Florida State League (1997-2000)
Tombstone
Born: September 16, 1996 – Affiliation change from St. Petersburg Cardinals1Topkin, Marc. “Rays put FSL club at Al Lang”. Tampa Bay Times (St. Petersburg, FL). September 17, 1996
Folded:
First Game: April 3, 1997 (W 5-4 vs. Lakeland Tigers)
Final Game: September 3, 2000 (L 6-5 @ Dunedin Blue Jays)
FSL Champions: 1997
Stadium
Al Lang Stadium (6,750)21998 St. Petersburg Devil Rays Program
Opened: 1947
Dimensions (1998): LF 325′, CF 400′, RF 325′31998 St. Petersburg Devil Rays Yearbook
Ownership & Affiliation
Owner: Tampa Bay Devil Rays (Vince Naimoli)
Major League Affiliation: Tampa Bay Devil Rays
Attendance
Background
The St. Petersburg Devil Rays were one of the original farm teams of the Tampa Bay Rays (known back then as the Devil Rays). The team began play in 1997, one year ahead of its Major League patron’s expansion debut, and set up shop at Al Lang Stadium in downtown St. Pete, just over a mile away from the Major League Rays’ home at Tropicana Field.
St. Petersburg won the Class A Florida State League championship during their debut season under the Devils Rays banner in 1997, defeating the Vero Beach Dodgers 3 games to 2 in a best-of-five series that September. St. Pete also led the FSL in attendance that summer with an announced turnstile count of 154,670 fans.
End of an Era
At the end of the 2000 season, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays sold the St. Petersburg franchise back to the Florida State League. The move brought to an end a largely uninterrupted tradition of Minor League Baseball in St. Pete dating back to the conclusion of World War II, as no other Major League organization would be likely to operate a minor league farm team in the Tampa Bay Rays’ backyard.
St. Petersburg Devil Rays Shop
In Memoriam
Tampa Bay Devil Rays owner Vince Naimoli, whose organization owned the St. Petersburg FSL franchise outright, died of complications from a brain disorder, progressive supranuclear palsy, on August 25, 2019. Naimoli was 81. New York Times obituary.
Links
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One Response
From the Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd Edition:
1998 attendance: 87,181 (5th of 14)
1999: 82,631 (5th of 14)
2000: 61,993 (7th of 14)