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THE HISTORY OF THE COLUMBUS CLIPPERS

By Clippers Historian, Joseph M. Santry

When the Columbus Jets pulled up stakes and moved away after the 1970 season, it left Columbus without professional baseball for the first time in 75 years.  For six years central Ohio fans did without baseball as Jet Stadium deteriorated.  Franklin County Commissioner Harold Cooper (right) had led the drive to buy the Jets in 1955.  In 1977, Cooper again pushed for a professional team and a major stadium renovation.  The Columbus Clippers and Franklin County Stadium were born.  A multi-million dollar renovation made Franklin County Stadium the jewel of the International League and the first minor league facility to have Astroturf.

  The Columbus Clippers were affiliated with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1977-78. The Clippers finished in seventh place both seasons but they developed a lot of young talent.  Righty Tim Jones was 15-6 in ’77 and second baseman Mike Edwards made All-League honors.   Catcher Steve Nicosia, outfielders Mike Easler and Alberto Lois, infielders Dale Berra, Doe Boyland, Gary Hargis and pitchers Eddie Whitson and Don Robinson all played for the 1979 World Champion Pirates.

 THREE OF A KIND


Marshall Brant, Dave Righetti and Steve Balboni

  In 1979, General Manager George Sisler, Jr. signed a working agreement with the New York Yankees.  The Bronx Bombers finished in first place in 1980 & ’81.  Their Triple-A farm club did them one better by becoming the first team ever to win three consecutive International League pennants and Governors’ Cup championships, despite having a different manager each season.  

   Gene Michael’s ’79 club was led by co-International League MVP outfielder Bobby Brown (.349 & 25 SB), first baseman Dennis Werth (17 HRs, .299), pitching aces Bob Kammeyer (16-8) and Rick Anderson (13-3, 21 saves, 1.63 ERA).  Joe Altobelli’s Clippers won the following year on the strength of great defense, first baseman Marshall Brant’s bat (23 HRs, 92 RBI and .289) and one of the strongest pitching staffs in history.  Bob Kammeyer won 15 games and Greg Cochran added 12 more, on a staff that had nine hurlers with ERAs less than 3.00. Ken Clay led all hurlers with a 1.96 ERA.  The only losing record on the staff belonged to rookie 21-year-old southpaw, Dave Righetti (6-10, 4.63).  Frank Verdi’s squad made it three in a row in 1981, powered by first basemen Steve Balboni (33 HRs, 98 RBIs) and Brant (25 HRs,95 RBIs), third baseman Tucker Ashford (17 HRs, 86 RBI’s, .300) and outfielder Mike Patterson (15 HRs).  Pitchers Dave Wehrmeister, John Pacella and Paul Boris all won in double figures. Dave Righetti turned things around going 5-0 with a 1.00 ERA in his first seven games before being called up by the Yankees.  Thirteen former Clippers on the 1981 American League Champion Yankees joined Righetti.

  A NEAR MISS

    Manager Frank Verdi’s club just missed their fourth consecutive pennant in 1982.  Injuries and poor pitching caused Columbus to finish 3.5 games back of the Richmond Braves.  Brant (31 HRs & 96 RBIs), Ashford (101RBI’s and .331) and 21-year-old outfielder Don Mattingly (.315) were the only Clippers to have 400 at bats.  Steve Balboni cracked 32 home runs and 86 RBIs.  But nine second basemen and six shortstops kept the middle infield in a state of flux.  Centerfielder Otis Nixon had 46 stolen bases in just 59 games.  Jim Lewis was the only standout on the mound at 12-6 with a 2.60 ERA.

BACK ON TOP

Butch Hobson and Rex Hudler

    Manager Johnny Oates led Columbus back to the penthouse in 1983.  The Clippers had a terrific offense led by outfielders Mattingly (.340), Brian Dayett (a Clippers record 35 HRs, with 105 runs and 108 RBIs), Nixon (129 runs, 94 RBIs and .291) and Matt Winters (29 HRs, 99 RBIs and .292).  Butch Hobson hit 19 home runs and reserve outfielder Mike Patterson added ten more.  Brad Gulden (.316) and Juan Espino (.280) shared the catching duties, combining for 19 HRs and 89 RBIs.  Dennis Rasmussen (13-10), Jamie Werly (9-2) and Curt Kaufman (6-3 with 25 saves) led the pitching corps.

    
Scott Patterson (1982-86) the star of The Gilmore Girls. Don Mattingly.

     The Clippers won their fifth pennant with yet another manager, Stump Merrill, in 1984. First baseman Dan Briggs (15 HRs, 71 RBIs and .285), second baseman Rex Hudler (.292) and third baseman Hobson were the heart of the offense.  IL MVP and Rookie of the Year catcher Scott Bradley (.335) was the star of the team.  The pitching staff was led by Jim Deshaies (10-5, 2.39 ERA) and energized by two mid-season call-ups, Kelly Faulk (11-1, 2.82) and Joe Cowley (10-3).  On August 19, 1984 the stadium was renamed Cooper Stadium to honor former Franklin County Commissioner Harold M. Cooper, the International League President at that time and also the former GM of the Columbus Jets.

CLOSE BUT ONE CIGAR



Hal Morris, Al Lieter, Roberto Kelly and Jay Buhner with Bucky Dent.

    From 1985-89 the Clippers had three close calls but went "pennantless".  But Cooper Stadium was still filled with future major league stars as Bob Tewksbury, Doug Drabek, Jay Buhner, Roberto Kelly, Deion Sanders and brothers Al and Mark LeiterJuan Bonilla (.330) won the batting title in 1985, as did Hal Morris (.326) in 1989.   Following in the footsteps of Bradley in ‘84, Dan Pasqua was named the IL’s MVP and Rookie of the Year in ’85. Orestes Destrade gave Columbus it’s third straight Rookie of the Year the following season in ‘86.  Brad Arnsberg (12-5, 2.88 ERA) was named the IL’s Most Valuable Pitcher in 1987 as he led Bucky Dent’s (right) Clippers to the Governors’ Cup Championship.

   At the 1989 baseball winter meetings in Nashville, The Clippers   received The Bob Freitas Award as the Triple-A “Organization of the Decade”.  Ken Schnacke replaced the retiring George Sisler, Jr. as general manager in the fall of 1989, having trained under Sisler since the franchise’s beginning in 1977.

THREE MORE IN A ROW

    Rick Down took over for Stump Merrill midway through the 1990 season and led Columbus to three straight first place finishes.  The 1990 club was led by a pair of IL MVP’s, third baseman Hensley “Bam-Bam” Meulens (26 HRs, 96RBIs, .285) and the Clippers all-time winningest pitcher, Dave Eiland (16-5, 2.87 ERA). 

The 1991 squad literally stole the Western Division title.  They had no power hitters or great starting pitching.  What they did have was great defense and speed.  Jim Walewander led the league with 54 stolen bases, followed by Mike Humphreys’ 34 swipes and Andy Stankiewicz’s 29 pilfered bags.  Catcher John Ramos (.308) and center fielder Bernie Williams (.294) led the hitters.  The bullpen of Darrin Chapin (10-3 and 12 saves) and Rich Monteleone (17 saves) were the unsung heroes.

     Columbus celebrated their 100th season in professional baseball in 1992 with one of the greatest teams in minor league history.  Eight Clippers were named on the IL All-Star team. MVP and Rookie of the Year first baseman J.T. Snow (15 HRs, 78 RBIs and a league leading .313), third baseman Hensley “Bam-Bam” Meulens (26 HRs, 100 RBIs, .275), shortstop Dave Silvestri (13 HRs, 73 RBIs), center fielder Bernie Williams (.306), right fielder Gerald Williams (16 HRs, 86 RBIs, .285), starting pitcher Sam Militello (12-2) and reliever Mike Draper (a Columbus record 37 saves).  Three other pitchers, Bob Wickman, Royal Clayton and Ed Martel won in double figures. The season was capped off when the Clippers defeated Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons in a dramatic ninth inning victory in the final game of the Governors’ Cup Championship.

 RELOADING

     The longest period the Clippers failed to make the post season playoffs was from 1993-95. This despite a powerful consistent lineup which included Don Sparks, Dave Silvestri, Russ Davis, Mike Humphreys, and Bubba Carpenter, and included pitchers Dave Eiland and Royal Clayton.  Eighteen Clippers from this era were on the World Champion Yankees of 1996, including shortstop Derek Jeter, pitchers Andy Pettitte, Mariano Rivera and Brian Boehringer, infielder Andy Fox and catcher Jorge Posada



Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter and Bernie Williams

ANOTHER CUP

   The 1996 Clippers were seven games back in late June.  Stump Merrill’s crew fought back to take the lead a month later.  Then the club went on to win 13 of 14 and held off a determined Norfolk Tides team.  Columbus swept Norfolk and Rochester for the Governors’ Cup.  The Clippers were powered by first baseman Ivan Cruz (28 HRs, 96 RBIs), third baseman Tracy Woodson (21 HRs, 81 RBIs) and outfielder Ricky Ledee (21 HRs & 64 RBIs).  Brian Boehringer led the staff with eleven victories and Dave Pavlas was 8-2, with 26 saves and a 1.99 ERA. Cruz and catcher Jorge Posada won IL All-Star recognition.

    Ivan Cruz (24 HRs & 95 RBIs), outfielder Shane Spencer (30 HRs & 86 RBIs) and All-Star shortstop Matt Howard (.312) brought Columbus home in first again in ’97.  Willie Banks (14-5) was the team’s stopper but it was a newcomer from across the Pacific that got most of the ink.  Japan’s Hideki Irabu (2-0 & 1.67 ERA) drew large crowds while with the team whenever he pitched.

    With the most power-laden lineup in team history, the Columbus fans were eager for the 1998 season.  Unfortunately for manager Stump Merrill, Ivan Cruz, Shane Spencer, Ricky Ledee, Mike Lowell and Mike Figga only appeared in the lineup together once during the season. The team got off to a horrible 2-13 start.  By mid-June the club had battled back into first place.  Only to drop out of the race with a 1-13 streak between July & August.  The Clippers had 110 roster moves and 19 different starting pitchers.  One bright spot was Orlando “El Duque” Hernandez (6-0).  Other bright spots were Mike Lowell (26 HRs, 99 RBIs, .304), outfielders Scott Pose (.297 and a league leading 47 stolen bases), Shane Spencer (.322 and 18 HRs in half a season) and catcher Mike Figga (26 HRs, 95 RBIs and .280).  Fifteen ’98 Clippers played for the World Champion Yankees.

REAL GRASS, REAL BASEBALL, REAL FUN!


Harold Cooper, George Sisler, Jr., Dick Fitzpatrick and Ken Schnacke

During the winter of 1998, the Columbus Clippers pulled up the carpeting that had adorned the floor of Cooper Stadium since ‘77 and laid down sod, provided by The Scotts Company of Marysville, Ohio. It was only one of the many changes Columbus had in store in 1999. Other changes included a new scoreboard and a new manager, Trey Hillman.

The 1999 Clippers were a blend of both familiar names and new faces. Back from last year were shortstop D'Angelo Jimenez, outfielder Bubba Carpenter and pitcher Mike Buddie. Major league veteran free agents such as infielders Andy Stankiewicz and Brian Raabe; infielder-outfielders Alonzo Powell, Mike Coolbaugh and Tony Torasco ; catchers B.J. Waszgis and Izzy Molina and pitchers Chris Nichting, Dave Pavlas and Jeff Juden gave Hillman a firm backbone for the team. Prospects like first baseman Kirk Bierek, pitchers Jay Tessmer, Ed Yarnall, Ryan Bradley and Luis De Los Santos added an interesting combination of youth to the equation.

The Clippers burst out of the gate and never looked back. At the end of May, the team had an incredible .653 winning percent. The year before, Columbus had one player who had hit over .300. Half way through the season, the Clippers were hitting over .300 as a team.

When injuries slowed some players, others, particularly Mike Coolbaugh, caught fire in the second half of the season. Ricky Ledee, Shane Spencer, Clay Bellinger and Darryl Strawberry added big sparks while on loan from the Yankees. In early September, the Clippers led the rest of the division by 12 games.

Ed Yarnall (13-4), Jeff Juden (11-12), Chris Nichting (8-5) and Ryan Bradley all started over 20 games, giving the Clippers a solid starting rotation. Bullpen mates Mike Buddie, Ben Ford, Dave Pavlas and Greg McCarthy combined for a 21-8 record.

Columbus won the West Division by nine and a half games with a record of 83-58. It marked the eleventh time in 23 seasons that the Clippers have finished in first place.

Ed Yarnall was voted the International League's Most Valuable Pitcher. He was 1st in the IL in ERA (3.47), 2nd in wins (13) and 3rd in strikeouts (146). Jay Tessmer was voted the league's top reliever with his 28 saves. First baseman Kirk Bierek hit a Clippers record 42 doubles and added 23 home runs and 95 RBI's to win the IL's Rookie of the Year Award.

The Clippers keystone combination of Brian Raabe (35 doubles, 77 RBI's and .327) and D'Angelo Jimenez (32 doubles, 88 RBI's and .327) were named to the league's All-Star team.

Seven Clippers hit in double figures in home runs: Alonzo Powell (24 HRs, 90 RBI's, .315), Bierek (23 HRs, 95 RBI’s, .280), Bubba Carpenter (22 HRs, 81 RBI's, .283), Tony Torasco (19 HRs, 66 RBI's, .295), Mike Coolbaugh (15 HRs), Jimenez (15 HRs) and Raabe (11 HRs). Chris Ashby clubbed nine home runs in just 70 games.

   Trey Hillman's squads finished in second place in 2000 and 2001.  Brandon Knight led the I.L. in strikeouts both seasons.  Columbus fans even got a glimpse of the future in young infielder Alfonso Soriano and Nick Johnson (right).

Bucky Dent returned to manage the Clippers in 2003. After a slow start, Columbus came roaring back to just miss out of the playoff picture. They finished in second place with a record of 76-68. Fernando Seguignol won the IL’s MVP Award on the strength of his league leading .341 and 28 home runs, despite missing five weeks on the DL.


Fernando Seguignol

The Columbus Clippers won the Western Division by 13 games and set a club record by having twenty players wear both Yankees and Clippers pinstripes in 2004.

 

Bucky Dent brought a mixture of veterans and young players north to start the season.  The Clippers were 9-11 in April despite leading the league in hitting.  The offense was led by the young keystone combination of Caonabe Cosme (.365 -left) and shortstop Felix Escalona (.328).  Outfielder Darren Bragg chipped in with a .343 average.  Reliever Colter Bean did not allow an earned run during the month.  The big submariner continued his dominance all season, finishing with nine victories and a 2.29 ERA.  The reliever finished in the International League’s Top Ten in strikeouts

 

Bucky’s Bunch caught fire in May (18-11) when Andy Phillips (right) brought his bat to town after a year on the DL.  Phillips hit seven home runs with a .387 average.  Third baseman Jeff Deardorff also hit seven dingers during the month.  Seven Clippers hit over .300 in May. Southpaw Alex Graman (left) was 4-0 and joined teammate Sam Marsonek as I.L. pitcher of the week. 

 Columbus continued to roll in June (17-11).  The hitting slumped but Mike Kelly (sliding right) with seven home runs and Michael Vento (seven doubles, 3 HR and .311) carried the team.  Right-hander Buddy Carlyle returned from Trenton to post a 2-0, 1.83 ERA for the month, easing the burden of call ups to the pitching staff.

Randy Johnson trade rumors swirled around the clubhouse all July (11-18).  Every day different Yankee farm hands were talked about in the press in different trade cinereous.  Catcher Dioner Navarro (20-years-old), second baseman Robinson Cano (21-year-old) and 24-year-old pitcher Chien-Ming Wang were brought up to be showcased vs. Triple-A competition and earned a place on the Columbus roster.

 

A six game losing streak dropped the Clippers out of first place on July 24th and five days later Columbus found themselves trailing Toledo by 3.5 games.  But the Clippers stepped up to the plate and won 21 of their last 33 games to win the West by 13.5 games.  It was the Clippers first playoff appearance in five years.  Brad Halsey (right), Wang, Graman and Lance Davis each won three games in the month.  Phillips (9 hr, 30 RBI, .359), Escalona (7 doubles, .356) and John Rodriguez (seven doubles, 3 HR, .354) spearheaded the offense.

Yankees Slugger Jason Giambi (left) played for the Clippers on major league rehab during the series.  The Clippers lost to the Braves in the first round of the playoffs, three games to two. 

 Brad Halsey (11-4, 2.63) and Alex Graman (11-6, 3.37) were the pitching staff’s top winners.  Graman led the league in strikeouts with 129.  Sam Marsonek led the team again in saves with 17 in a half season of work

 During the season the Clippers had 4/5 of the Yankees starting rotation take the mound at The Coop.  Orlando Hernandez, Kevin Brown, Jose Contreras and Mike Mussina all appeared in Clippers pinstripes in 2004.

Six Clippers hit in double figures in home runs.  Despite missing the first month of the season, Andy Phillips put up MVP type numbers (26 HR, 85 RBI, .318).  Other big contributors were centerfielder John Rodriguez (27 doubles, 10 triples and 16 HR), third baseman Jeff Deardorff (18 HR, 76 RBI, .271), shortstop Felix Escalona (32 doubles, .308) infielder Homer Bush (.291), Mike Vento (28 doubles, 15 HR, 72 RBI, .275) and Kevin Reese (.323).  Reese split the season between Trenton and Columbus ended the season with 98 runs, 50 doubles, seven triples and 16 HR).   

 In August, Chien-Ming Wang (Taiwan-right) and Todd Betts (Canada) played for their countries in the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.

2005  So Close

The 2005 Columbus Clippers missed the playoffs by just one game, despite 121 roster moves involving 55 different players. The Clippers sent a record 24 players to New York during the season.  Columbus finished third behind Toledo and Indianapolis, who faced off the Governor's Cup finals.

The Clippers jumped out to a 14-10 record in April, on the strength of a team .297 batting average.  Robinson Cano (right) hit .337 with 8 doubles, 2 triples, 4 home runs and 23 RBIs, earning him a May 3rd call up to New York.

First baseman Mitch Jones had a great start (7 HR, 16 RBIs, .360), as did Michael Vento (3 HR, 20 RBIs, .333), Caonabo Cosme (.300), Damian Rolls (.326) and Russ Johnson (10 doubles, 3 HR, 283).  Jones hit for the cycle on April 15th and came back two days later with three home runs, including a game winning walk off homer in the 12th inning.

The bats fell silent in May but the pitching came through in big fashion.  Veteran Brad Voyles (3.25) and youngster Sean Henn (1.35) were 3-1.  Alex Graman was 2-1 with a 2.50 for the month.  The bullpen came through in big fashion, led by Jason Anderson (1-1, 2.16), Wayne Franklin (2-0, 1.59), Scott Proctor (1-0, 2.93) and Kris Wilson (1-0, 0.00).

June saw the bats come alive again.  On June 3rd, Wil Nieves, Andy Phillips, Michael Vento, Mitch Jones and Ryan Hankins set a record by hitting home runs in the same inning at Buffalo.  The last four were consecutive. Jones (8 doubles, 9 HR, 25 RBIs, .342), Andy Phillips (6 doubles, 7 HR, 18 RBIs, .314) and Vento (15 doubles, 5 HR, 27 RBIs, .374) stayed hot all month.  Newcomers Melky Cabrera (.300) and Andy Cannizaro (.316) added a spark as the club posted a 18-10 in June.

A .500 record in July kept the club in the thick of the race with solid performances by Felix Escalona (.316), Hankins (.333), Nieves (.325), Kevin Thompson (.305),  Vento (.301) and hurlers Darrell May, right, (3-0, 0.95) and Eric Schmitt (3-2).  Jones and Vento were named to the I.L. Triple-A All-Star team.  Jones won the Triple-A All-Star Home Run Derby.

Injuries decimated the pitching staff the last month of the season, as Voyles, Henn, Wilson and Tim Redding had season ending injuries. But Kevin Reese (4 doubles, 2 triples, 3 HR and .304) continued his consistent season.  Nieves (.295) and Johnson (.295) helped keep the Clippers in games.  Pete Munro (3-0, 2.45) and Jorge DePaula (2-0, 2.76) finished the season strong. 


Hideo Nomo

Pitchers Chien-Ming Wang and Hideo Nomo added a international flair to the Clippers that season.

Despite the injuries and call ups, the Clippers were not eliminated until there was only one game left in the season.  The team's final record was a solid 77-67.

Reese (left) finished first in the league in doubles (38), 3rd in runs (92), 4th in extra base hits (69) and 5th in hits (149).  Jones finished 5th in home runs (27).  Vento was 2nd in doubles (37).

Escalona broke Marshall Brant's career Clippers record by being hit by a pitch a record 18 this season. Felix has been hit 35 times as a Clipper.

Colter Bean set a club record by appearing in 65 games and Jones set a mark by striking out 174 times.

Jones was named first baseman on  the post season International League All-Star team.


2005 Columbus Clippers

Clippers end 2006 season on a high note

It was a tough year to be the manager of the Columbus Clippers. Players were coming and going at a record pace, 58 different players came and went 158 times.  Add to that thirteen players on the DL for a total of 391 days, it was a tough season.  The only players available to manager Dave Miley every game this season was shortstop Andy Cannizaro, second baseman Danny Garcia and relief pitcher Mark Corey.  Even Miley missed a portion of the season, being hospitalized with back problems.

The Clippers had eight different players play first base, nine at second base, eight at shortstop, ten third basemen, fifteen outfielders, seven catchers, 28 designed hitters and 27 pitchers.

After a rough April (9-15) the Clippers played six games under .500 from May through July.  In August, Columbus turned things around and had the best record (19-11) in the league.

Cannizaro led the team in runs (69 tied with Kevin Thompson) hits (115) and doubles (32).  Mitch Jones paced the club with 21 home runs and 78 RBIs.  Garcia stole 21 bases.  Bronson Sardinha and Thompson each hit five triples

Colter Bean (9-2) and Kris Wilson (9-6) led the pitching staff in wins.  Tommy Phelps pitched well in a starting role and Mark Corey out of the pen.  Both men finished with a 7-4 mark.  Bean led all pitchers with 116 strikeouts.

Five young hurlers were called up to the Yankees late in the season, T. J Beam (2-0, 1.71), Sean Henn (3-1, 4.01),  Darrell Rasner (4-0, 2.76), Jose Veras ( 5-3, 2.41 with 21 saves) and Jeff Karstens, who was 5-0 with a 1.85 ERA after being recalled in July.

“If we had the club we had at the end of the season, for 30 more days, we would have won the whole thing.” said pitching coach, Neil Allen.  With an abundance of good young talent in the Yankees farm system, the Clippers have a bright outlook for 2007.

Beaner Honored

 

In the fifth inning of the final home game at The Coop Saturday, the game was stopped to honor Clippers pitcher Colter Bean.  Earlier in the month, Bean set a record for the most games pitched by a Columbus pitcher (1866-present).   President and G.M. Ken Schnacke presented Colter with a handsome check for his infant son's Gipson college education.

Nationals-Clippers announce partnership

“This is a great major step forward for our franchise to have our affiliate in Columbus, Ohio.”

 - Jim Bowden, Vice President / General Manger, Washington Nationals

Click on the logos at the left to watch the board meeting and press conference.

Ken Schnacke and the Columbus Baseball Team, Inc. Board of Trustees voted in special session Wednesday to sign a two year Player Development Contract with the Washington Nationals for the Franklin County owned Columbus Clippers, Triple-A ball club.

 

Clippers 2007 season is eventful

The 2007 Clippers, in their first season as the Washington Nationals franchise, was marked with a number of milestones and records for the fans to enjoy.  The season kicked off with the exhibition game between the Nationals and the Baltimore Orioles at The Coop. 

Brandon Watson (right) drew national media attention when he broke a 95-year-old International League record when he hit in 43 consecutive games from May 1st thru June 17th.  Watty finished third in the league in hitting with a .313 average.


Bernie Castro

Second baseman Bernie Castro went on a tear in August to lead the league with 34 stolen bases.  Reliever Chris Booker (left) saved 30 ball games, the third highest total in Columbus history. Book allowed just one earned run after the All-Star break.

Reliever Winston Abreu (3-0, 1.20 ERA, 5 SV) nearly broke a 45-year-old International League record when he struck out 21 hitters over nine innings.  The record is 22 strikeouts by Columbus Jets Bob Veale in 1962.  The 30-year-old right-hander followed that feat by pitching nine innings of no-hit ball over six appearances.  Winnie struck out 14.10 batters per nine innings.

Along with southpaw Arnie Munoz (3-1, 2.56 ERA in 54 games), Chris Schroder (2-2, 1.64 in 26 games) and Jonathan Albaladejo (3-0, 1.13 in 37 games), the Clippers bullpen was a formidable force all season.

 


Winston Abreu and Chris Schroder


Arnie Munoz and Jonathan Albaladejo

Columbus got another taste of the national spot light in August.  Mike Bacsik (right) started the season with the Clippers and soon earned a spot in the Washington rotation.  On August 7th, Mike gave up Barry Bonds’ record 756 career home run. After the game Mike was all class and said, “I’m lucky enough to be a part of a very special moment in sports history.”

Manager John Stearns (left) and his staff sent a record 26 Clippers up to the Washington Nationals.  John also had to navigate the Clippers ship through 126 roster changes.  He had 15 players go one the DL and three players (McDonald, Van Buren and Fruto) traded mid-season. Stearns used a Clippers record 64 players during the season.  Through it all, the Clippers and the fans stayed upbeat.

 

 

 


Catcher Brandon Harper was the only Clipper available to play every game in 2007.


Chris Michalak and Tony Batista


D'Angelo Jimenez and Manny Alexander

Along with veterans like Chris Michalak, Tony Batista, D’Angelo Jimenez and Manny Alexander, Clippers fans also go to see the future in young players such as John Lannan, Collin Balester, Kory Casto and Joel Hanrahan.  With the youngsters, the Clippers have a solid foundation for next season.


Joel Hanrahan and John Lannan


Collin Balester and Kory Casto


Tim Redding led the staff with nine victories despite being called up to Washington on July 3rd.
Michael Restovich led the team in home runs but finished the season on the DL.

 
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