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Greensboro Grasshoppers

The Greensboro Grasshoppers are a Minor League Baseball team based in Greensboro, North Carolina. They are members of the South Atlantic League and are the High-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. They play their home games at First National Bank Field, which opened in 2005 and seats 7,499 fans.

Greensboro Grasshoppers
Team logo Cap insignia
Minor league affiliations
ClassHigh-A (2021–present)
Previous classesClass A (1979–2020)
LeagueSouth Atlantic League (2022–present)
DivisionNorth Division
Previous leagues
Major league affiliations
TeamPittsburgh Pirates (2019–present)
Previous teams
Minor league titles
League titles (4)
  • 1980
  • 1981
  • 1982
  • 2011
Division titles (8)
  • 1980
  • 1981
  • 1982
  • 1985
  • 1993
  • 1997
  • 2011
  • 2012
Wild card berths (1)
  • 2021
Team data
Name
  • Greensboro Grasshoppers (2005–present)
  • Greensboro Bats (1994–2004)
  • Greensboro Hornets (1979–1993)
  • Greensboro Patriots (1968)
  • Greensboro Yankees (1958–1967)
  • Greensboro Patriots (1945–1957)
  • Greensboro Red Sox (1941–1942)
  • Greensboro Patriots (1911–1917; 1920–1926; 1928–1934)
  • Greensboro Champs (1908–1910)
  • Greensboro Farmers (1902, 1905)
ColorsGreen, orange, black, cream
       
MascotGuilford Grasshopper
BallparkFirst National Bank Field (2005–present)
Previous parks
World War Memorial Stadium (1979–2004)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Temerity Baseball
General managerTim Vangel
ManagerBlake Butler

The team's logo was changed to a Grasshopper prior to the inaugural season at the new ballpark. Fans selected the name "Guilford" (Greensboro's county's name) for the team's mascot, a giant grasshopper. Prior to that, all home games for the Hornets and Bats were held at World War Memorial Stadium, just northeast of downtown Greensboro.

History edit

Greensboro has fielded professional teams since the early 1900s, in several different leagues. Early on, the nickname Greensboro Patriots was applied to those teams, in reference to the Battle of Guilford Court House.

There were a few false starts. In 1902 local cotton broker Leon J. Brandt fielded a Greensboro team in the North Carolina League, but the league failed in mid-season. The Virginia-North Carolina League of 1905 included the Greensboro Farmers franchise, also owned by Brandt. The league completed its season but disbanded thereafter.

The Greensboro Patriots joined the Carolina Association as charter members in 1908 and began a run of 10 straight seasons in pro ball. The league was reorganized as the North Carolina Association for 1913 and renamed itself the North Carolina State League in 1916. The league played one more season and then disbanded after 1917. By then, America's involvement in World War I was well under way, and many minor leagues folded after 1917.[1]

With peacetime, interest in professional baseball and the minor leagues revived. The Greensboro Patriots were revived as well, joining the newly formed Piedmont League in 1920, winning its inaugural championship. The Patriots also won the league title in 1926. In 1930, the club began a five-year affiliation with the St. Louis Cardinals.

After the Cardinals contract expired, the franchise transferred to Asheville Tourists in 1935. Five years later, minor league ball returned to Greensboro for a couple of years, with another Piedmont League entry called the Greensboro Red Sox, which played during 1941–1942.

After the Piedmont League years, another Greensboro team operated in the Carolina League during 1945–1968. The club was known variously as the Patriots (1945–1951), the Greensboro Pirates (1952–1954), the Patriots again (1955–1957), the Greensboro Yankees (1958–67), and the Patriots once again (1968). Following the 1968 season, Greensboro dropped out of professional ball for the next ten years, during a time when minor league baseball had lost popularity. That situation would start to change for the better in the late 1970s, and Greensboro would benefit from it.

The minors returned to Greensboro in 1979, with a new entry in the Western Carolinas League. The WCL renamed itself as the South Atlantic League the next year, reviving the name once used by the Southern League. Abandoning the old nickname of "Patriots", which by then was best known for the New England Patriots of the NFL, the new club instead decided to adopt the nickname Greensboro Hornets. That nickname was better known for teams based in Charlotte, but the Charlotte Hornets baseball team had abandoned its nickname after the 1973 season, and the new Greensboro team adopted it. Some naming rights complications arose when the Charlotte Hornets of the NBA began play in 1988. The nicknames co-existed in the state until 1994, when the Hornets settled with the NBA and changed their name to the punning nickname Greensboro Bats. Consequently, the team mascot switched from a hornet to a flying bat wielding a baseball bat.

With the move from 80-year-old War Memorial Stadium to the new park in 2005, the club further expanded its corporate face-lift by changing nicknames again, to the alliterative Greensboro Grasshoppers.

In the 2008 season 18-year-old Giancarlo Stanton, former second round pick by the Florida Marlins, set the single season record for home runs by a Greensboro player with 39.[2]

In 2009, Master Yogi Berra, a black Labrador who has been "a fixture" at Grasshoppers games since then, became the only dog ever thrown out of a professional baseball game for "leaving a mess in the outfield."[3]

In 2011, the Grasshoppers won 13 of their last 15 regular season games to make the playoffs for the first time in 12 years. After winning the second half of the season in the Northern Division, the Grasshoppers went on to beat the Savannah Sand Gnats in five games to win the South Atlantic League championship, their first title in 29 years.

In 2012, the Grasshoppers won the SAL Northern Division first half championship by posting a record of 46–24. They went on to win the Northern Division title with a 2–0 sweep of the Hagerstown Suns in the first round of the playoffs, but lost the Championship Series 3–1 to the Asheville Tourists.

In September 2018, the Grasshoppers signed a 2-year affiliation agreement with the Pittsburgh Pirates.[4]

For the 2018 season, the Grasshoppers went 60-76 under manager Todd Pratt for a 13th-place finish in the South Atlantic League. For 2019, the Pirates organization made Miguel Perez head coach, who managed the Grasshoppers to an improved 79-59 for a 3rd-place finish. For 2020 Perez was moved to the Pirates' Bradenton Marauders club, and the Pirates announced Kieran Mattison would be the Grasshoppers' new manager. However, all minor league baseball was shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[citation needed]

In conjunction with Major League Baseball's restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Grasshoppers were organized into the High-A East.[5] They finished the 2021 season in second place in the Southern Division with a record of 74–46.[6] Despite not winning the division, their record was the second-best overall in the league, which qualified them for the playoffs.[7] They lost the best-of-five championship series to the Bowling Green Hot Rods, 3–2.[8] In 2022, the High-A East became known as the South Atlantic League, the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization.[9]

On January 4, 2022, Temerity Baseball bought the team.[10] Temerity Baseball also owns the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers. Team owner Andy Sandler intends to develop mixed-use and multi-family around the stadium.[11]

Ballpark edit

The Greensboro clubs initially played their home games at Cone Athletic Park, better known as simply Cone Park. World War Memorial Stadium opened in 1926 (on Armistice Day), but the Patriots continued to play at Cone Park until 1930, when the addition of lights and other improvements to the Stadium, spurred by the affiliation with the Cardinals, resulted in the team moving to the Stadium. The various Greensboro clubs would call the Stadium "home" for the next 75 years. The franchise moved from 80-year-old War Memorial Stadium to First National Bank Field in 2005.

Notable franchise alumni edit

Hall of Fame alumni

  • Heinie Manush (1941-1942, MGR) Inducted, 1964
  • Johnny Mize (1930-1931, 1933) Inducted, 1981
  • Mariano Rivera (1991, 1993) 13 x MLB All-Star; 1999 World Series Most Valuable Player; All-Time MLB Saves Leader, Inducted 2019
  • Derek Jeter (1992-1993) 14 x AL All-Star; 1995 AL Rookie of the Year; 2000 World Series Most Valuable Player

Notable alumni

Active edit

Greensboro alumni who are currently on Major League active rosters as of 8/4/2023:

Roster edit

Players Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 45 Hunter Barco
  • 31 Brandan Bidois
  • 41 Elijah Birdsong  
  • 15 Julian Bosnic
  • 35 Jack Carey
  • 51 Emmanuel Chapman
  •  5 Jaycob Deese
  • 52 Derek Diamond
  • 30 Wilber Dotel
  • 46 Alessandro Ercolani
  • 37 Darvin Garcia
  • -- Ryan Harbin  
  • 23 J. P. Massey
  • 17 Cy Nielson
  • 41 Luis Peralta
  • -- Scott Randall  
  • 50 Patrick Reilly
  • 32 Jaden Woods

Catchers

  • 22 Nick Cimillo
  • 29 Geovanny Planchart
  • 24 Shawn Ross

Infielders

Outfielders


Manager

  • 49 Blake Butler

Coaches

  • -- Quentin Brown (performance)
  • 27 Ethan Goforth (catching)
  • 18 Casey Harms (bench)
  • 12 Matt Myers (pitching)
  • 25 Jonathan Prieto (hitting)

60-day injured list

  • 92 Adrian Florencio
  • -- Will Kobos
  • -- Joshua Loeschorn

  7-day injured list
* On Pittsburgh Pirates 40-man roster
~ Development list
# Rehab assignment
∞ Reserve list
‡ Restricted list
§ Suspended list
† Temporarily inactive list
Roster updated May 3, 2024
Transactions
→ More rosters: MiLB • South Atlantic League
Pittsburgh Pirates minor league players

Sources edit

  • Professional Baseball Franchises, Peter Filichia, Facts on File Books, 1993.
  • Baseball in North Carolina's Piedmont, Chris Holaday, Arcadia, 2002.

References edit

  1. ^ Holaday, Chris (1998). Professional Baseball in North Carolina: An Illustrated City-by-city History, 1901-1996. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786425532.
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-09-05. Retrieved 2008-10-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ Mills, Jeff (July 14, 2017). "Hoppers dog Yogi's cancer diagnosed as inoperable". News & Record. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  4. ^ Mills, Jeff (September 21, 2018). "Greensboro Grasshoppers agree to two-year deal with Pittsburgh Pirates". News & Record. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  5. ^ Mayo, Jonathan (February 12, 2021). "MLB Announces New Minors Teams, Leagues". Major League Baseball. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  6. ^ "2021 High-A East". Baseball-Reference. Sports Reference. Retrieved October 9, 2021.
  7. ^ Heneghan, Kelsie (July 1, 2021). "Playoffs Return to the Minor Leagues". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  8. ^ Avallone, Michael (September 29, 2021). "Bowling Green Rolls to High-A East Crown". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved October 9, 2021.
  9. ^ "Historical League Names to Return in 2022". Minor League Baseball. March 16, 2022. Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  10. ^ "Temerity Baseball Acquires Greensboro Grasshoppers". Minor League Baseball. January 4, 2022. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  11. ^ www.bizjournals.com https://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/news/2022/12/28/andy-sandler-temerity-baseball-greensboro-grasshop.html. Retrieved 2023-01-09. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

External links edit

  • Official website

greensboro, grasshoppers, minor, league, baseball, team, based, greensboro, north, carolina, they, members, south, atlantic, league, high, affiliate, pittsburgh, pirates, they, play, their, home, games, first, national, bank, field, which, opened, 2005, seats,. The Greensboro Grasshoppers are a Minor League Baseball team based in Greensboro North Carolina They are members of the South Atlantic League and are the High A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates They play their home games at First National Bank Field which opened in 2005 and seats 7 499 fans Greensboro GrasshoppersFounded in 1979Greensboro North CarolinaTeam logo Cap insigniaMinor league affiliationsClassHigh A 2021 present Previous classesClass A 1979 2020 LeagueSouth Atlantic League 2022 present DivisionNorth DivisionPrevious leaguesHigh A East 2021 South Atlantic League 1979 2020 Piedmont League 1920 1932 North Carolina State League 1913 1917 Carolina Association 1908 1912 Virginia North Carolina League 1905 Major league affiliationsTeamPittsburgh Pirates 2019 present Previous teamsMiami Marlins 2003 2018 New York Yankees 1990 2002 Cincinnati Reds 1988 1989 Boston Red Sox 1985 1987 New York Yankees 1980 1984 Cincinnati Reds 1979 New York Yankees 1958 1968 Boston Red Sox 1953 1957 Chicago Cubs 1951 1952 Philadelphia Phillies 1945 Boston Red Sox 1941 1942 St Louis Cardinals 1932 1934 Minor league titlesLeague titles 4 1980198119822011Division titles 8 19801981198219851993199720112012Wild card berths 1 2021Team dataNameGreensboro Grasshoppers 2005 present Greensboro Bats 1994 2004 Greensboro Hornets 1979 1993 Greensboro Patriots 1968 Greensboro Yankees 1958 1967 Greensboro Patriots 1945 1957 Greensboro Red Sox 1941 1942 Greensboro Patriots 1911 1917 1920 1926 1928 1934 Greensboro Champs 1908 1910 Greensboro Farmers 1902 1905 ColorsGreen orange black cream MascotGuilford GrasshopperBallparkFirst National Bank Field 2005 present Previous parksWorld War Memorial Stadium 1979 2004 Owner s Operator s Temerity BaseballGeneral managerTim VangelManagerBlake Butler The team s logo was changed to a Grasshopper prior to the inaugural season at the new ballpark Fans selected the name Guilford Greensboro s county s name for the team s mascot a giant grasshopper Prior to that all home games for the Hornets and Bats were held at World War Memorial Stadium just northeast of downtown Greensboro Contents 1 History 2 Ballpark 3 Notable franchise alumni 3 1 Active 4 Roster 5 Sources 6 References 7 External linksHistory editGreensboro has fielded professional teams since the early 1900s in several different leagues Early on the nickname Greensboro Patriots was applied to those teams in reference to the Battle of Guilford Court House There were a few false starts In 1902 local cotton broker Leon J Brandt fielded a Greensboro team in the North Carolina League but the league failed in mid season The Virginia North Carolina League of 1905 included the Greensboro Farmers franchise also owned by Brandt The league completed its season but disbanded thereafter The Greensboro Patriots joined the Carolina Association as charter members in 1908 and began a run of 10 straight seasons in pro ball The league was reorganized as the North Carolina Association for 1913 and renamed itself the North Carolina State League in 1916 The league played one more season and then disbanded after 1917 By then America s involvement in World War I was well under way and many minor leagues folded after 1917 1 With peacetime interest in professional baseball and the minor leagues revived The Greensboro Patriots were revived as well joining the newly formed Piedmont League in 1920 winning its inaugural championship The Patriots also won the league title in 1926 In 1930 the club began a five year affiliation with the St Louis Cardinals After the Cardinals contract expired the franchise transferred to Asheville Tourists in 1935 Five years later minor league ball returned to Greensboro for a couple of years with another Piedmont League entry called the Greensboro Red Sox which played during 1941 1942 After the Piedmont League years another Greensboro team operated in the Carolina League during 1945 1968 The club was known variously as the Patriots 1945 1951 the Greensboro Pirates 1952 1954 the Patriots again 1955 1957 the Greensboro Yankees 1958 67 and the Patriots once again 1968 Following the 1968 season Greensboro dropped out of professional ball for the next ten years during a time when minor league baseball had lost popularity That situation would start to change for the better in the late 1970s and Greensboro would benefit from it The minors returned to Greensboro in 1979 with a new entry in the Western Carolinas League The WCL renamed itself as the South Atlantic League the next year reviving the name once used by the Southern League Abandoning the old nickname of Patriots which by then was best known for the New England Patriots of the NFL the new club instead decided to adopt the nickname Greensboro Hornets That nickname was better known for teams based in Charlotte but the Charlotte Hornets baseball team had abandoned its nickname after the 1973 season and the new Greensboro team adopted it Some naming rights complications arose when the Charlotte Hornets of the NBA began play in 1988 The nicknames co existed in the state until 1994 when the Hornets settled with the NBA and changed their name to the punning nickname Greensboro Bats Consequently the team mascot switched from a hornet to a flying bat wielding a baseball bat With the move from 80 year old War Memorial Stadium to the new park in 2005 the club further expanded its corporate face lift by changing nicknames again to the alliterative Greensboro Grasshoppers In the 2008 season 18 year old Giancarlo Stanton former second round pick by the Florida Marlins set the single season record for home runs by a Greensboro player with 39 2 In 2009 Master Yogi Berra a black Labrador who has been a fixture at Grasshoppers games since then became the only dog ever thrown out of a professional baseball game for leaving a mess in the outfield 3 In 2011 the Grasshoppers won 13 of their last 15 regular season games to make the playoffs for the first time in 12 years After winning the second half of the season in the Northern Division the Grasshoppers went on to beat the Savannah Sand Gnats in five games to win the South Atlantic League championship their first title in 29 years In 2012 the Grasshoppers won the SAL Northern Division first half championship by posting a record of 46 24 They went on to win the Northern Division title with a 2 0 sweep of the Hagerstown Suns in the first round of the playoffs but lost the Championship Series 3 1 to the Asheville Tourists In September 2018 the Grasshoppers signed a 2 year affiliation agreement with the Pittsburgh Pirates 4 For the 2018 season the Grasshoppers went 60 76 under manager Todd Pratt for a 13th place finish in the South Atlantic League For 2019 the Pirates organization made Miguel Perez head coach who managed the Grasshoppers to an improved 79 59 for a 3rd place finish For 2020 Perez was moved to the Pirates Bradenton Marauders club and the Pirates announced Kieran Mattison would be the Grasshoppers new manager However all minor league baseball was shut down due to the COVID 19 pandemic citation needed In conjunction with Major League Baseball s restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021 the Grasshoppers were organized into the High A East 5 They finished the 2021 season in second place in the Southern Division with a record of 74 46 6 Despite not winning the division their record was the second best overall in the league which qualified them for the playoffs 7 They lost the best of five championship series to the Bowling Green Hot Rods 3 2 8 In 2022 the High A East became known as the South Atlantic League the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization 9 On January 4 2022 Temerity Baseball bought the team 10 Temerity Baseball also owns the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers Team owner Andy Sandler intends to develop mixed use and multi family around the stadium 11 Ballpark editThe Greensboro clubs initially played their home games at Cone Athletic Park better known as simply Cone Park World War Memorial Stadium opened in 1926 on Armistice Day but the Patriots continued to play at Cone Park until 1930 when the addition of lights and other improvements to the Stadium spurred by the affiliation with the Cardinals resulted in the team moving to the Stadium The various Greensboro clubs would call the Stadium home for the next 75 years The franchise moved from 80 year old War Memorial Stadium to First National Bank Field in 2005 Notable franchise alumni editHall of Fame alumni Heinie Manush 1941 1942 MGR Inducted 1964 Johnny Mize 1930 1931 1933 Inducted 1981 Mariano Rivera 1991 1993 13 x MLB All Star 1999 World Series Most Valuable Player All Time MLB Saves Leader Inducted 2019 Derek Jeter 1992 1993 14 x AL All Star 1995 AL Rookie of the Year 2000 World Series Most Valuable Player Notable alumni Johnny Allen 1945 MLB All Star Luis Arroyo 1948 2 x MLB All Star Curt Blefary 1962 1963 1965 AL Rookie of the Year Jim Bouton 1960 Author MLB All Star Mace Brown 1930 MLB All Star Robinson Cano 2002 8 x MLB All Star Chris Coghlan 2007 2009 NL Rookie of the Year Scott Cooper 1987 2 x MLB All Star Carl Everett 1991 2 x MLB All Star Jose Fernandez 2 x MLB All Star 2013 NL Rookie of the Year Wes Ferrell 1949 2 x MLB All Star Dave Ferriss 1942 2 x MLB All Star Ken Forsch 1968 2 x MLB All Star Greg Gagne 1980 1981 Sterling Hitchcock 1990 Rex Hudler 1980 Stan Javier 1983 Josh Johnson 2003 2008 2 x MLB All Star 2010 NL ERA Leader Nick Johnson 1997 Roberto Kelly 1983 2 x MLB All Star Mike Lowell 1996 4 x MLB All Star 2007 World Series Most Valuable Player Bill Lee 1930 2 x MLB All Star 1938 NL ERA Leader Ken McBride 1955 1956 3 x MLB All Star Don Mattingly 1980 6 x MLB All Star 1984 AL Batting Title 1985 AL Most Valuable Player John Mayberry 1968 2 x MLB All Star Bill Monbouquette 1957 4 x MLB All Star Otis Nixon 1980 Fritz Ostermueller 1931 Marcell Ozuna 2011 2 x MLB All Star Mike Pagliarulo 1982 Fritz Peterson 1965 MLB All Star Andy Pettitte 1992 3 x MLB All Star Jorge Posada 1992 5 x MLB All Star Rip Radcliff 1948 MLB All Star Reggie Sanders 1989 MLB All Star Curt Schilling 1987 6 x MLB All Star World Series Most Valuable Player Ernie Shore 1913 Shane Spencer 1992 1993 Russ Springer 1990 Giancarlo Stanton 2008 4 x MLB All Star 2 x NL Home Run Leader 2014 2017 2017 NL Most Valuable Player Mel Stottlemyre 1962 5 x MLB All Star Eddie Taubensee 1987 Jim Turner 1926 MLB All Star 1937 NL ERA Leader Tom Tresh 1959 3 x MLB All Star 1962 AL Rookie of the Year Jason Vargas 2005 MLB All Star Dixie Walker 1928 5 x MLB All Star 1944 NL Batting Title Roy White 1962 1963 2 x MLB All Star Christian Yelich 2011 2018 MLB All Star 2018 NL Batting Title 2018 NL Most Valuable Player Active edit Greensboro alumni who are currently on Major League active rosters as of 8 4 2023 Austin Barnes catcher Los Angeles Dodgers Mark Canha outfielder Milwaukee Brewers Brad Hand pitcher Atlanta Braves Marcell Ozuna outfielder Atlanta Braves J T Realmuto catcher Philadelphia Phillies Giancarlo Stanton outfielder New York Yankees Christian Yelich outfielder Milwaukee Brewers Trevor Richards pitcher Toronto Blue Jays Brian Anderson third baseman Milwaukee Brewers Luis Castillo pitcher Seattle Mariners Andrew Heaney pitcher Texas Rangers Josh Naylor infielder Cleveland Indians Braxton Garrett pitcher Miami Marlins Trevor Rogers pitcher Miami Marlins Blake Sabol catcher San Francisco Giants Ji Hwan Bae infielder Pittsburgh Pirates Rodolfo Castro infielder Philadelphia Phillies Edward Cabrera pitcher Miami Marlins Domingo German pitcher New York Yankees Stone Garrett outfielder Washington Nationals Austin Nola catcher San Diego Padres Jose Urena pitcher Colorado Rockies Chad Wallach catcher Los Angeles Angels Osvaldo Bido pitcher Pittsburgh Pirates Henry Davis outfielder Pittsburgh Pirates Yerry De Los Santos pitcher Pittsburgh Pirates Nick Gonzales infielder Pittsburgh Pirates Carmen Mlodzinski pitcher Pittsburgh Pirates Endy Rodriguez catcher Pittsburgh Pirates Jared Triolo infielder Pittsburgh PiratesRoster editGreensboro Grasshoppers rostervte Players Coaches Other Pitchers 45 Hunter Barco 31 Brandan Bidois 41 Elijah Birdsong nbsp 15 Julian Bosnic 35 Jack Carey 51 Emmanuel Chapman 5 Jaycob Deese 52 Derek Diamond 30 Wilber Dotel 46 Alessandro Ercolani 37 Darvin Garcia Ryan Harbin nbsp 23 J P Massey 17 Cy Nielson 41 Luis Peralta Scott Randall nbsp 50 Patrick Reilly 32 Jaden Woods Catchers 22 Nick Cimillo 29 Geovanny Planchart 24 Shawn Ross Infielders 44 Jack Brannigan 2 Maikol Escotto 36 Mitch Jebb 7 Termarr Johnson 48 Josiah Sightler Outfielders 26 Luke Brown 34 Hudson Head 38 Charles McAdoo 14 Rodolfo Nolasco 10 Sammy Siani 28 Lonnie White Manager 49 Blake Butler Coaches Quentin Brown performance 27 Ethan Goforth catching 18 Casey Harms bench 12 Matt Myers pitching 25 Jonathan Prieto hitting 60 day injured list 92 Adrian Florencio Will Kobos Joshua Loeschorn nbsp 7 day injured list On Pittsburgh Pirates 40 man roster Development list Rehab assignment Reserve list Restricted list Suspended list Temporarily inactive list Roster updated May 3 2024 Transactions More rosters MiLB South Atlantic League Pittsburgh Pirates minor league playersSources editProfessional Baseball Franchises Peter Filichia Facts on File Books 1993 Baseball in North Carolina s Piedmont Chris Holaday Arcadia 2002 References edit Holaday Chris 1998 Professional Baseball in North Carolina An Illustrated City by city History 1901 1996 Jefferson N C McFarland ISBN 978 0786425532 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2012 09 05 Retrieved 2008 10 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Mills Jeff July 14 2017 Hoppers dog Yogi s cancer diagnosed as inoperable News amp Record Retrieved July 15 2017 Mills Jeff September 21 2018 Greensboro Grasshoppers agree to two year deal with Pittsburgh Pirates News amp Record Retrieved September 21 2018 Mayo Jonathan February 12 2021 MLB Announces New Minors Teams Leagues Major League Baseball Retrieved February 12 2021 2021 High A East Baseball Reference Sports Reference Retrieved October 9 2021 Heneghan Kelsie July 1 2021 Playoffs Return to the Minor Leagues Minor League Baseball Retrieved October 8 2021 Avallone Michael September 29 2021 Bowling Green Rolls to High A East Crown Minor League Baseball Retrieved October 9 2021 Historical League Names to Return in 2022 Minor League Baseball March 16 2022 Retrieved March 16 2022 Temerity Baseball Acquires Greensboro Grasshoppers Minor League Baseball January 4 2022 Retrieved January 4 2022 www bizjournals com https www bizjournals com charlotte news 2022 12 28 andy sandler temerity baseball greensboro grasshop html Retrieved 2023 01 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greensboro Grasshoppers amp oldid 1219771076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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