers.com. Let me know when the book is out! If you have it available on Amazon, we’ll link to it from this article.

      Drew

    1. I know it’s two years later and this is quite the long-shot, but if you still have this or any other Spartanburg Phillies stuff, I would be very interested.

  4. Hi,

    My father, Ken Kraft, played for the Spartanburg Suns in 1984. My mom and him always speak very fondly of their time in Spartanburg. I was wondering if anyone is aware of any Suns games being televised? I’m trying to track down a televised game video for my dad as a gift.

    If anyone could help it would be much appreciated. thank you!

    1. Growing up in Spartanburg, I don’t recall any games ever being televised, although WSPA7 would regularly cover them in nightly roundups. You might be able to connect with them and see what they might share from their archives…

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