Birmingham A's: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Tag: Removed redirect
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''Birmingham A's''' were the [[Southern League of Professional Baseball|Southern League]] AA affiliate of the Kansas City Athletics, playing at [[Rickwood Field]] from [[1967]] to [[1975]]. They were a successor to the re-formed [[1964 Birmingham Barons]], also affiliated with the A's, which was the first racially-integrated professional sports team to play for Birmingham after the repeal of the city's [[segregation ordinances]] in [[1963]]. After the [[1965 Birmingham Barons|1965 season]], that team relocated to Mobile as the Mobile A's.
[[File:Birmingham As logo.png|right]]
The '''Birmingham Athletics''', commonly the '''Birmingham A's''' were the [[Southern League of Professional Baseball|Southern League]] AA affiliate of the Kansas City Athletics, playing at [[Rickwood Field]] from [[1967]] to [[1975]]. They were a successor to the re-formed [[1964 Birmingham Barons]], also affiliated with the A's, which was the first racially-integrated professional sports team to play for Birmingham after the repeal of the city's [[segregation ordinances]] in [[1963]]. After the [[1965 Birmingham Barons|1965 season]], owner [[Al Belcher]] decided to suspend play, and the team relocated to Mobile as the Mobile A's.


In [[1967]] Athletics owner [[Charlie Finley]] brought the team back to Birmingham, keeping the A's name. With manager [[John McNamara]] and future Hall of Famers [[Reggie Jackson]] and [[Rollie Fingers]], the A's went 84-55 and took the 6-team Southern League title by 3.5 games.
Belcher put Rickwood up for sale for $500,000 and threatened to demolish it for the salvage value. In 1966 he reached an agreement with the City of Birmingham, retaining a lease for the remainder of that year. Later in 1966, the lease was transferred to Athletics owner [[Charlie Finley]], who brought Kansas City's farm team back to Birmingham for the 1967 season, playing as the "[[Birmingham A's]]".  


The Athletics moved from Kansas City to Oakland, California in [[1968]]. After a few strong seasons, the Birmingham club suffered along with the struggling league. The 1973 A's averaged only 305 fans per game at Rickwood.
With manager [[John McNamara]] and future Hall of Famers [[Reggie Jackson]] and [[Rollie Fingers]], the A's went 84-55 and took the 6-team Southern League title by 3.5 games.


The A's moved after the 1975 season and Rickwood did not see Southern League baseball again for 5 seasons.
The Major League Athletics moved from Kansas City to Oakland, California in [[1968]]. After a few strong seasons, the Birmingham club struggled for relevance on and off the field. The 1973 A's averaged only 305 fans per game at Rickwood.
 
The A's were sold to a group of Chattanooga, Tennessee investors in a deal announced during winter meetings on [[December 9]], [[1975]]. They played as the Chattanooga Lookouts the next season. Rickwood did not see Southern League baseball again for 5 seasons.


==Records==
==Records==
Line 17: Line 20:
* [[1974 Birmingham A's]]: 54-81
* [[1974 Birmingham A's]]: 54-81
* [[1975 Birmingham A's]]: 65-69
* [[1975 Birmingham A's]]: 65-69
==External links==
* [http://www.birminghamprosports.com/birminghamathleticshistory.htm Birmingham Athletics history] at birminghamprosports.com


[[Category:Birmingham A's|*]]
[[Category:Birmingham A's|*]]
[[Category: 1967 establishments]]
[[Category: 1967 establishments]]
[[Category: 1975 disestablishments]]
[[Category: 1975 disestablishments]]

Latest revision as of 14:13, 23 June 2024

Birmingham As logo.png

The Birmingham Athletics, commonly the Birmingham A's were the Southern League AA affiliate of the Kansas City Athletics, playing at Rickwood Field from 1967 to 1975. They were a successor to the re-formed 1964 Birmingham Barons, also affiliated with the A's, which was the first racially-integrated professional sports team to play for Birmingham after the repeal of the city's segregation ordinances in 1963. After the 1965 season, owner Al Belcher decided to suspend play, and the team relocated to Mobile as the Mobile A's.

Belcher put Rickwood up for sale for $500,000 and threatened to demolish it for the salvage value. In 1966 he reached an agreement with the City of Birmingham, retaining a lease for the remainder of that year. Later in 1966, the lease was transferred to Athletics owner Charlie Finley, who brought Kansas City's farm team back to Birmingham for the 1967 season, playing as the "Birmingham A's".

With manager John McNamara and future Hall of Famers Reggie Jackson and Rollie Fingers, the A's went 84-55 and took the 6-team Southern League title by 3.5 games.

The Major League Athletics moved from Kansas City to Oakland, California in 1968. After a few strong seasons, the Birmingham club struggled for relevance on and off the field. The 1973 A's averaged only 305 fans per game at Rickwood.

The A's were sold to a group of Chattanooga, Tennessee investors in a deal announced during winter meetings on December 9, 1975. They played as the Chattanooga Lookouts the next season. Rickwood did not see Southern League baseball again for 5 seasons.

Records

External links