Kinston Indians
Template:Infobox Minor League Baseball The Kinston Indians were a Minor League Baseball team of the Carolina League (CL) located in Kinston, North Carolina, from 1978 to 2011. They played their home games at Grainger Stadium, which opened in 1949.
The team began play in 1978 as the Kinston Eagles, borrowing their name from the city's first team of the same name dating back to 1925. They became an affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays in 1979 and rebranded as the Kinston Blue Jays in 1982. Kinston reverted to the Eagles moniker in 1986 after the Toronto affiliation ended and became the Kinston Indians upon partnering with the Cleveland Indians in 1987. After the 2011 season, the Carolina League franchise was relocated to Zebulon, North Carolina, for the 2012 campaign to become the Carolina Mudcats.
The K-Tribe won the Carolina League championship in 1988, 1991, 1995, 2004, and 2006.
HistoryEdit
Early yearsEdit
Kinston was represented by many amateur clubs since the late nineteenth century, but it was unable to sustain a viable professional team until the mid-1920s.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Earlier attempts included an aborted campaign in the Class D Eastern Carolina League in Template:Baseball year<ref name="Spalding1909">Template:Cite conference</ref> and an "outlaw league" team in Template:Baseball year and Template:Baseball year. The latter was notable for being managed by former major league pitcher George Suggs and College Football Hall of Fame member Ira Rodgers.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Due to the efforts of the city's business leaders, former local amateur star Elisha Lewis, and George Suggs, the town secured a professional team in the Virginia League for the Template:Baseball year season<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> named the "Eagles".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The Eagles were a Class B team playing out of a then newly renovated stadium designed by Suggs known as West End Park.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The squad had little success against other teams in their league, but was successful enough in gate receipts to validate the city's capacity to sustain a professional team. Kinston's team remained in the Virginia League for three years and then migrated to a newly reformed Eastern Carolina League. This later affiliation collapsed along with the stock market in Template:Baseball year.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The 1920s Eagles' roster included a young catcher named Rick Ferrell, who later had a long playing career and even longer front office career in the major leagues. In Template:Baseball year, Ferrell became the only former Kinston player inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Another player, Frank Armstrong, gave up baseball for a career in the armed services and became one of the most decorated generals in the history of the Air Force.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Coastal Plain LeagueEdit
The Great Depression took a great toll on the minor leagues, with only thirteen teams operating across the U.S. at a 1933 low point.<ref name="Voigt">Template:Cite book</ref> Like most, Kinston sat out the first few years of the Great Depression but reentered play for the Template:Baseball year season in the semi-professional Coastal Plain League. By Template:Baseball year the circuit had become a fully professional, Class D league as ranked by the National Association.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The city remained in the Coastal Plain League continuously until it was disbanded after Template:Baseball year. As a member of this affiliation, Kinston saw many playoff appearances and won league championships in Template:Baseball year and Template:Baseball year. Among the superior talent during this period was a young player named Charlie "King Kong" Keller who is listed as among the top 40 major league players of all-time in terms of on-base percentage (.410).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Carolina LeagueEdit
Kinston was without a team for the three-year period following the dissolution of the Coastal Plain League. In 1956, the owner of the Burlington Bees of the Carolina League moved his team to Kinston. At that time, the Carolina League was a Class B loop with teams located in Virginia and North Carolina.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The team, calling itself the Kinston Eagles, were a Pittsburgh Pirates affiliate and featured the city's first African American ball players. In these early days of the Civil Rights Movement, the black players in the Carolina League received much verbal and psychological abuse from the largely white, Southern fan base.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The first black players were Frank Washington and Carl Long.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Long excelled during the 1956 season, setting an RBI standard of 111 that has never been surpassed by any later Kinston hitter.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The racial experiment succeeded, but the team failed financially. The Eagles' owner was an inept businessman who brought the club near bankruptcy before it was moved 40 miles away to Wilson in Template:Baseball year.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Kinston's re-entry into Carolina League baseball in Template:Baseball year was successful both on the field and at the turnstile. The Eagles were able to claim the first of its Carolina League crowns. At a time when Kinston's population was only 25,000, the ball club attracted over 140,000 fans. Part of the lure was the talent supplied by Kinston's parent club, the Pittsburgh Pirates, which included Steve Blass (17–3, 1.97 ERA, 209 K's), and Frank Bork (19–7, 2.00 ERA).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Another fan attraction was that the Eagles were for the first time a community owned team, operating under the non-profit Kinston Eagles Baseball Company, run by an elected eighteen-man, unpaid board of directors. Profits were reinvested into improving the stadium, promoting the team, and supplying playing equipment for the youth of Kinston. This arrangement continued through all thirteen years of Kinston's second tenure in the Carolina League, from Template:Baseball year through Template:Baseball year.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
In Template:Baseball year minor league baseball was restructured nationwide, with B, C and D classes eliminated.<ref name="Voigt" /> The Carolina League became a High-A circuit. The Eagles failed to win any championships during this second era of Carolina League play, but they managed to make the playoffs in six of thirteen seasons. The Pirates stuck with Kinston through the Template:Baseball year campaign. During three of those four seasons, the Eagles were managed by Harding "Pete" Peterson, who later oversaw the Pirates farm system, and become the Pirates' general manager, helping to build the late seventies team that won the World Series.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Eagles became affiliated with the new Atlanta Braves during Template:Baseball year and Template:Baseball year, under the management of Andy Pafko.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> From Template:Baseball year through Template:Baseball year the Eagles were affiliation with the New York Yankees; the fans saw a lot of future all-stars pass through the city including a young Ron Guidry who would soon establish himself as one of the best pitchers in the American League.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
During the 1970s the popularity of minor league baseball reached its lowest point and the attendance in Kinston fell to only 30,000 for the Template:Baseball year season. The city needed a revival of interest, and the Expos were turned to for help. The young Montreal franchise boasted a strong farm system with a lot of talent. So much talent in fact, that they decided to experiment with having two High A affiliates. Instead of dividing the players evenly between the two, all the top players were placed in the West Palm Beach club, while the newly renamed Kinston Expos had to make do with castoffs. The Kinston team soon found itself overmatched among its Carolina League rivals. The Expos fell to last place and attendance fell to only 27,000 for the year. Montreal declared the experiment a failure and withdrew from Kinston following the Template:Baseball year season. With no major league sponsor and very little fan support, Kinston likewise withdrew from the league.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Former airline pilot Ray Kuhlman brought minor league baseball back to Kinston by investing in a Carolina League franchise in the late seventies. The renamed Kinston Eagles flew unaffiliated in their first season back in the circuit in Template:Baseball year. By the next campaign, they were associated with the Toronto Blue Jays, which remained with Kinston for seven years where the team eventually took on the Blue Jays name in 1979. Kinston did not win any championships during the Blue Jays years. Kuhlman and his wife, Ruth, ran the team themselves and saw steady annual increases in attendance each season. The couple brought in a string of successful marketing ideas for the team which took hold and remained to this day. These included increasing promotional days, fireworks displays, the introduction of yearly Kinston baseball cards, an increase in branded souvenir merchandise, the establishment of the Kinston Professional Baseball Hall of Fame, and the hiring of a team mascot. Another fan attraction was a collection of future major league stars including Pat Borders, Tony Fernández, Cecil Fielder, Nelson Liriano, Fred McGriff and David Wells.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Following the Template:Baseball year season, the Blue Jays dropped Kinston as a franchise, and professional baseball in the city seemed to be in doubt once again. There was talk of moving the franchise to Charles County, Maryland, but the city remained in the Carolina League with an independent ball club that took on the Eagles name. Template:Baseball year proved to be disappointing in the standings and at the gate, and talk of a move was renewed, but ownership secured an affiliation with the Cleveland Indians during the off season.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> For twenty-five years, Cleveland and the KTribe, as they came to be known, enjoyed a successful partnership which produced seventeen playoff appearances and five Carolina League championships (Template:Baseball year, Template:Baseball year, Template:Baseball year, Template:Baseball year and Template:Baseball year).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The value of the team has risen along with its onfield success. In Template:Baseball year, Kuhlman sold the team for $100,000. The franchise was sold again in Template:Baseball year for $225,000, then changed hands again in Template:Baseball year for $750,000. The team's value in Template:Baseball year was estimated at $1.5 million.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Six figure attendance totals became the norm throughout the 1990s and into the new century. General Manager North Johnson fostered closer bonds with the mayor's office and helped create the Mayor's Committee for Professional Baseball in Template:Baseball year.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> Dedicated to increasing season ticket sales and promoting ties with businesses, the committee accomplished much in a short span of time. Attendance increased by nearly twenty thousand in Template:Baseball year and by more than twelve thousand the following year. By Template:Baseball year, the number of fans through the turnstiles topped 100,000 for the first time since Template:Baseball year. Although a new ownership group purchased the franchise in Template:Baseball year, continuity in day-to-day operations was maintained through general manager North Johnson, and front office mainstay Shari Massengill who took over the reins in Template:Baseball year.<ref name="GM"/> The local government's dedication to keeping baseball in Kinston is evidenced by extensive new renovations to the ballpark.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The Kinston Indians were last managed by Aaron Holbert, a former major league infielder. Their General Manager through the 2010 season, Shari Massengill,<ref name="GM">Template:Cite news</ref> and former Assistant General Manager, Jessie Hays, made up the only all-female General Manager/Assistant General Manager team in the Minor Leagues.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> When Hays departed for the 2008 season, her replacement, Janell Bullock, was also female. The final GM was Benjamin Jones, who was previously employed by the Wilson Tobs.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In Template:Baseball year, the Indians won the Southern Division crown for both halves of the year, but they lost in the first round of the playoffs to the wild card team, the Salem Avalanche. It was the seventh consecutive season the Indians made the post season, which is a new Carolina League record formerly held by the Burlington Bees (Template:Baseball year–Template:Baseball year). It was the second time a Kinston team had accomplished this feat as the Kinston Eagles of the Coastal Plain League also made it to seven consecutive post seasons (Template:Baseball year–Template:Baseball year).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Kinston's player development contract with Cleveland ended following the 2011 season. In 2012, the franchise moved to Zebulon, North Carolina and was renamed the Carolina Mudcats.
On August 22, 2016, the Texas Rangers announced plans to bring a minor league team back to Kinston.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The yet-to-be-named Class A-Advanced team will join the Carolina League starting in the 2017 season.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On November 2, the team announced that the new name would be the name that they trademarked on August 15, Down East Wood Ducks.
Grainger StadiumEdit
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The Kinston Indians, and all the Kinston teams since 1949, played their home games at Grainger Stadium located at 400 East Grainger Avenue in Kinston. The original structure was built by architect John J. Rowland in 1949 at a cost of $170,000 inclusive of everything except the land. $150,000 of the money was raised by bond issue.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> The stadium is owned by the city and leased by the team. A dedicatory plaque identifies the structure as "Municipal Stadium", but it has been called Grainger Stadium since it was first built.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> Recent ownership referred to it as "Historic Grainger Stadium" due to its age relative to other fields in the Carolina League. It was the second oldest stadium in the circuit. The name Grainger comes from its location on Grainger Avenue as well as its use early on by Grainger High School. Grainger is a prominent old family name in Lenoir County.
Annual AwardsEdit
Each year, usually on the weekend of the last home games, the Kinston Indians presented awards to those deserving. The team MVP Award was named in honor of "Cap'n Pat" Crawford. Crawford was a longtime Kinston resident who made it to the major leagues with the St. Louis Cardinals during the Gashouse Gang era.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
Steve Olin was a right-handed submarining relief pitcher for Kinston who had moved up to the Cleveland Indians. He was killed in a boating accident during spring training of 1993 in Winter Haven, Florida. The boat he was in struck a pier, killing him and fellow reliever Tim Crews and seriously injuring Bob Ojeda. Kinston's annual award for Pitcher of the Year was named in his honor.
The award given each year to the player who had to overcome the greatest adversity in his career was named in honor of Tex Drake. Drake was one of the batboys for the Kinston Blue Jays starting with the Template:Baseball year season. On the last day of the Template:Baseball year campaign, he found out that he had Hodgkin's Disease which had advanced to all four stages. The club president, Gary Fitzpatrick, arranged for Drake to work as a batboy for the last three home games of the Toronto Blue Jays season. Once back in Kinston, Drake was able to overcome his cancer through chemotherapy and return to his duties on the field.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref><ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
The Kinston player who best represented good sportsmanship was given an award named for Steve Gaydek. Gaydek was a former member of the club's Board of Directors who became a lifelong fan of Kinston's baseball teams. He attended every home game for over twenty years even though he lived over thirty miles from the ballpark.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
Lewis B. "Mac" McAvery was the head groundskeeper from Template:Baseball year to his death in Template:Baseball year. In honor of his accomplishments, the team established an award in his name to be given to the individual who has done the most to "preserve and enhance" professional baseball in Kinston.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
MascotsEdit
Template:See also The Indians' last mascot was a dog named Scout. Scout was usually found in an Indians jersey and baseball cap, but was also known to don a Superman t-shirt or an aloha shirt depending on the antics he was performing. Scout replaced an earlier Native American mascot who was named Tom E. Hawk.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> After the introduction of Scout, Tom E. Hawk no longer greeted fans in person at the ballpark, but he was still seen in several of the official logos on much of the team merchandise through the 2010 season. His broadly smiling visage is very reminiscent of Cleveland's Chief Wahoo. In late 2010, the team released new logos which did not include Tom E. Hawk.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
During the days when Kinston was a Toronto Blue Jays affiliate, the team had a bird mascot named B.J.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> Template:Baseball year manager Dennis Holmberg once resorted to dressing up in the mascot's costume so that he could return to the dugout undetected after being ejected from a game.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> For the Template:Baseball year season, the Blue Jays had a dozen teenage girls, known as the Golden Corral Lady Jays, in the stadium. This experiment only lasted the one season.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref>
Local baseball personalitiesEdit
- Chris Hemeyer: Hemeyer was the radio voice of the Indians as well as the host of Tribe Talk. Tribe Talk was an interview television program shown on local public access stations in southeastern North Carolina. Besides interviewing team members and staff, the show also has highlighted recent Kinston games. First run episodes aired once a week during the season.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Team Mamas: Anne "Mama" Robinson and Evelyn "Mama" Kornegay were local residents of Kinston who hosted players during their stay in Kinston. Mama Robinson hosted players for the first eleven years of the current franchise (1987–1997),<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> while Mama Kornegay took over the duties until her death in 2010.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Although only a few of the team members lived in the house at any one time, the homes became popular gathering places and a home away from home for the club. Prior to this arrangement, players had some difficulty establishing a stable environment in which to live. In his autobiography, Ron Guidry relates how his rented mobile home was sold out from under him while he was gone on Reserve duty.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> David Wells tells similar stories of being bounced around from place to place during his time in Kinston.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Delmont Miller: (March 30, 1966 – October 25, 2008): Miller was the longtime scoreboard operator for the Indians. His humorous first inning chatter and "shout-outs" prior to each "KTribe" game had become a tradition at Grainger Stadium. Recognizing the popularity of Delmont with both the fans and the players, the Kinston front office held special "Delmont Miller Nights" and built promotions around his unique personality. His twenty-plus year career at the stadium spanned several ownerships and even major league affiliation changes. Prior to becoming the scoreboard operator, he was the clubhouse assistant for the Kinston Blue Jays. His first name came from his father's love of Del Monte brand peaches.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> On October 25, 2008, the 42-year-old Miller died of a massive heart attack.
- The Smeraldos: Robert Smeraldo and Robert Smeraldo Jr. were the longtime father/son clubhouse managers for the ballclub. The senior Smeraldo has since died. His son no longer works for the team.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Season-by-season resultsEdit
Year | Name | League | Level | Affiliation | Record | Manager | Playoffs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Template:Baseball year | Eagles | Carolina | High-A | 57–77 | Leo Mazzone | ||
Template:Baseball year | Eagles | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 67–69 | Duane Larson | |
Template:Baseball year | Eagles | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 69–69 | Dennis Holmberg | |
Template:Baseball year | Eagles | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 72–68 | John McLaren | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Blue Jays | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 76–59 | John McLaren | |
Template:Baseball year | Blue Jays | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 62–76 | Clark/Ault | |
Template:Baseball year | Blue Jays | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 71–69 | Doug Ault | |
Template:Baseball year | Blue Jays | Carolina | High-A | Toronto Blue Jays | 64–73 | Grady Little | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Eagles | Carolina | High-A | Co-op | 60–75 | Dave Trembley | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 75–65 | Mike Hargrove | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 88–52 | Glenn Adams | League Champs |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 76–60 | Ken Bolek | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 88–47 | Brian Graham | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 89–49 | Brian Graham | League Champs |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 65–71 | Dave Keller | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 71–67 | Dave Keller | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 60–78 | Dave Keller | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 81–56 | Gordon Mackenzie | League Champs |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 76–62 | Jack Mull | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 87–53 | Joel Skinner | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 69–71 | Mako Oliveras | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 79–58 | Eric Wedge | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 68–69 | Brad Komminsk | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 89–51 | Brad Komminsk | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 74–65 | Ted Kubiak | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 73–66 | Torey Lovullo | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 88–50 | Torey Lovullo | League Champs |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 76–64 | Luis Rivera | Lost League Finals |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 85–54 | Mike Sarbaugh | League Champs |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 87–52 | Mike Sarbaugh | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 72–66 | Chris Tremie | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 60–78 | Chris Tremie | |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 73–67 | Aaron Holbert | Lost in 1st round |
Template:Baseball year | Indians | Carolina | High-A | Cleveland Indians | 76–62 | Aaron Holbert | Lost League Finals |
TABLE NOTES:
- DNF = Did Not Finish season.
- Sources<ref>Template:Cite bookThis was the main source for all the information concerning teams in "official" leagues. Whenever possible, the facts were cross-checked using other sources.</ref><ref>Template:Cite news Used for the two E.C.B.A. teams.</ref><ref>Template:Cite bookUsed for the semi-pro Coastal Plain League team.</ref><ref>Template:Cite book Used for seasons since the publication of The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, second ed. and to cross-check same.</ref>
PlayoffsEdit
- 1981 season: Lost to Peninsula 1–0 in semifinals.
- 1985 season: Lost to Winston-Salem 2–0 in semifinals.
- 1987 season: Defeated Winston-Salem 2–0 in semifinals; lost to Salem 3–1 in championship.
- 1988 season: Defeated Lynchburg 3–2 to win championship.
- 1990 season: Lost to Frederick 3–2 in championship.
- 1991 season: Defeated Lynchburg 3–0 to win championship.
- 1993 season: Lost to Winston-Salem 2–1 in semifinals.
- 1995 season: Defeated Wilmington 3–0 to win championship.
- 1996 season: Defeated Durham 2–1 in semifinals; lost to Wilmington 3–1 in championship.
- 1997 season: Lost to Lynchburg 3–1 in championship.
- 1999 season: Lost to Myrtle Beach 2–1 in semifinals.
- 2001 season: Lost to Salem 2–1 in semifinals.
- 2002 season: Defeated Myrtle Beach 2–0 in semifinals; lost to Lynchburg 3–1 in championship.
- 2003 season: Lost to Winston-Salem 2–0 in semifinals.
- 2004 season: Defeated Winston-Salem 2–1 in semifinals; defeated Wilmington 3–2 to win championship.
- 2005 season: Defeated Winston-Salem 2–0 in semifinals; lost to Frederick 3–2 in championship.
- 2006 season: Defeated Salem 2–0 in semifinals; defeated Frederick 3–0 to win league championship.
- 2007 season: Lost to Salem 2–1 in semifinals.
- 2010 season: Lost to Winston-Salem 3–0 in semifinals.
- 2011 season: Defeated Myrtle Beach 3–1 in semifinals; lost to Frederick 3–1 in championship.
No HittersEdit
- Oscar Muñoz (5/26/1991) vs the Prince William Cannons<ref name="NoNo">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Paul Byrd, Scott Morgan, and Mike Soper (8/23/1991) vs the Prince William Cannons<ref name="NoNo"/>
- Jason Rakers (6/4/1997) vs the Durham Bulls (7 inning game)<ref name="NoNo"/>
- Keith Ramsey (9/6/2004) vs the Myrtle Beach Pelicans (perfect game)<ref name="NoNo"/>
- Marty Popham, Chris Jones and Cory Burns (9/5/2010) vs the Potomac Nationals (10 innings)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
See alsoEdit
- Kinston Eagles – Previous baseball teams in Kinston known as the Eagles
BibliographyEdit
Autobiographies and biographiesEdit
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
League historiesEdit
NewspapersEdit
- Template:Citation – Issues for the 1908 season do not exist. Issues for all other seasons are available on microfilm at Lenoir Community College.
Official sourcesEdit
- Template:Citation – Programs are also referred to as yearbooks.
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- Template:Cite book – Over the years, this publication has also been known as Carolina League Media Guide and Record Book and Carolina League Directory and Record Book
FootnotesEdit
Template:S-start Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box
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