Vallejo Admirals

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Vallejo Admirals
Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs (2013–2021)
LocationVallejo, California
BallparkWilson Park
Founded2013
Folded2021
League championships2017
ColorsNavy, Gold, Gray, white
       
OwnershipDave Phinney
ManagerPJ Phillips
General ManagerHeather Luna
MediaTim Fitzgerald
Websitewww.vallejoadmirals.com

The Vallejo Admirals were an independent

Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, which was not associated with Major League Baseball
. In 2017, the Admirals won the Pacific Association championship.

History

The Vallejo Admirals baseball team sits atop a float for the 4th of July parade in 2014

The Admirals began play as a charter member of the four-team

Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, along with the Hawaii Stars, Na Koa Ikaika Maui, and San Rafael Pacifics, former members of the now-defunct North American League
.

The Admirals started play at Wilson Park in Vallejo in the spring of 2013. They club was originally owned by Redwood Sports and Entertainment, which also owns the San Rafael Pacifics.[1][2][3]

The Admirals were subsequently sold to Joe Fontana, who named ex-big leaguer

Pedro Guerrero field manager in April 2013.[4]

In July 2013, the league suspended the team for failure to pay players, employees, and rent, among other financial problems.[5] Under new ownership and a new manager in Tito Fuentes Jr., the team returned to play on July 31, 2013, with an 11–2 win over the East Bay Lumberjacks.[6] The team finished the season in third place overall, winning all of its playoff games at Wilson Park, but falling to Maui, 8–3, in the semifinals in San Rafael. Shortstop Jesse Olivar out of Cosumnes River College was named team MVP.

First baseman Nathan Tomaszewski became the first Admirals player to be signed by an affiliated club. He was signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates following the 2013 season and played one year with Pittsburgh's rookie affiliate, the Bristol Pirates.

Robert Young, former owner of the two now-defunct Hawaii franchises, purchased the team prior to the 2014 season. With a new manager, Garry Templeton II, the Admirals went 44–34 and finished in second place in the Pacific Association. The team had an opportunity to win the second half, assuring them a second consecutive postseason appearance, but fell to San Rafael on the final day of the regular season, 11–8.

Templeton II was named the Pacific Association Manager of the Year for the 18-win turnaround compared to the 2013 season. Right fielder Jordan Hinshaw earned the league's Rookie of the Year Award while also being named a top defender at his position. Along with Hinshaw, Tillman Pugh (center field), Elvin Rodriguez (shortstop),, and Michael Cerda (third base) all received the league's top defensive award at their positions.

During the 2015 offseason, general manager Kathy Beistel purchased the team from Young and located Kevin Reilly, a local realtor, as a silent partner to provide operating funds. Despite the large cash infusion, player salaries were halved for the last month of the season, and the Admirals finished the season 25–53 overall in last place.

At the end of 2015, Beistel announced she had sold her remaining shares to Reilly, who became the sole share owner.

In 2016, team operations solidified in every aspect. Attendance was up almost 50%, and the game-day experience was greatly improved by adding stadium seating, a picnic/dining area behind first base, pre-game and between-inning entertainment, and improved cost and selection in food and merchandise. Gone were the days of ownership instability, and the team had become a civic asset and a vehicle for local business to be seen in the community.

The Admirals hired Mike Samuels as manager. Samuels' staff consisted of former big leaguer Warren Brusstar and a pair of major league draft picks Tim Wallace (Chicago Cubs) and Lonnie Jackson (Los Angeles Dodgers).

Samuels and his staff were replaced one month into the season with manager PJ Phillips, who became the first player-manager for the Admirals. Phillips spent seven seasons in the

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim organization after being a 2nd-round pick in the 2005 Major League Baseball draft, and two with the Cincinnati Reds organization before starting his independent baseball career with the Long Island Ducks of the Atlantic League
in 2013.

Phillips hit exactly .300 with 32 RBI in 52 games with the Admirals in 2014. In 2015, Phillips hit .302 with nine home runs, and a single-season record for doubles in the Pacific Association with 27. His minor league resume and influence over the clubhouse made him the front office's choice for

player-manager
. Kenneth Owen was hired as Phillips' assistant coach, while Roman Gomez was hired as pitching coach.

The Admirals went 32–46 during the 2016 season. The Admirals did, however, experience a large attendance increase and improved on-field performance. Highlights of the season included a Pacific Association record shattering 99 stolen bases by Darian Sandford, and several players earning awards, including the Pacific Association Rookie of the Year Marquis Hutchinson. Joining Hutchinson were first baseman Lydell Moseby, third baseman Gerald Bautista and right fielder Tim Williams, all who were deemed the best defenders at their positions by the Pacific Association.

Just nine games into the 2016 season, closer Tim Holmes became the second Admirals player to advance into affiliated baseball when his contract was purchased by the

Gulf Coast League Yankees
, Holmes boasted a 0.59 ERA and 15 strikeouts in 15.1 innings.

During the offseason, a pair of Admirals players were signed by affiliated clubs, including second baseman Alian Silva with the Washington Nationals and starter Kida De La Cruz with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

In the 2019 offseason, the team was sold to Dave Phinney, a Napa Valley winemaker and one of the partners of the Nimitz Group.

Their seasons was cancelled in 2020 due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. There have not been a new updates since April 2021 suggesting that the franchise, like the league, has quietly folded.

2017 Championship

The Admirals opened their fifth season of Pacific Association play in 2017 by hosting the San Rafael Pacifics on June 2 at Wilson Park. The franchise had two major signings in spring training in their first former big leaguer in reliever Sammy Gervacio, and their first ever former first-round draft pick in outfielder Chevy Clarke. The Admirals drafted Vallejo native and Benicia High product Peter Reyes first overall at the 2017 Pacific Association Tryout.

It was the first full season as manager for PJ Phillips, and the team stumbled out to a first-half record of 12–27. Phillips had to re-tool a roster that had finished at the bottom of the standings in two-straight seasons, and weed out the leftovers from the previous regime that had not bought into his program. Phillips revamped his infield by bringing in Pacific Association veteran David Kiriakos to play shortstop,

Iona College
's Alex Fishberg.

This bolstered a core of returners and new talent who specifically came to Vallejo to play for Phillips, including the returns of outfielder Tillman Pugh and pitchers Tim Holmes and Demetrius Banks. Even though the team began the second half just 1–6, improvement in their play and energy was visible. The team then went on a 20–7 run through the month of August, and won the head-to-head match up with the first-half champion Sonoma Stompers 7–5. That gave the Admirals the tie-breaker for the second-half championship as both teams finished the second half with 24–15 records. Reyes got the victory to clinch the second-half title by pitching six innings and allowing three runs with just one walk and seven strikeouts in a 12–5 victory over San Rafael.

This put the Admirals in their first ever Pacific Association championship game on September 1, 2017, in Sonoma. Vallejo jumped out to an early lead and were up 9–1 in the fourth inning. The defending champion Stompers stormed back though and cut it to 9–8 before the Admirals reclaimed a three-run lead with runs in the eight and ninth inning, and held on to win 11–8.[7]

It was the first Pacific Association championship for the Vallejo Admirals, and completed a 25-game turnaround from worst to first in one season. Gervacio set the single-season record for saves in the Pacific Association with 18, Banks became the Admirals' single-season leader for strikeouts with 86, and Pugh set the single season record for home runs with 18 and also became the franchise's all-time leader in hits and RBI.

Season-by-season results

Season W L Finish Playoffs/Result
2013 28 32 3rd of 5 Lost semi-final game vs Na Koa Ikaika Maui
2014 44 34 3rd of 4
2015 25 53 4th of 4
2016 32 46 4th of 4
2017 36 42 2nd (t) of 4 Second half winner; won championship game vs Sonoma Stompers
2018 37 43 3rd of 6 Lost semi-final game vs San Rafael Pacifics
2019 34 30 3rd of 5 Lost quarter-final game vs Napa Silverados

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ It's official: Vallejo Admirals in Pacific Association for 2013 Archived 2013-08-01 at the Wayback Machine, Ballpark Digest, February 18, 2013
  2. ^ Vallejo in, Sonoma County out in Pacific Association Archived 2013-07-20 at the Wayback Machine, Ballpark Digest, February 4, 2013
  3. ^ Vallejo thrilled to be the home of the Admirals, Rich Freedman, Times-Herald, February 17, 2013
  4. ^ Burchyns, Tony, Jessica A. York, Rachel Raskin-Zrihen and Thomas Gase (2013-07-13). "Vallejo Admirals' backer calls for probe of team's owner". Vallejo Times-Herald. Archived from the original on 2013-07-16. Retrieved 15 July 2013.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Register Staff (July 11, 2013). "Vallejo Admirals suspended from league play due to financial issues". Napa Valley Register. Archived from the original on 15 July 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  6. ^ Lito Roman leads Vallejo Admirals past Lumberjacks, Vallejo Times-Herald, August 1, 2013
  7. ^ "Sonoma Stompers vs. Vallejo Admirals - Pacific Association of Professional Baseball - boxscore". Pointstreak Sports Technologies.

External links