Ottawa Lynx

The Ottawa Lynx were a Minor League Baseball team that competed in the Triple-A International League (IL) from 1993 to 2007. The team's home field was Lynx Stadium in Ottawa, Ontario. Over 15 seasons, the team was an affiliate of the Montreal Expos (1993–2002), Baltimore Orioles (2003–2006), and Philadelphia Phillies (2007). At the time, it was the only IL franchise in Canada.

Ottawa Lynx
19932007
Ottawa, Ontario
Team logoCap insignia
Minor league affiliations
Previous classesTriple-A (1993–2007)
LeagueInternational League (1993–2007)
DivisionNorth Division
Major league affiliations
Previous teams
Minor league titles
League titles (1)1995
Wild card berths (1)2003
Team data
Previous names
Ottawa Lynx (1993–2007)
Previous parks
  • Lynx Stadium (1993–2007)
  • JetForm Park (1993–2002)

In late August 2006, the league approved the conditions to negotiate the sale of the team. The new owners moved the team to Allentown, Pennsylvania, beginning with the 2008 season, where it became known as the Lehigh Valley IronPigs.[1]

History

In 1991, Ottawa businessman and then Ottawa 67's owner Howard Darwin was successful in applying to the IL for an expansion franchise to begin play in 1993, at a cost of $5 million. The Lynx became the second IL franchise to play in Ottawa, after the former Ottawa Giants and Ottawa Athletics of the 1950s. The application was contingent on the City of Ottawa building a baseball stadium for the team. Lynx Stadium was completed in time for the 1993 season.

Lynx Stadium, home of the Ottawa Lynx

The Lynx began play in 1993, serving as the top farm team for the Montreal Expos. The team won the International League championship in 1995, the only time it would do so. During this period, the Lynx featured such future Major League Baseball players as Rondell White, Cliff Floyd, Matt Stairs, Kirk Rueter, and F.P. Santangelo. The Lynx eventually retired two numbers: Santangelo's 24, and Jamey Carroll's 3.

In 2000, Darwin sold his shares in the team to Ray Pecor for $7 million. According to news reports, Pecor lost $1 million annually on the team due to low attendance.[2]

In 2003, the Lynx were not given any assurances from either the Montreal Expos or Major League Baseball on the long-term future of the Expos. They became the Triple-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles on September 24, 2002.[3] As a result, Montreal shifted its affiliation to the Edmonton Trappers of the Pacific Coast League. The Lynx's working agreement with the Orioles ended when the latter signed a Player Development Contract with the Norfolk Tides on September 25, 2006.[4]

In 2006, the ball club was sold to Joe Finley and Craig Stein, while Pecor maintained a minority stake. Finley and Stein declared their intention to move the team to Allentown, Pennsylvania, for the 2008 season, where a new stadium was set to begin construction that September (now built as Coca-Cola Park).[5][6] The owners, facing a lawsuit from the City of Ottawa if they moved the Lynx, filed a lawsuit of their own against the City of Ottawa on October 17, 2006, seeking $10.75 million in damages claiming that the city failed to provide enough parking spaces, which, the team alleged, was a violation of its lease. The location far from the city centre might have contributed to the attendance problem.[7]

The team played its last game in Ottawa on September 3, 2007, losing to the Syracuse Chiefs, 8–5. The Ottawa Lynx ultimately won exactly 1,000 games before leaving Ottawa.[8]

Titles

The Lynx won the Governors' Cup, the championship of the International League, once by defeating the Norfolk Tides in 1995.

Season-by-season records

Ottawa Lynx (1993–2007)
Season Total Finished Playoffs
199373–69.514Did not qualify
199470–72.493Did not qualify
199572–70.507Won Opening Round over Rochester Red Wings 3–2
Won Governors' Cup Championship vs. Norfolk Tides 3–1
199660–82.423Did not qualify
199754–86.386Did not qualify
199869–74.483Did not qualify
199959–85.410Did not qualify
200053–88.376Did not qualify
200168–76.472Did not qualify
200280–61.567Did not qualify
200379–65.549Lost Opening Round to Pawtucket Red Sox 3–2
200466–78.458Did not qualify
200569–75.479Did not qualify
200674–69.517Did not qualify
200755–88.385Did not qualify
Regular Season Totals1,001–1,138.468
Postseason Totals8–6.571
Regular and Postseason Totals1,009–1,144.4691 League Championship

Alumni

See also

  • Ottawa Rapidz, an independent baseball team active in 2008
  • Ottawa Fat Cats, a semi-professional baseball team active from 2010 to 2012
  • Ottawa Champions, an independent baseball team active since 2015

References

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