History
Batavia Muckdogs/New York-Penn League History
In 1939 professional baseball came to Batavia and Genesee County. There had been talk of a professional baseball team for Batavia as early as 1936, but lack of a proper playing field including fences and lights which were the criteria, did not exist in the city.
This was not the first professional baseball team to represent Batavia. As early as 1897 a franchise was transferred to Batavia from Pittston, Pennsylvania in the New York State League. Other cities making up the league that year included Auburn, Canandaigua, Lyons, Palmyra, and Cortland.
1948 Season Ticket
The Batavians, wearing crimson uniforms and sometimes referred to as the Batavia Reds, played home on a diamond built on Swan Street but failed to compete the season here. A woefully poor team, it lost its first nine games before beating Canandaigua 11 to 5. Though managers and players were changed, play did not improve. Batavia was mired deeply in last place. At the end of July with a record of only eleven wins and thirty-three looses, the players refused to play without pay. Batavia fans were unwilling to pay even the 10 cents admission charge to watch inept baseball. The team was moved to Geneva, that city being hot to get the losers. The ball club left local merchants and contractors with an assortment of unpaid bills. Amateur and semi-pro baseball flourished for the next forty-two years. In 1939 during the Great Depression, grant money to create jobs mainly through construction projects from the Works Progress Administration created two full size baseball fields, one in Kibbe Park and one in the State Street Park. They were both patterned after Rochester's Red Wing Stadium built by the Major League St. Louis Cardinals in 1929. The State Street Park diamond was touted as equal to a professional playing field. After meeting in Olean, Batavia and Buffalo, a Class D professional baseball league formed with six teams: Olean, Batavia, Niagara Falls, and Jamestown in New York State, Bradford, Pennsylvania and Hamilton, Ontario Canada. The January 8, 1939 meeting in Batavia confirmed the formation of the league, making Batavia the birthplace of the Pennsylvania, Ontario New York League, today's NY-Penn League.
Batavia Major James J. Mahaney obtained additional Works Projects Administration funds to enclose the ballpark with a wooden fence and to construct an 800 seat roofed grandstand. Seventeen local men were employed on the ball park project. However, the fence and the grandstand remained incomplete for the opening day, May 10, 1939; the outfield was enclosed with snow fence. Folding chairs borrowed from a local mortuary were used for seating. These temporary measures did not deter the opening day crowd of over 3,000, largest baseball crowd in Batavia's history. The Clippers lost to Jamestown, 9 to 4.
1948 Batavia Clippers Pony League
The new league mane P-O-N-Y was suggested by Batavian Joseph M. Ryan, the letters standing for Pennsylvania, Ontario and New York. Mr. Ryan served as the first president of the Batavia Baseball Club. In 1956 the league mane was changed to the present New York-Pennsylvania Professional Baseball League, it was formed originally as a Class D League and reclassified as a short season Class A League; its classification today.
When We Were Trojans
Batavia was a charter member and a mainstay of the league; except for the years 1954-1956 and 1960 when it was forced to drop out for financial reasons.
1961 Batavia Pirates
Batavia won league championships in 1945, 1946 and 1963. The team has been affiliated over the years with major league teams, the Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, Detroit Tigers, Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Mets, and Philadelphia Phillies. Their nicknames have included Clippers, Indians, Pirates, Trojans and since 1998, Muckdogs.
During the affiliation with the Pittsburgh Pirates, a former Major League infielder, Gene Baker was named on June 20, 1961 as manager of the Class D Batavia Pirates. He led them to a second place finish. Baker is credited with being the first African American to manage a minor league team with a major league affiliation. Gene Baker died in 1991, at the age of 74.
1995 Batavia Clippers
Approximately fourteen Genesee County men have put on the uniforms and played for the local team. The first was Gordon "Bus" Merrill of Elba in 1939 and the most recent was Mickey Hyde of East Bethany in 1989; both were outfielders. The first pitcher to win a game for the 1939 Clippers was Frank "Pike" Trigilio, an Oakfield athlete. He beat the Niagara Falls Rainbows 13 to 3 allowing only three hits.
During World War II the State Street Park baseball field, in a burst of patriotism, was named MacArthur Stadium after General Douglas MacArthur.
1997 Batavia Clippers
Since 1939, many well known Genesee County people have contributed time and money to the maintenance and operation of the team. The most dedicated of there was Edward D. Dwyer, long time club president. In 1973 MacArthur Stadium was officially renamed Dwyer Stadium in his honor, a fitting tribute to the county's "Mr. Baseball". It is because of Mr. Dwyer that Batavia has a team today. Mr. Dwyer died in 1995 at the age of 92. He had continued to attend games until his health prevented him.
At the close of the 1995 season old Dwyer Stadium was demolished and replaced with a new three million dollar facility, which opened in time for the 1996 season.
Old Dwyer Stadium
To coincide with the new stadium a new club nickname was chosen by the fans in a stimulating contest. The old Batavia Clippers became the Batavia Muckdogs; along with the name change came a new logo. The name Muckdogs identifies the area with its strong agricultural background especially the importance of the rich Elba muck land. The Muckdogs name and logo took off with the public and became known nationwide. Under General Manager Paul Marriott and his staff, Muckdogs merchandise sales skyrocketed putting Batavia in the top ten of minor league sales leaders along with the nearby Rochester Red Wings and Buffalo Bisons, both Triple A franchises.
The Batavia franchise is unique in organized baseball because it is truly a community owned and operated in the strictest sense. There are no stockholders and no stock issue. The Genesee County Baseball Club Incorporated holds legal title to the franchise; its officers and directors are elected each year. Currently, team Chaplin, Brian Paris serves as club president. The overall stadium and team operation is the responsibility of the Batavia Regional Recreation Corporation, an eleven member board of area volunteer citizens appointed by the Batavia City Council. Barry W. Bower is the present chairman of the Batavia Regional Recreation Corporation.
Old Dwyer Stadium
For over sixty years, the professional baseball team has furnished affordable family entertainment and publicized the Genesee County area far outside of New York State, while many larger communities like Utica, Bradford, Hamilton and Niagara Falls have fallen by the wayside.
The baseball team and its modern 2,200 seat stadium are jewels that other communities can only envy.
Ricky Williams
Story by Bill Dougherty, Team Historian
Genesee County Baseball Players
1939 - OF Gordon "Bus" Merrill from Elba 1939 - P Frank "Pike" Trigilio from Oakfield 1939 - 1B James "Jim" Carragher from LeRoy 1940 - P William "Bill" Kell from Darien 1940 - OF Laverne "Pete" Petherbridge from Byron 1943-1944 - P Theodore "Ted" Platek from Pavilion 1946-1947 - P John "Johnny" Freeman from S.Byron 1948 - INF Jerry Maley from Batavia 1950 - C Robert "Bob" Radley from Batavia 1951 - P Ray "Jamo" Jamalkowski from Batavia 1952 & 1957 - P Richard "Dick" Raymond from Batavia 1957 - P Frank Dudley from Batavia 1958 - P Larry Richenburg from Elba 1989 - OF Mickey Hyde from E.Bethany
5 Year Anniversary Logo
Orioles' Honeycutt joins The Show Before the Show
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Red Sox prospect rips double THROUGH Fenway-esque scoreboard
Red Sox No. 4 prospect Franklin Arias, an infielder for High-A Greenville, REALLY didn’t want to let visiting Asheville score any runs in the top of the eighth inning on Friday night. With runners on first and second base in the bottom of the fourth, Arias showed he apparently held
April's hottest hitting prospects -- one for each organization
The Minor League season is a month old and several of the game's best hitting prospects are off to fast starts. Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony is tearing up Triple-A (just like he did at the end of last year), Padres shortstop Leo De Vries is leading the High-A Midwest
Check out the best -- and wackiest -- Minor League promos happening in May
Benjamin Hill travels the nation collecting stories about what makes Minor League Baseball unique. This excerpt from the Baseball Traveler newsletter, presented by Circle K, is a mere taste of the smorgasbord of delights he offers every week. Read the full newsletter here, and subscribe to his newsletter here.
MiLB podcast coming LIVE to a Somerset this June
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
New ballparks highlight 2025 MiLB road trip stops
Benjamin Hill travels the nation collecting stories about what makes Minor League Baseball unique. This excerpt from the Baseball Traveler newsletter, presented by Circle K, is a mere taste of the smorgasbord of delights he offers every week. Read the full newsletter here, and subscribe to his newsletter here.
Minor League Baseball partners with TruGreen
FRANKLIN, Tenn. -- TruGreen, the nation's leading lawn care treatment provider, is proud to announce a groundbreaking partnership with Minor League Baseball that includes activations across all 120 clubs, a makeover of the home dugout in each market, sponsorship of select MiLB team grounds crews, and a new initiative called
Podcast explains why the Syracuse Mets are looking for Jim Morrison
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Dash im-prom-tu promo and Mets' Suero joins the podcast
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Minor League Baseball partners with Circle K
Minor League Baseball announced a new national partnership with Circle K, which will see the convenience store giant become the “Official Convenience Store of Minor League Baseball.” During the 2025 season, the Circle K brand will be integrated into the MiLB in-stadium experience through in-game video board assets at most
These 15 moments led to season No. 15 of Minor League road trips
Benjamin Hill travels the nation collecting stories about what makes Minor League Baseball unique. This excerpt from his newsletter is a mere taste of the smorgasbord of delights he offers every week. Read the full newsletter here, and subscribe to his newsletter here.
MiLB podcast crew makes Opening Day predictions
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Everything you need to know for Triple-A Opening Day
First, there was big league Opening Day. Now it's Triple-A's turn to take the spotlight. The Minor League season opens Friday when the Triple-A International League and Pacific Coast League seasons get underway for the first of MiLB’s two Opening Days. And right out of the gates, several of baseball's
Top prospects to watch at Triple-A -- one for each organization
It’s Triple-A’s turn up to bat on Friday. The regular season begins for the Minor Leagues’ highest level one day after the action starts on the Major League side. Fun fact: it’ll be the earliest start to a Minor League season since 1951 (March 27). Double-A, High-A and Single-A will
Here's where every Top 100 prospect is expected to start the season
The 2025 Opening Day prospect roster announcements began last week when the Cubs informed Matt Shaw (MLB No. 19) he was making the trip overseas to compete in the Tokyo Series. Roki Sasaki (No. 1) also received the good news, but his assignment was much less of a surprise. Now
Nationals prospect King joins MiLB podcast
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Here are the 2025 All-Spring Breakout Teams
Fifteen games, several jersey swaps and countless highlights later, the second edition of Spring Breakout has officially concluded – and it lived up to its billing. Of the 16 contests sprinkled across four days, only one game (Dodgers vs. Cubs) was rained out. Coincidentally, the Cubs were one of two
Rox young sluggers aim to bring pop back to Coors Field
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Coors Field may provide the best run-scoring environment in Major League Baseball, but the Rockies haven’t taken advantage of it in recent years. Even without adjusting for Coors, they have fielded offenses worse than the league average the past three seasons, and they scored the fewest runs
Astros brass sees potential in consistently 'underranked' farm system
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- The last time the Astros landed in the top 10 of MLB Pipeline’s farm system rankings was before the 2019 season. Since those rankings expanded to all 30 teams ahead of the 2020 season -- 11 lists in total -- they’ve never ranked higher than
Complete results and highlights from Spring Breakout
The second edition of MLB Spring Breakout is complete, and there was no shortage of highlights from the future stars of Major League Baseball over the four-day showcase. Here's a complete breakdown of the 16-game exhibition:
Southpaw Spring Breakout: White Sox future on display with Schultz, Smith
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- If all goes as planned for the White Sox, left-handers Hagen Smith and Noah Schultz won’t spend much time following each other to the mound in a single game. Schultz, the No. 1 White Sox prospect and No. 16 overall, per MLB Pipeline, and Smith, who is
In first pro game, Rainer offers pop, promise to Tigers fans
NORTH PORT, Fla. -- Bryce Rainer’s pro career consisted of workouts and batting practice until Sunday.
'Me and Brady on the dirt again': House, King reunite at Spring Breakout
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- The 2025 Spring Breakout was a flashback for Brady House and Seaver King. Over 10 years ago, the infielders were travel ball teammates in Georgia who shared the dream of making it to the Major Leagues. Now, they are top prospects in the same organization,
Lambert -- 'an adrenaline guy' -- hoping to be next Mets bullpen gem
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Ryan Lambert loves throwing hard. He relishes the idea of getting to two strikes and blowing hitters away. “Get me in a game,” Lambert said, “cool things will happen.”
Stewart embraces Spring Breakout: 'What's not to love?'
PHOENIX -- Sal Stewart was one fired-up Reds prospect. On Sunday in the first inning during the organization's 9-7 Spring Breakout win over Brewers prospects, Stewart lifted a 2-2 pitch that sailed over the center fielder's head to the wall. Already not known as a speedster, he stumbled running between