Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Spokane Club won the Northwest League pennant in its first season, overcoming teams from Portland, Seattle, and Tacoma, among others. The nickname Indians dates to 1903, when Spokane joined the Pacific National League, a predecessor to the Pacific Coast League and, at Class A, an elite minor league of the period, equivalent to Triple-A today.
This category is for players of the Spokane Indians Minor League Baseball team of the Pacific Northwest League (1903–1904), Northwestern League (1905–1917), Pacific Coast International League (1918–1920), Western International League (1940–1954), Pacific Coast League (1958–1982), Northwest League (1955–1956, 1972, 1984–2020), and High-A West (2021–present).
The Indians left for Las Vegas after the 1982 season and the NWL returned in 1983 and has remained for over three decades. The natural grass field is aligned southeast (home plate to second base), at an approximate elevation of 1,920 feet (585 m) above sea level .
The station carries broadcasts of the Spokane Indians minor league baseball team and the Spokane Chiefs junior ice hockey team. Going on the air in 1927, it was one of the earliest radio stations in Washington. By day, KGA is powered at 50,000 watts non-directional, the maximum for commercial AM stations.
At the end of the season, Washington sold Roig to the Los Angeles Dodgers, who assigned him to the Spokane Indians of the Pacific League. [2] [3] [4] Although the hard-hitting 1960 Spokane produced big-league standouts as Willie Davis and Ron Fairly, fanatics selected Roig as the team's Most Valuable Player. On September 8, 1960, he set a team ...
The Spokan or Spokane people are a Native American Plateau tribe who inhabit the eastern portion of present-day Washington state and parts of northern Idaho in the United States of America. The current Spokane Indian Reservation is located in northeastern Washington state, centered at Wellpinit (Sčecuwe). [6]
Managers of the Spokane Indians, an American minor league baseball franchise that has played in the Northwest League since 1983. It previously played in the Pacific National League (1903–1904), Northwestern League (1905–1917), Pacific Coast International League (1918; 1920); Western International League (1937–1942; 1946–1954); and Pacific Coast League (1958–1971; 1973–1982); and ...
Informally known as the "Willy" loop, [1] [2] The Western International League operated in 1922, 1937 to 1942, and 1946 to 1954. [3] [4] In 1955, the league changed its name to become the Northwest League, [5] and operated through 2019 as a Class A-Short Season loop under that name.