Schaumburg Boomers

The Schaumburg Boomers are a professional baseball team, based in Schaumburg, Illinois, that began play in the independent Frontier League on May 18, 2012 with their first home game coming a week later on May 25. Home games are played at Boomers Stadium. The Boomers replaced the now defunct Schaumburg Flyers of the Northern League after the franchise was evicted for not paying almost $1 million in back rent.[1]

Schaumburg Boomers
Team logo Cap insignia
Information
LeagueFrontier League (2012–present) (East Division)
LocationSchaumburg, Illinois
BallparkBoomers Stadium (2012–present)
Year founded2011
League championships3 (2013, 2014, 2017)
Division championships2 (2013, 2017)
ColorsBlack, orange, white
              
OwnershipSalvi Sports Enterprises
ManagerJamie Bennett
General ManagerMichael Larson
MediaDaily Herald
Websiteboomersbaseball.com
2012 Schaumburg Boomers All-Stars

The "Boomers" nickname comes from a common nickname for males of the greater prairie chicken species, a bird which was once abundant in the Midwest but is now a vulnerable species. That bird's nickname comes from the dance these males do in order to attract females for mating purposes. The Boomers carry on the mascot's tradition by performing a reenactment of the prairie chicken's dance in between innings during games.

History

Originally, the team was set to play in the American Association of Independent Professional Baseball under the ownership of Joliet Slammers principal owner Alan Oremus; however, Oremus sold the team to Gary SouthShore RailCats owner Pat Salvi, who moved the team to the Frontier League because of his loyalty to the RailCats and lack of interest in setting up a conflict should the two teams play against each other.[2] Under Oremus's ownership, the team had held a name-the-team contest, with the winner selecting "Mallers". After the ownership change, however, the Boomers name, logo, and colors were unveiled on October 18, 2011.[3]

The games are broadcast on WRMN (1410 AM, Elgin, Illinois) by Boomers broadcaster Tim Calderwood.[4][5]

The first signed roster player was infielder Andrew Cohn of Emory University. Shortstop Gerard Hall recorded the first hit in Boomers history in a 4-0 shutout against the Lake Erie Crushers in Avon, Ohio in the franchise's first-ever regular season game. Outfielder Jereme Milons had the first extra-base hit in team history with a double to centerfield in the same game.

The Boomers won their home debut with a 5-2 victory over the Florence Freedom in front of 6,067 fans at Boomers Stadium. Outfielder Nate Baumann hit the first home run at Boomers Stadium with a two-run blast to left in the five-run sixth inning.

The Schaumburg Boomers won the 2013 Frontier League Championship in September 2013, becoming the first team in Frontier League history to finish the playoffs undefeated (in this case 6-0 as they won two best-of-5 series). They defeated the Lake Erie Crushers in the championship final.

The Boomers again won the 2014 Frontier League Championship, winning back-to-back titles. They beat the Southern Illinois Miners 2 games to 1 in the Divisional round, and beat the River City Rascals 3 games to 1 to win the Title.

Inaugural season

The Boomers finished the first half of their inaugural season as the Frontier League West Division Leaders with a record of 29-19. The team had a total of 10 representatives appear in the 2012 Frontier League All-Star game in Normal. Manager Jamie Bennett managed the West Division squad and was joined by his coaching staff, Mike Kashirsky, Paul Kubon, C.J. Thieleke, and team trainer Scott Waehler. Schaumburg's Frank Pfister was selected as the West Division's starting third-baseman, and was joined by outfielders Sean Mahley and Chad Mozingo and pitchers Cameron Roth and Patrick Mincey.[6]

Mascot

Coop, the mascot of the Schaumburg Boomers

The mascot of the Schaumburg Boomers is Coop the boomer. Coop is portrayed by a person dressed in a prairie chicken costume.[7][8]

Current roster

Schaumburg Boomers roster
Active (24-man) roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 8 Jumpei Akanuma
  • 33 Connor Eller
  • 37 Trevin Eubanks
  • -- Anthony Guardado
  • 29 Gunnar Kines
  • 18 Jack Landwehr
  • 34 Payton Lobdell
  • 17 Erik Martinez
  • 11 Matt Miller
  • 32 Thomas Nicoll
  • 13 Connor Reed
  • 35 Aaron Rozek
  • 12 Dylan Stutsman
  •  7 Darrell Thompson
  • 31 Renny Tolentino
  • -- Tyler Tomaka
 

Catchers

  • 16 Gian Martellini

Infielders

  • -- Luke Becker
  • 15 Chase Dawson
  • -- Sebastian Diaz
  • -- Matt McGarry
  • 19 Quincy Nieporte
  • -- Jack Zoellner

Outfielders

  • -- Logan Farrar
  • 25 Clint Hardy
  • 21 Dylan Jones
  • -- Ben Spitznagel
 

Manager

  • 27 Jamie Bennett

Coaches

  • Bill Fratto (first base)
  • J.T. Scara (hitting)
  • Anthony Smith (pitching)

Disabled list
‡ Inactive list
§ Suspended list

Roster updated June 11, 2020
Transactions

gollark: I too change the name of my site all the time.
gollark: I have this here:```server.use((req, res, next) => { res.locals.flash = req.flash next()})```and res.locals contains that when I console.log it in the handler... but apparently my template doesn't have `flash` available?
gollark: On an unrelated note it appears that I do not understand express.js locals.
gollark: JOIN OSMARKS.TKCRAFT TODAY AT minecraft.osmarks.tk !!!
gollark: imagine making rules against advertisingthis post sponsored by... actually most servers do this oh well... er... potatOS gang?

References

  1. Jaworski, Jim (January 11, 2012). "After Flyers, Schaumburg Boomers Get Ready to Play Ball". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on October 9, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
  2. http://m.nwitimes.com/mobile/article_ed674485-4bbb-539d-bbc1-346fcef8c177.html
  3. Peterson, Eric (October 3, 2011). "Schaumburg Baseball Team to Be Named Oct. 18". Daily Herald. Arlington Heights. Archived from the original on October 9, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
  4. "Sports Schedule". WRMN 1410. Archived from the original on March 10, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
  5. "Tim Calderwood". Archived from the original on 2013-01-24. Retrieved 2012-07-12.
  6. "Boomers All-Stars". Archived from the original on 2014-01-01. Retrieved 2012-07-12.
  7. Reichard, Kevin (February 10, 2012). "Boomers Unveil New Mascot in Time for Valentine's Day: Coop". Ballpark Digest. Archived from the original on October 9, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
  8. "Fan Zone – Coop the Boomer". Schaumburg Boomers. Archived from the original on October 10, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.