Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox Minor League Baseball

File:Portland Sea Dogs Uniform.png
Portland Sea Dogs Uniform

The Portland Sea Dogs are a Minor League Baseball team based in Portland, Maine, playing in the Eastern League.Template:Efn Established in 1994, the Sea Dogs are the Double-A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.

Originally affiliated with the Florida Marlins, the Sea Dogs became part of the Red Sox system for the 2003 season. The team went to the Eastern League championship series in 2005, losing to the Akron Aeros; and again in 2006, when they defeated the Aeros to win the first Double-A championship for a Red Sox farm team since the New Britain Red Sox in 1983.

All games are carried on a network of radio stations with Emma Tiedemann providing the play-by-play,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> with the flagship WPEI doing both home and away games.

HistoryEdit

File:Slugger Sea Dogs mascot.jpg
Slugger the Sea Dog, the team mascot

Minor league baseball returned to Maine on October 4, 1992, when Portland was awarded one of two Eastern League expansion franchises (the other being the New Haven Ravens) to begin play in April 1994. The Sea Dogs signed an affiliation agreement with the Florida Marlins on May 3, 1993, beginning a nine-season relationship.<ref>Sea Dogs Time Line (Franchise History) – Portland Sea Dogs.</ref> The city renovated Hadlock Field, transforming a high-school stadium into a professional ballpark. City manager Robert Ganley led efforts to renovate Hadlock Field and return professional baseball to Portland.

The team won its first game, defeating the Reading Phillies on the road 2–1, with the help of a 14th-inning home run by future major league catcher Charles Johnson. The team opened Hadlock Field on April 18, 1994, losing 7–6 to the Albany-Colonie Yankees.

Cartoonist Guy Gilchrist designed the team's logo.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> His comic strip Mudpie had a series of strips in which the young cat's family visit the Portland area and attend a Sea Dogs game.Template:Citation needed

The team won its sole league title on September 17, 2006, defeating the Akron Aeros 8–5, in a rematch of the series from the previous year.

When Major League Baseball restructured Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Sea Dogs were organized into the Double-A Northeast.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2022, the division was renamed the Eastern League, the name used by the regional circuit before the 2021 reorganization.<ref name=ELrename>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Ahead of the 2023 season, the Sea Dogs' longtime owners, the Burke family, sold the team to Diamond Baseball Holdings.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In August 2024, Portland cartoonist Lincoln Peirce featured the team in his comic strip Big Nate.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

StadiumEdit

File:Portland Sea Dogs, April 2016.jpg
The Sea Dogs hosting the Hartford Yard Goats during the 2016 season

The Sea Dogs' home stadium is Delta Dental Park at Hadlock Field, named after longtime Portland High School baseball coach Edson Hadlock.<ref name=Hadlock>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It has a seating capacity of 7,368.<ref name=Hadlock/> Hadlock Field is often visited by vacationing celebrities, such as former NFL coach Bill Parcells, former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, and his wife Barbara. In left field stands the Maine Monster, a Template:Convert replica of Fenway Park's Green Monster, complete with Coke bottle and Citgo sign.<ref name=Hadlock/> Along the right-field foul line just beyond first base, a picnic pavilion is available for group outings from 20 up to 300 people. In 2006, a new pavilion opened above the right-field wall over the Sea Dogs bullpen. Modeled after the Green Monster seats at Fenway Park in Boston, it seats up to 393 people and gives fans an opportunity to catch a home run ball. After the 2024 season, construction began on a new locker room facility behind the left field grandstand.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Slugger the Sea Dog has been the Sea Dogs' mascot since May 6, 1994.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Season recordsEdit

The team was a member of the Northeast division of the Eastern League from 1994 to 2020 and the Northeast division of Double-A Northeast in 2021. They have been members of the Eastern League's Northeast division since 2022.

In the below table, "Place" represents finish within the team's division for the overall regular reason. Note that in 2019 and 2022, the Eastern League played a split-season schedule, with first-half and second-half winners advancing to the postseason.

Legend
Place   Playoffs
Division champions   Won championship series
Made playoffs   Lost championship series
Results by season
Year W–L Pct. Place Manager Playoffs
1994 60–81 Template:Winning percentage 4th Carlos Tosca  
1995 86–56 Template:Winning percentage 1st Lost to New Haven, 3–2 in semifinals
1996 83–58 Template:Winning percentage 1st Defeated Binghamton, 3–2 in semifinals
Lost to Harrisburg, 3–2 in championship
1997 79–63 Template:Winning percentage 1st Fredi González Defeated Norwich, 3–2 in semifinals
Lost to Harrisburg, 3–1 in championship
1998 66–75 Template:Winning percentage 3rd Lynn Jones  
1999 65–77 Template:Winning percentage 3rd Frank Cacciatore  
2000 71–70 Template:Winning percentage 4th Rick Renteria  
2001 77–65 Template:Winning percentage 3rd  
2002 63–77 Template:Winning percentage 5th Eric Fox  
2003 72–70 Template:Winning percentage 3rd Ron Johnson  
2004 69–73 Template:Winning percentage 4th  
2005 76–66 Template:Winning percentage 1st Todd Claus Defeated Trenton, 3–2 in semifinals
Lost to Akron, 3–1 in championship
2006 72–67 Template:Winning percentage 2nd Defeated Trenton, 3–1 in semifinals
Defeated Akron, 3–2 in championship
2007 71–72 Template:Winning percentage 2nd Arnie Beyeler Lost to Trenton, 3–1 in semifinals
2008 74–66 Template:Winning percentage 2nd Lost to Trenton, 3–0 in semifinals
2009 67–74 Template:Winning percentage 4th  
2010 70–71 Template:Winning percentage 3rd  
2011 59–83 Template:Winning percentage 6th Kevin Boles  
2012 68–73 Template:Winning percentage 4th  
2013 68–73 Template:Winning percentage 4th  
2014 88–54 Template:Winning percentage 1st Billy McMillon Lost to Binghamton, 3–2 in semifinals
2015 53–89 Template:Winning percentage 6th  
2016 55–84 Template:Winning percentage 6th Carlos Febles  
2017 65–74 Template:Winning percentage 4th  
2018 63–76 Template:Winning percentage 6th Darren Fenster  
2019 62–77 Template:Winning percentage 6th Joe Oliver  
2020 Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 67–47 Template:Winning percentage 2nd Corey Wimberly  
2022 75–63 Template:Winning percentage 3rd Chad Epperson Lost to Somerset, 2–0 in semifinals
2023 73–63 Template:Winning percentage 3rd  
2024 78–60 Template:Winning percentage 1st  

RosterEdit

Template:Portland Sea Dogs roster

BroadcastsEdit

Sea Dogs games can be heard on the following radio stations: 95.5 WPPI Topsham, Maine, 95.9 WPEI: Saco, Maine, 780 WEZR: Rumford, Maine, and 1450 WPNO: South Paris, Maine. Game audio is also streamed for free on MiLB.com

Games can be watched for free using the Bally Live app, or with a paid subscription to MiLB.TV, though Black Out Restrictions may apply.

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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