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Bristol Red Sox





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The Bristol Red Sox baseball club was an American minor league baseball franchise. Based in Bristol, Connecticut, it was the Double-A Eastern League farm system affiliate of the Boston Red Sox for ten seasons (1973–82) and played at Muzzy Field.

Bristol Red Sox
  • Bristol, Connecticut
  • Minor league affiliations
    Previous classesDouble-A (1973–1982)
    LeagueEastern League (1973–1982)
    Major league affiliations
    Previous teamsBoston Red Sox (1973–1982)
    Minor league titles
    League titles (3)
    • 1975
  • 1978
  • 1981
  • Team data

    Previous names

    • Bristol Red Sox (1973–1982)

    Previous parks

    Muzzy Field (1973–1982)

    Successor to original "PawSox"

    edit

    The team was created during the 1972–73 offseason, when the parent Red Sox decided to move their Triple-A franchise, the Louisville Colonels, to Pawtucket, Rhode Island, home of the Sox' Eastern League farm team, the Pawtucket Red Sox, since 1970.

    The Double-A PawSox' owner, Joe Buzas, selected Bristol as the site for his relocated EL franchise. The city had previously hosted the Bristol Owls of the Class B Colonial League in 1949–50 (the league disbanded on July 14, 1950) and the Tramps, Bellmakers and Woodchoppers of the Connecticut State League at the turn of the 20th century (1897; 1899–1901).[1]

    Nine winning seasons in ten years

    edit

    Despite the presence of future Boston stars Jim Rice and Fred Lynn on the 1973 squad, the maiden season of the Bristol Red Sox was a losing one — but the next nine editions of the club sported over .500 records and won Eastern League titles in 1975, 1978 and 1981. Other future MLB or Red Sox stars who played for Bristol included Marty Barrett, Wade Boggs, Oil Can Boyd, Steve Crawford, Bo Díaz, Rich Gedman, Butch Hobson, Bruce Hurst, Steve Lyons, Al Nipper, Bob Stanley, Dave Stapleton, John Tudor and Ernie Whitt.

    Managers included former Major Leaguers Stan Williams, Dick McAuliffe and John Kennedy, but the most successful Bristol skipper was veteran minor league player and skipper Tony Torchia, who piloted the club for its final five seasons, winning two championships.

    Relocation to New Britain (1983–2015), Hartford (2016-present)

    edit

    The franchise shifted to New Britain, Connecticut, in 1983, where it played for 33 years, the last 21 as the Rock Cats. The New Britain franchise, now a Colorado Rockies' affiliate, officially moved to nearby Hartford as the Yard Goats in 2016. Since 2003, the Red Sox' Eastern League affiliate has been the Portland Sea Dogs.

    Annual record

    edit
    Year Record Finish
    Full Season
    Attendance Manager Postseason
    1973 62–77 Third
    (American Div.)
    47,288 Rac Slider DNQ
    1974 74–61 First
    (American Div.)
    47,989 Stan Williams Lost in first round
    1975 81–57 Second 42,238 Dick McAuliffe
    Bill Slack
    League champions
    1976 74–60 Second
    (Southern Div.)
    38,637 John Kennedy DNQ
    1977 72–67 Fourth
    (Southern Div.)
    57,563 John Kennedy DNQ
    1978 72–66 Third 64,921 Tony Torchia League champions
    1979 73–66 Third 66,844 Tony Torchia DNQ
    1980 79–60 First
    (Southern Div.)
    65,991 Tony Torchia DNQ
    1981 72–66 Second
    (Southern Div.)
    77,066 Tony Torchia League champions
    1982 75–65 Second
    (Southern Div.)
    67,564 Tony Torchia DNQ

    References

    edit
    1. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, eds., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, N.C.: Baseball America, 2007.
    edit
    Preceded by

    Pawtucket Red Sox

    Boston Red Sox
    Double-A affiliate

    1973–1982
    Succeeded by

    New Britain Red Sox


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bristol_Red_Sox&oldid=1159355292"
     



    Last edited on 9 June 2023, at 20:11  





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    This page was last edited on 9 June 2023, at 20:11 (UTC).

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