Madison Muskies
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Madison_Muskies an entity of type: WikicatSportsInMadison,Wisconsin
The Madison Muskies were a Class A minor league baseball team that played in the Midwest League from 1982 to 1993 in Madison, Wisconsin.In 1993, the team relocated to Comstock Park, Michigan and became today's West Michigan Whitecaps. The Muskies were an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics. The team, which was founded by former Rochester Red Wing GM and announcer of professional baseball's longest game Bob Drew and played at Breese Stevens Field and Warner Park.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Madison Muskies
rdf:langString
Madison Muskies
xsd:integer
4944272
xsd:integer
1063645263
rdf:langString
Madison, Wisconsin
rdf:langString
North Division
rdf:langString
Muskies.jpg
rdf:langString
The Madison Muskies were a Class A minor league baseball team that played in the Midwest League from 1982 to 1993 in Madison, Wisconsin.In 1993, the team relocated to Comstock Park, Michigan and became today's West Michigan Whitecaps. The Muskies were an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics. The team, which was founded by former Rochester Red Wing GM and announcer of professional baseball's longest game Bob Drew and played at Breese Stevens Field and Warner Park. The debut Muskies team had a league-best 87–52 record, 6.5 games ahead of the Appleton Foxes in the North Division, however, they lost the Midwest League championship to the Foxes 2 games to 1. Romano, a Muskies outfielder, was the Midwest League Most Valuable Player in 1982. In 1991, they made their second and last championship appearance, this time losing to the Clinton Giants 3 games to 0. The Muskies played their last home game in Madison against the Foxes in 1993. In a driving rainstorm, with Appleton leading 5–3 in the bottom of the ninth inning, the Foxes' pitcher slipped on the mound and his manager requested that the game be called. After a second slip, the umpire called the game, ending the Muskies' Madison tenure in anticlimactic fashion: Madison's final home game ended with one out in the bottom of the ninth, with the potential tying run coming to bat. They finished their 12-year run in Madison with an 860–786 record, .522 winning percentage, including three division titles and four second-place finishes.
xsd:decimal
198219861991
xsd:integer
1982
xsd:integer
1993
rdf:langString
Class A
rdf:langString
Madison Muskies
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4199