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В Сиракузы Метс являются Малой бейсбольной лиги команда Triple-Востока и Triple- филиал в Нью - Йорк Метс . Они расположены в Сиракузах, штат Нью-Йорк , и играют в свои домашние игры на стадионе NBT Bank , который открылся в 1997 году и вмещает 11 071 человек. [4] Mets названы в честь их филиала и владельца в высшей лиге New York Mets.

На протяжении большей части своего существования, с 1934 по 1996 год и снова с 2007 по 2018 год, команда была известна как Сиракузские вожди , а с 1997 по 2006 год она была известна как Сиракузские вожди неба . В октябре 2018 года клуб был переименован в Syracuse Mets [5].

History[edit]

Syracuse Chiefs[edit]

Establishment (1934-1957)[edit]

The Syracuse Chiefs baseball team was established in 1934, when the Jersey City Skeeters moved to Syracuse and were renamed the Chiefs. The team played in the International League (IL) through 1955. They won five Governors' Cup championships during this stretch, including back-to-back championships in 1942 and 1943. The team was then sold and moved to Miami as the Marlins for the 1956 campaign. Another team known as the Syracuse Chiefs competed in the Class A Eastern League (then two levels below the IL) in 1956 and 1957, but moved to Allentown, Pennsylvania, on July 13, 1957.[6] The Chiefs played at MacArthur Stadium from 1934 to 1996, moving to new then-P&C Stadium (1997-2005) in 1997.

Restart and multiple affiliations (1961-1978)[edit]

Syracuse was without professional baseball from 1957 until 1961, when the Montreal Royals franchise was abandoned by its owners (the Los Angeles Dodgers) and relocated to Syracuse as the top affiliate of the Minnesota Twins, becoming the Syracuse Chiefs. After that, the team had affiliations with the New York Mets and Washington Senators (1962), the Detroit Tigers (1963,) and the New York Yankees (1967-1977). Baseball has been played in Syracuse without interruption since the rebirth of the Chiefs in 1961.

Toronto Blue Jays (1978-2008)[edit]

From 1978 to 2008, the Chiefs were the Triple-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays. The three-decade Toronto–Syracuse affiliation is the longest of the 11 major league affiliations the team has had since 1936. While the Chiefs reached three Governors Cup finals during this time, many of the players who helped lead the Blue Jays to consecutive World Series titles in 1992 and 1993 passed through Syracuse. In 1994, outfielder Shawn Green hit .344 for the Chiefs, winning the International League batting title and the International League Rookie of the Year Award. The team was renamed the SkyChiefs in 1997 before reverting to simply "Chiefs" in December 2006.[7]

Washington Nationals (2008-2018)[edit]

On September 20, 2008, the Chiefs signed a two-year affiliation agreement with the Washington Nationals, ending their relationship with the Blue Jays. That first season, the players wore a decal on their uniforms with the letters "HB" to commemorate Harold Berman, former member of the team's board of directors, who died after the 2007 season. In 2009, the Chiefs wore a decal on their uniforms with the letters "HM" to commemorate Hy Miller, former state assemblyman and former member of the team's board of directors, who died after the 2008 season.

In 2010, the Chiefs celebrated their 50th season of community-owned baseball (1961–2010), wearing 1961 jerseys for every Thursday home game. The team brought back radio announcers from the past, such as Dan Hoard and Syracuse University alumnus Sean McDonough. They had a 76–67 win–loss record, with pitching prospect Stephen Strasburg winning two games and losing one in five appearances.

In 2011, the Chiefs, wore throwback jerseys for every Thursday home game to commemorate the 35th anniversary of their last International League Governors' Cup championship team (managed by Syracuse Wall of Fame member Bobby Cox). The Chiefs added four alternate jerseys to their rotation for the season: one for Latin American Day, a second for Jackie Robinson Day (commemorating Negro league uniforms), a third for national holidays such as Independence Day and Memorial Day, and a fourth for Breast Cancer Awareness Night. The team played the Pawtucket Red Sox on August 20 at Fenway Park as part of a doubleheader in conjunction with the sixth annual Futures at Fenway event, featuring games involving Boston Red Sox minor league teams. The Chiefs, behind starter Brad Meyers, defeated the PawSox 3–1 before more than 29,000 fans. At Alliance Bank Stadium (now NBT Bank Stadium) the Chiefs added a "Home Plate Club" to the stadium: premium seating in the first four rows behind home plate, with waitstaff for merchandise, food and drinks.

On May 14, Chiefs DH Michael Aubrey went four for four, hitting four home runs in an 11–0 victory over the Durham Bulls and becoming the second player in team history to hit four home runs in a game; Gene Locklear was the first, on July 14, 1977. On August 27, Stephen Strasburg pitched his only rehab game for the Chiefs, against the Rochester Red Wings. Giving up two hits in the sixth inning (his only hits allowed before departing, with the Chiefs leading 1–0), he received no decision in Syracuse's 4–3 win. It did, however, clinch the Chiefs' third Thruway Cup victory; the team's other wins were in 1999 and 2010. The club's record for the season was 66–74, 14 games out of first place and fourth place in the six-team North Division.

On April 5, 2012, the Chiefs opened at home against the Rochester Red Wings. Top draft pick Bryce Harper, later that month promoted to the Nationals, made the opening-day roster. Randy Knorr did not return for a second season as manager, and Tony Beasley was promoted from the Harrisburg Senators. The Chiefs played all 16 of their games against the Scranton/Wilkes Barre Yankees at the now renamed Alliance Bank Stadium (2005-2013) due to stadium renovations at the Yankees' ballpark in Moosic, Pennsylvania. On May 7, the Chiefs unveiled a new high-definition video board in left field, replacing the board which had been in place since the stadium's 1997 opening.

The 2013 season, with manager Tony Beasley in his second season with the team, began on April 4 in Allentown, Pennsylvania, against the Lehigh Valley IronPigs; the Chiefs' home opener was eight days later against the IronPigs. On Throwback Thursdays, the team wore jerseys from 1983 to 1996.

Fireworks following Syracuse Chiefs home game, August 2016

On September 30, 2013, it was announced that 16-year general manager John Simone and any family members associated with the team, including assistant GM Mike Vounitas, were fired. On October 8, former Auburn Doubledays general manager Jason Smorol became the Chiefs' GM, with Jason Horbal as his assistant. It was the first time since 1970 that someone not named Simone was general manager of Syracuse; John Simone had taken over the job from his father, Anthony (Tex) Simone, in 1997.

The Chiefs opened their 2014 season on April 3 with a loss at home to the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders and finished the season with the best record (81–62) in the International League, clinching a playoff spot for the first time since 1998 and the first IL North Division title since 1989. NBT Bank Stadium hosted its first ever playoff game on September 5, 2014, a 7–6 loss to the Pawtucket Red Sox which capped off a 3–0 first round series sweep for the Red Sox. The season featured an aggressive promotional campaign, including Social Media Monday, Two-for-One Tickets on Tuesday, Winning Wednesday, Dollar Thursday, Fireworks Friday, Giveaway Saturday, and Family Sunday. The Chiefs sold out the outfield wall, the dugouts, and the field tarp, earning $500,000 in advertising.

Following the 2014 season, the Chiefs would not make the playoffs during the final years of the Nationals' affiliation, including a 54–87 record during the 2017 season, their worst since 1966. Many prospects passed through Syracuse on their way to the MLB, including Trea Turner, Lucas Giolito, and Victor Robles. Randy Knorr replaced Gardner Jr. after 4 seasons as Chiefs' manager for the 2018 season, his second stint with the Chiefs.

Syracuse Mets[edit]

The chief operating officer of the New York Mets, Jeff Wilpon, joined Governor Andrew Cuomo and Joanie Mahoney, Onondaga County Executive, at NBT Bank Stadium on October 11, 2017, to announce that the Mets would purchase the Chiefs from the Community Baseball Club of Central New York in early 2018. Under the deal, the Chiefs' affiliation with the Washington Nationals continued through the end of the 2018 season, with the Chiefs becoming the Mets' Triple-A affiliate beginning with the 2019 season.[8] The team was rebranded as the Syracuse Mets, adopting the New York Mets' blue, orange, and white color scheme along with new logos and uniforms on October 16, 2018.[9]

The Syracuse Mets started their 2019 inaugural season with one of the most experienced rosters in the minor leagues. Of the 25 players on the roster, 21 of them had previously played in the majors. They had combined for 7,006 total games. The Opening Day roster consisted of veteran outfielders Carlos Gómez and Rajai Davis, former Syracuse Chief Danny Espinosa, catcher René Rivera, and cult-star outfielder Tim Tebow.[10] The Mets played their first game on April 4, against the Pawtucket Red Sox in front of an Opening Day home crowd of 8,823 fans. Syracuse took a 3–2 lead in the bottom of the sixth inning, but Pawtucket tied the game in the top of the eighth. The PawSox scored three more runs in the top of the tenth, defeating the home team, 6–3.[11] The Mets' first win came in game one of a doubleheader on April 6 in which they defeated Pawtucket, 6–3 in 7 innings.[12]In that same first Mets win, with one out in the bottom of the fourth inning, Dilson Herrera hit the Syracuse Mets first home run.

On May 31, 2019, Travis Taijeron hit the first cycle in Syracuse Mets history in a 13–4 win over the PawSox. It was the first in franchise history since 1987.[13] Rubén Tejada also hit for the cycle on June 19, 2019 against the Charlotte Knights. Despite his efforts, the Mets lost 9–7.

At the 2019 All-star break, the Mets were 42–47, good for 5th place in the IL North Division. After August 7, they made up 6.5 games in the standings to put themselves in a share of the division lead with the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders after sweeping a doubleheader versus the Lehigh Valley IronPigs on August 26. They also had a winning season for the first time since 2014. Syracuse went into the final weekend of the 2019 season tied with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for the division lead. Both teams split both of their respective series' to stay tied for the division lead. The two teams played a one-game tie breaker in order to decide who would win the division, and ultimately make the playoffs. The Mets would lose the one-game tiebreaker by a score of 14–13. Syracuse had led 13-6 going into the bottom of the eighth inning, but Scranton/Wilkes-Barre would come back and score eight runs in the bottom half of the inning to eventually win the game, effectively eliminating the Mets from qualifying for the playoffs.[14]

The 2020 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[15] In conjunction with Major League Baseball's restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Mets were organized into the 20-team Triple-A East.[16]The start of the season was pushed back to May.[17]

Roster[edit]

Corporate structure[edit]

New York Mets[edit]

In October 2017, the New York Mets, headed by Jeff Wilpon, agreed to purchase the Chiefs for approximately $18 million pending approval by team shareholders. A vote was held on November 17, 2017, in which 88 percent of shareholders voted in favor of selling the team, thus meeting the required two-thirds vote needed for approval.[18] The Mets organization assumed ownership in early 2018.[19]

Community Baseball Club, Inc.[edit]

Prior to the Mets' purchase, the franchise was owned by the Community Baseball Club of Central New York, Inc., "a community-owned club, controlled by a [13-person] board of directors,"[20][21][22] acting on behalf of approximately 4,000 shareholders, who together held 15,857 shares from 1961 to 2017.[22]

According to Dick Ryan, a former club chairman of the board and treasurer, a majority of the Community Baseball Club shares were "owned by people who own one or two shares."[20] Shares in the club were first sold in 1961, at a price of $10 each; as of 2011, shares had a resale value of approximately $126, but were not publicly traded. A provision in the Chief's certificate of corporation stated that "no one may vote more than 500 shares."[20] This provision was intended to make it difficult for the club to be sold and moved to another location, as happened earlier in its history.[20]

Management[edit]

Officers of the Community Baseball Club of Central New York, Inc., included:

  • Robert F. Julian, Chairman of the Board
  • William Dutch, President
  • Jason Smorol, General Manager[3]

Among those serving on the organization's Board of Directors were Stephen A. Rogers, Chairman, Syracuse Media Group;[21] and Crandall Melvin III, "a software executive from Syracuse and the team's largest single shareholder with 502 shares."[22]

Dutch was a partner in Chiefs First LLC, an investment company established in September 2013, which loaned the Chiefs $500,000 in return for 600 shares and controlled the team's 13-member board.[23]

Finances[edit]

The Chiefs operated at a loss from 2006, except for the 2010 season when they ended the season $100,000 in the black. The team lost $973,516 in the 2013 season, on operating expenses of $3.1 million.[24][25] Under general manager Jason Smorol, their losses were reduced to $241,584 in 2014, and $169,011 in 2015.[26]

Attendance[edit]

Top season attendance[edit]

NBT Bank Stadium[edit]

  • 1999: 446,025
  • 2001: 423,405
  • 1998: 420,488
  • 2010: 416,382
  • 2002: 413,566
  • 2000: 402,450
  • 1997: 400,804
  • 2009: 392,518
  • 2008: 392,028
  • 2005: 382,896
  • 2007: 380,152
  • 2004: 364,648
  • 2003: 356,303
  • 2006: 347,699
  • 2013: 345,047[27]
  • 2019: 327,478
  • 2016: 274,427
  • 2015: 262,408[28]

* Includes playoffs

MacArthur Stadium[edit]

  • 1994: 368,971*
  • 1991: 307,922
  • 1995: 300,589
  • 1996: 300,405
  • 1992: 276,786
  • 1993: 265,486
  • 1970: 257,650*
  • 1990: 250,048
  • 1989: 233,161*
  • 1985: 232,073*
  • 1971: 216,115*
  • 1987: 211,315
  • 1964: 208,956*
  • 1975: 201,725*
  • 1977: 200,302
  • 1981: 198,101
  • 1979: 196,228*
  • 1976: 196,121*
  • 1980: 189,250
  • 1986: 187,758
  • 1988: 184,967
  • 1973: 184,461
  • 1982: 184,297
  • 1974: 182,082*
  • 1963: 180,971*
  • 1972: 179,048
  • 1983: 163,859
  • 1978: 160,427
  • 1967: 152,781
  • 1969: 152,201*
  • 1965: 152,072*
  • 1968: 150,295
  • 1984: 142,571
  • 1961: 126,016
  • 1966: 106,669

* Includes playoffs

Top 40 attendance dates since 1961[edit]

  1. May 7, 2010 (14,098)
  2. May 24, 2010 (13,288)
  3. July 17, 1993 (13,124)
  4. May 29, 2010 (13,115)
  5. July 17, 1967 (13,082)
  6. July 25, 1967 (13,063)
  7. August 17, 1995 (12,711)
  8. July 30, 2010 (12,674)
  9. June 28, 1995 (12,659)
  10. July 4, 2015 (12,526)
  11. July 14, 2001 (12,455)
  12. June 28, 2001 (12,368)
  13. August 17, 1999 (12,344)
  14. August 22, 1972 (12,322)
  15. August 16, 1961 (12,321)
  16. August 14, 2009 (12,288)
  17. May 30, 2018 (12,269)
  18. July 11, 1998 (12,255)
  19. July 23, 1994 (12,224)
  20. August 1, 2008 (12,208)
  21. July 13, 2001 (12,121)
  22. April 3, 1997 (12,112)
  23. May 29, 1994 (12,112)
  24. July 4, 2019 (12,063)
  25. July 4, 2014 (12,045)
  26. July 18, 1994 (11,899)
  27. July 11, 1994 (11,679)
  28. August 20, 1994 (11,485)
  29. August 9, 1963 (11,476)
  30. August 30, 1994 (11,469)
  31. July 10, 1995 (11,455)
  32. May 9, 1970 (11,398)
  33. June 25, 2002 (11,356)
  34. June 29, 2000 (11,295)
  35. August 18, 1999 (11,228)
  36. June 22, 1999 (11,219)
  37. July 13, 1970 (11,144)
  38. June 27, 1977 (11,100)
  39. May 5, 2006 (11,012)
  40. July 16, 1981 (10,835)

Titles and pennants[edit]

Syracuse Chiefs[edit]

Governors' Cup[edit]

The Chiefs won the Governors' Cup (the IL championship) 8 times, and played in the championship series 17 times.

  • 1935 – Defeated Montreal, 4–2
  • 1942 – Defeated Jersey City, 4–2
  • 1943 – Defeated Toronto, 4–1
  • 1946 – Lost to Montreal, 4–3
  • 1947 – Defeated Buffalo, 4–1
  • 1948 – Lost to Montreal, 4–0
  • 1951 – Lost to Montreal, 4–3
  • 1954 – Defeated Montreal, 4–2
  • 1964 – Lost to Rochester, 4–1
  • 1969 – Defeated Columbus, 4–1
  • 1970 – Defeated Columbus, 4–1
  • 1974 – Lost to Rochester, 4–3
  • 1975 – Lost to Tidewater, 4–3
  • 1976 – Defeated Richmond, 4–1
  • 1979 – Lost to Columbus, 3–1
  • 1994 – Lost to Richmond, 3–0 (All games aired on ESPN, due to the MLB strike.)

The Chiefs won the International League pennant — finishing the regular season with the best record in the league — eight times.

Junior World Series[edit]

The Chiefs played in the Junior World Series five times, winning it once, in 1970 against the Omaha Royals, 4–1.

Season standings[edit]

All-time records[edit]

Note: One playoff series is missing from the original Syracuse Chiefs. It will be added to the records when found.

Notable people[edit]

Players[edit]

Shawn Green
Roy Halladay
Chien-Ming Wang pitching for the Chiefs, July 2011
  • A. J. Burnett, one-time highest-paid pitcher in baseball
  • Robinson Canó, 8-time All-Star second baseman and 2009 World Series champion
  • Chris Carpenter, 3-time All-Star pitcher, World Series Champion in 2011
  • Kevin Cash, manager for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Bobby Cox, Manager with Toronto Blue Jays and most notably Atlanta Braves
  • Carlos Delgado, 2-time All-Star first baseman. 4 HR game with Toronto vs Tampa Bay Rays
  • Tony Fernández, All-time Blue Jays hit leader, 5-time All Star infielder, 4-time Gold Glove winner
  • Lucas Giolito, Former #1 Prospect in the Washington Nationals organization. Threw a no-hitter with the Chicago White Sox
  • Shawn Green, 2-time All-Star outfielder
  • Carlos Gomez, 2-time All-Star outfielder
  • Ron Guidry, 4-time All-Star pitcher
  • Roy Halladay, 7-time All-Star pitcher, Perfect Game pitcher, and MLB Hall Of Fame inductee
  • Bryce Harper, 2011 #1 MLB overall pick
  • Aaron Hill
  • Casey Janssen
  • Jimmy Key, World Series champion
  • Matt Kemp, 3-time All-Star Outfielder
  • Adam Lind
  • Gene Locklear Hit 4 Hr in one game, played for New York Yankees
  • Fred McGriff
  • Denny McLain, won 31 games for the Detroit Tigers in 1968
  • Thurman Munson, 7-time All-Star catcher
  • Stu Pederson, Major League outfielder
  • Goody Rosen, All-Star outfielder
  • Deion Sanders, NFL Hall of famer, Super Bowl Champion
  • Dave Stieb, Toronto Blue Jays legend and has thrown a no-hitter
  • Hank Sauer, All-time Chiefs single season home run leader
  • Travis Snider
  • Jhonatan Solano, All-time leader in games caught as a catcher with the Syracuse Chiefs.
  • Luis Sojo
  • Ed Sprague, Jr.
  • Stephen Strasburg, highest-paid contract for drafted player and 2019 World Series champion
  • Johnny Reder
  • Víctor Robles, 2019 World Series champion
  • Tim Tebow, NFL quarterback, Heisman Trophy winner
  • Trea Turner, 13th overall draft pick in 2014 and 2019 World Series champion
  • Alex Ríos, 2-time All Star
  • David Wells, owner of a perfect game with the New York Yankees
  • Vernon Wells
  • Jayson Werth, 2008 World Series champion

Broadcasters[edit]

Marv Albert
  • Marv Albert (1962)
  • Hank Greenwald (1962)
  • Greg Papa (1982–83)
  • Sean McDonough (1982–84), current ESPN play-by-play man for Major League Baseball, NCAA Men's Basketball, NCAA Football, and the National Football League
  • Craig Minervini (1983)
  • Dan Hoard (1985–95), former Cincinnati Reds fill in broadcaster, now voice of the Cincinnati Bengals
  • Ken Levine (1988), film and television writer who also broadcast for the Baltimore Orioles, 1991, Seattle Mariners, 1992–94, 2011–12, San Diego Padres, 1995–1997, Los Angeles Dodgers, 2008–2010
  • Matt Vasgersian (1995)
  • Bob McElligott (2000–2009), radio broadcaster for the Columbus Blue Jackets
  • Jason Benetti (2009–2014), broadcaster for the Chicago White Sox[29]
  • Kevin Brown (2010–2017) [30]

Retired numbers and recognized people[edit]

Game broadcasts[edit]

Locally games are broadcast on the Mets' flagship radio station, WSKO "The Score" 1260 AM, and globally online via SyracuseMets.com. In addition, all games are broadcast on MiLB.TV, an internet video subscription service. Select games were broadcast live on Spectrum Sports, provided on Spectrum Cable services throughout the Central and Northern New York area until Spectrum ceased operations of its sports channels in the state sometime around 2017. The games on Spectrum Sports were called by Steve Grilli, Syracuse Wall of Fame member and former major leaguer. All games against thruway rivals Rochester or Buffalo were broadcast on Spectrum Sports and fed between the cities, with the host city providing the presentation and announcers.[citation needed]

In popular culture[edit]

Writer Ken Levine based the Springfield Isotopes minor league team in The Simpsons episode Dancin' Homer on experiences as an announcer for the Syracuse Chiefs. The episode includes references to former announcer Dan Hoard and owner Anthony "Tex" Simone (named Antoine "Tex" O'Hara in the episode).

The Chiefs gained national media attention for a promotion planned for 2014's Tattoo Appreciation Night, where anyone who got a tattoo of their "C" logo would receive free tickets to Chiefs games for life.[31]

See also[edit]

  • Star Park
  • Syracuse Baseball Wall of Fame
  • Syracuse Orange baseball

References[edit]

  1. ^ Previously known as Alliance Bank Stadium (2005–2013) and P&C Stadium (1997–2005)
  2. ^ Spedden, Zach (July 12, 2018). "Syracuse Chiefs to Rebrand in 2019". Ballpark Digest. August Publications. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
  3. ^ a b O'Brien, John (October 8, 2013). "Syracuse Chiefs, in deep financial hole, hire new general manager". Syracuse.com. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "2011 Syracuse Chiefs Media Guide". Syracuse Chiefs. April 2, 2011. Retrieved August 20, 2018.
  5. ^ "Goodbye, Chiefs: Syracuse's baseball team is now the Mets". Syracuse.com. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  6. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, eds., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3d edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007
  7. ^ "Chiefs' Nickname Returns Full Steam Ahead". Syracuse Chiefs. December 11, 2006. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  8. ^ Weiner, Mark (October 9, 2017). "New York Mets will buy Syracuse Chiefs, bring its Triple-A team to Syracuse". Syracuse.com. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  9. ^ Speddon, Zach (October 16, 2018). "New for 2019: Syracuse Mets". Ballpark Digest. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  10. ^ Kramer, Lindsay (March 29, 2019). "Tim Tebow leads list of players assigned to Syracuse Mets". syracuse.com. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  11. ^ "Syracuse Opens Season with 6–3 Loss in Ten Innings to Pawtucket". Syracuse Mets. Minor League Baseball. April 4, 2019. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  12. ^ "Mets Sweep Doubleheader, Coming from Behind in Both Games". Syracuse Mets. Minor League Baseball. April 6, 2019. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  13. ^ "Taijeron hits first Syracuse cycle in 32 years as Mets beat Red Sox, 13-4". syracuse.com. syracuse.com. May 31, 2019. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  14. ^ "Syracuse Mets collapse in North Division tiebreaker". syracuse.com. syracuse.com. September 3, 2019. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  15. ^ "Syracuse Mets, Auburn Doubledays seasons canceled amid coronavirus wreckage". syracuse.com. syracuse.com. June 30, 2020. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  16. ^ Mayo, Jonathan (February 12, 2021). "MLB Announces New Minors Teams, Leagues". Major League Baseball. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  17. ^ Owens, George (March 2, 2021). "Report: Start of Triple-A baseball season to be delayed until May". syracuse.com. Retrieved March 2, 2021.
  18. ^ "Shareholders approve sale of Syracuse Chiefs to the NY Mets". CNYCentral. November 17, 2017. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  19. ^ Reichard, Kevin (November 18, 2017). "Syracuse Chiefs Sale to Mets Approved by Shareholders". Ballpark Digest. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  20. ^ a b c d Leo, Tom. (2011, August 25). "Chiefs: Team Not for Sale," The Post Standard. Accessed: September 6, 2013.
  21. ^ a b "Staff Directory," SyracuseChiefs.com. Accessed: September 11, 2013.
  22. ^ a b c Kramer, Lindsay. (2013, November 19). "Syracuse Chiefs unveil pared down board of directors," Syracuse.com. Accessed: December 8, 2013.
  23. ^ O'Brien, John. (2013, September 30). "To escape fiscal crisis, Syracuse Chiefs' board considers offers: one for $500,000, another for $1 million," Syracuse.com. Accessed: December 8, 2013.
  24. ^ Kramer, Lindsay. (2013, November 21). "Syracuse Chiefs board president Bill Dutch on $1 million in losses: It is 'a shock to all of us'," Syracuse.com. Accessed: December 8, 2013.
  25. ^ O'Brien, John. (2013, October 1). "Syracuse Chiefs' ledger shows club going from profit to loss over past eight years," Syracuse.com. Accessed: October 2, 2013.
  26. ^ Moriarty, Rick (20 March 2016). "Chiefs ask county to cut stadium rent". The Post-Standard. p. C-4.
  27. ^ Kramer, Lindsay. (2013, September 3). "Chiefs fans show disappointment", The Post-Standard, p.C-4.
  28. ^ "International League Attendance," MiLB.com. Accessed: 20 March 2016.
  29. ^ "Chiefs congratulate former "Voice of the Chiefs" Jason Benetti". MiLB.com. 13 January 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  30. ^ "Kevin Brown leaving Syracuse Chiefs".
  31. ^ Oz, Mike. "Triple-A Syracuse Chiefs offering free tickets for life if fans get a tattoo of team's logo". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved 23 March 2014.

External links[edit]

  • Official website
  • Syracuse Chiefs at Baseball-Reference
  • Gersbacher, Ron. (2012). "History of Syracuse Baseball, 1858 to Present"
  • Photographs of Alliance Bank Stadium, home of the Syracuse Chiefs - Rochester Area Ballparks