London Tigers
- Location: London, ON
- League: Eastern League 1989-1993
- Affiliation: Detroit Tigers 1989-1993
- Ballpark: Labbatt Park
After 47 years without a team, professional baseball returned to London, ON in 1989 when the Glens Falls Tigers moved to the city and took on the name London Tigers. The Eastern League team club derived its offense from unusual sources - shortstop and catcher. SS Travis Fryman led the EL with 30 doubles, while hitting .265/~.297/.402 and C Phil Clark batted .298/.328/.427. 3B Scott Livingstone hit a team-high 14 HR but batted just .217. Paul Wenson went 2-3 with a 3.50 ERA one year after leading the EL in ERA while Darrin Hursey (8-13, 3.97) led the league in losses, hits allowed (183) and runs allowed (92). The Tigers went 63-76 and finished 6th of 8 teams. On the other hand, they drew 167,679 fans, more than they had their last two years in Glens Falls, NY. The team was managed by Chris Chambliss.
Chambliss was named Manager of the Year in the 1990 Eastern League after London finished 76-63, just three games behind the Albany Yankees while attendance was just 15 fans off of the opening season's pace. All-Star 1B Rico Brogna was named the #3 prospect in the circuit and led the league in homers (21) and tied for the lead in RBI (77) while hitting .262/~.331/.447. Mike Wilkins (13-5, 2.42), Dave Haas (13-8, 2.99) and Rusty Meacham (15-9, 3.13) gave the club a nice trio of arms; Wilkins was 6th in the league in ERA, Haas 9th and Meacham led in wins. In the post-season, London lost the first two games to the Canton-Akron Indians but then won three in a row at home Labatt Park. They then beat the New Britain Red Sox in three straight games to become the first Detroit Tigers farm club to win the Eastern League championship.
Gene Roof managed the team to sixth place in 1991 with a 61-78 record as attendance slipped to 150,435. Brogna was again named one of the top prospects in the loop (4th) though he spent some of the year in the International League while he hit .273/~.330/.457; for the second straight year he hit as many doubles as homers for London. Steve Pegues hit .301 and Lou Frazier stole 42 bases and drew 77 walks. John Doherty (3-3, 15 Sv, 2.22) was the top pitcher on the squad.
Mark DeJohn managed London to a 67-70 record in 1992 as the team finished in fifth. Attendance dropped to 112,913, lowest in the EL. The club's top position players were all repeats at AA. All-Star 1B Ivan Cruz hit .273/~.321/.407 in his second year with London; he drove in 104 to become the first EL player to top 100 since Mark Grace five years earlier. OF Frazier (in his 4th year at AA and third with London) hit .252/~.376/.298 and led the circuit in walks (95), steals (58) and times caught stealing (23). Greg Sparks (in his 5th season at AA) hit .232/~.331/.482 and topped the league with 25 homers; he was named to the All-Star team at DH. 3B Rob Reimink (.296/.393/.381 in his second year with London) was 4th in the league in average and Tyrone Kingwood (in his second AA season) (.284/~.333/.385, 22 SB) also placed in the top 10 in average.
In 1993 the Tigers again drew the fewest fans, with 103,840. Tom Runnells led the team to a 63-75, 6th place finish. The team at least wasn't loaded with minor-league veterans - 21-year-old OF Danny Bautista hit .285/~.336/.382 and stole 28 bases; 23-year-old OF Rudy Pemberton posted a .276/~.311/.435 line with 15 homers; 23-year-old 2B Shannon Penn (.260/~.335/.310) led the league with 53 stolen bases and 22-year-old OF Bobby Higginson batted .308/~.362/.464 after a call-up from the Lakeland Tigers. Felipe Lira went 10-4 with a 3.38 ERA, the third-best ERA in the league, and was the last London Tiger to make the EL All-Star team. Jose Lima went 8-13 with a 4.07 ERA.
After the 1993 campaign, the Tigers (frustrated with the facility and attendance) moved the team to Trenton, NJ where they became the Trenton Thunder.
Sources: 1990-1994 Baseball Almanacs
Year-by-Year Record[edit]
Year | Record | Finish | Manager | Playoffs | Hitting Coach | Pitching Coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | 63-76 | 6th | Chris Chambliss | Rob Thomson | ||
1990 | 76-63 | 2nd | Chris Chambliss | League Champs | Kevin Bradshaw | |
1991 | 61-78 | 6th | Gene Roof | Dan Raley | Jeff Jones | |
1992 | 67-70 | 5th | Mark DeJohn | Bruce Fields | Jeff Jones | |
1993 | 63-75 | 6th | Tom Runnells | Dan Raley | Sid Monge |
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