Current:Home > NewsOakland baseball will not die! City announces expansion team in Pioneer Baseball League -Horizon Finance Path
Oakland baseball will not die! City announces expansion team in Pioneer Baseball League
View
Date:2025-04-16 10:22:42
Major League Baseball may be able to take the Athletics out of Oakland, but city officials plan to prove that no one can take baseball out of Oakland.
The city of Oakland is scheduled to have a new baseball team in May 2024, the Oakland Ballers, an expansion team in the independent Pioneer Baseball League, city and team officials will announce Tuesday.
In their own words, "Oakland is stealing baseball back."
"I think the A’s are thinking that we’re not going to fight and we’re just going to let pro baseball die," said Jorge Leon, founder of the Oakland 68’s, a non-profit Oakland fan group. "This will send out a strong signal, with or without you, we’re not going let tradition die in Oakland."
While the A’s have one more year at the Oakland Coliseum and must find a place to play until they move to Las Vegas in 2028, the Oakland Ballers are being founded, which could help alleviate the pain of the A’s move.
HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.
Paul Freedman and Bryan Carmel, founders of the Ballers, have scheduled a 2 p.m. ET news conference Tuesday with Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao, Oakland City Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas, and U.S Congressional candidate Lateefah Simon to introduce the team. They’ll be joined by Oakland artist Mistah FAB and Leon.
The Ballers are hoping to play their inaugural season near Laney College in downtown Oakland, the site where the A’s once hoped to play among their stadium proposals over the years.
"I’m excited," Leon said. "I think this announcement is going to be a surprise to a lot of people, how fast someone can come back and help Oakland keep its tradition."
Don Wakamatsu, the former Seattle Mariners and Texas Rangers manager who spent 19 years as a coach and manager in the big leagues, will become their executive vice president of baseball operations. Micah Franklin, who spent 17 years as a player and scout, will be their manager. And former big-league pitcher Ray King will be the pitching coach.
The Ballers will become the Pioneer League’s first West Coast franchise, already raising more than $2 million from investors while starting a fundraising campaign to invite others to become part-owners of the team.
"We’re going to do our part to pack the place every night," Leon said. “Our emphasis will be to draw more than the actual A’s games. It will be saying, "Look at what you’re missing out on by leaving. It won’t necessarily ease the pain, but it will feel good to draw more than the A’s, showing it’s all about the community and approaching it the right way. It’ll show the inability of the A’s ownership to get things done here.
"And if it all goes well, and they don’t renew the lease with the A’s, let the Ballers play in the Coliseum, baby."
Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale
veryGood! (62899)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- 3-year-old migrant girl dies aboard bus headed from Texas to Chicago
- Clarence Avant, ‘Godfather of Black Music’ and benefactor of athletes and politicians, dies at 92
- Georgia jail fails to let out inmates who are due for release and met bail, citing crashed database
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Marine charged with sexual assault after 14-year-old found in California barracks
- Coast Guard rescues 4 divers who went missing off the Carolinas
- UBS to pay $1.44 billion to settle 2007 financial crisis-era mortgage fraud case, last of such cases
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Iowa State’s Isaiah Lee, who is accused of betting against Cyclones in a 2021 game, leaves program
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Fiery crash scatters exploding propane bottles across Mississippi highway, driver survives
- ‘Barbie’ has legs: Greta Gerwig’s film tops box office again and gives industry a midsummer surge
- Climber Kristin Harila responds after critics accuse her of walking past dying sherpa to set world record
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Russian air strikes hit Kyiv as Moscow claims to shoot down Ukrainian drone
- Wendy McMahon and Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews take lead news executive roles at CBS
- Why lasers could help make the electric grid greener
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Rescued baby walrus getting round-the-clock cuddles as part of care regimen dies in Alaska
5 people, including a child, are dead after an explosion destroys 3 homes and damages 12 others
Why Millie Bobby Brown Is Ready to Move on From Stranger Things
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Nick Jonas' Wife Priyanka Chopra and Daughter Malti Support Him at Jonas Brothers' Tour Opener
North Korea’s Kim orders sharp increase in missile production, days before US-South Korea drills
16 people injured after boat explodes at Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri