Lake County Captains

The Lake County Captains are a Minor League Baseball team in Eastlake, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland,[2][3][4] that plays in the Midwest League as the High-A affiliate of the Cleveland Guardians.

Lake County Captains
Team logoCap insignia
Minor league affiliations
ClassHigh-A (2021–present)
Previous classesClass A (1991–2020)
LeagueMidwest League (2010–present)
DivisionEast Division
Previous leagues
South Atlantic League (1991–2009)
Major league affiliations
TeamCleveland Indians / Guardians (1991–present)
Minor league titles
League titles (1)2010
Division titles (3)
  • 2021
  • 2022
  • 2024
First-half titles (9)
  • 1992
  • 1994
  • 1999
  • 2000
  • 2003
  • 2008
  • 2010
  • 2019
  • 2024
Second-half titles (7)
  • 1995
  • 1996
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2012
  • 2014
  • 2022
Team data
NameLake County Captains (2003–present)
Previous names
ColorsNavy blue, light blue, white
     
MascotsSkipper, Horatio, Skippy, Captain Clipper, and Captain Kenny
BallparkClassic Park (2003–present)
Previous parks
Golden Park (1991–2002)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Alan Miller, Jon Ryan and Collide NEO
General managerJen Yorko[1]
ManagerOmir Santos
MediaMiLB.TV, WFUN 970 AM, and WINT 1330 AM

The Captains joined the Class A Midwest League following the 2009 season in a shuffle caused by the Columbus Catfish's move to Bowling Green, Kentucky, for the 2009 season.[5] The move alleviated travel costs and time, as it was the South Atlantic League's northernmost team.

Prior to the 2003 season, the club was based in Columbus, Georgia, and known as the Columbus RedStixx. The Captains play their home games in Classic Park, which has a capacity of 6,157 and opened in 2003 as Eastlake Stadium. The current stadium name is the result of a naming rights arrangement; the sponsor is Classic Automotive Group, a major area chain of auto dealerships. Classic Park hosted the South Atlantic League All-Star Game on June 20, 2006.

In conjunction with Major League Baseball's restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Captains were organized into the High-A Central.[6] In 2022, the High-A Central became known as the Midwest League, the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization.[7]

Franchise regular season win–loss records

Scoreboard prior to a Captains game at Classic Park

Columbus Indians (73–69)

  • 1991: 73–69

Columbus RedStixx (823–711)

  • 1992: 77–62 (1st Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 1993: 86–56
  • 1994: 87–51 (1st Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 1995: 80–62 (2nd Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 1996: 79–63 (2nd Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 1997: 62–76
  • 1998: 59–81
  • 1999: 70–71 (1st Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 2000: 67–70 (1st Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 2001: 77–59
  • 2002: 79–60 (2nd Half Southern Division Champions – SAL)

Lake County Captains (853–810 entering 2016)

  • 2003: 97–43 (1st & 2nd Half Northern Division Champions – SAL) (Best regular season record in pro baseball in 2003, min 120 games)
  • 2004: 73–66
  • 2005: 72–66
  • 2006: 64–74
  • 2007: 64–74
  • 2008: 75–65 (1st Half Northern Division Champions – SAL)
  • 2009: 71–66
  • 2010: 77–62 (1st Half Eastern Division Champions – MWL & Midwest League Champions)
  • 2011: 53–86
  • 2012: 71–68 (2nd Half; Clinched MWL Wild Card - Lost in Semifinal Round)
  • 2013: 54–83
  • 2014: 65–74 (2nd Half; Clinched MWL Wild Card - Lost in Championship Round)
  • 2015: 71–66
  • 2016: 72–68
  • 2017: 54–85
  • 2018: 60–79
  • 2019: 74–64 (1st Half; Clinched MWL Wild Card - Lost in Quarterfinal Round)
  • 2020: Season Suspended due to COVID-19 Pandemic
  • 2021: 65–55
  • 2022: 76–53 (2nd half East Division Champions - MWL Runner-up)
  • 2023: 65–64
  • 2024: TBD (1st half East Division Champions)

Franchise records

  • Win–loss record entering 2024:
  • 2215–2058 (.518) overall
  • 1373–1361 (.502) as the Lake County Captains
  • Longest winning streak: 13 games (May 27 – June 8, 2003)
  • Longest losing streak: 10 games (June 8–18, 2011) & (April 10–19, 2012)
  • Pitcher with most wins in a season: Steve Kline, 18 in 1994 (also league leader that year)
  • Hitter with most home runs in a season: Russell Branyan, 40 in 1996 (also league leader that year)

Playoffs (since 2005)

Roster

PlayersCoaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 23 Trenton Denholm
  • 33 Jay Driver
  • 41 Magnus Ellerts
  • 44 Steve Hajjar
  • 26 Allan Hernández
  • 16 Matt Jachec
  • 35 Zach Jacobs
  • 58 Rorik Maltrud
  • 32 Jake Miller
  • 37 Zane Morehouse
  • 38 Carter Spivey
  • 34 Adam Tulloch
  • 40 Matt Wilkinson
  • 39 Juan Zapata

Catchers

  • 28 Zac Fascia
  • 10 Cooper Ingle
  • 13 Johnny Tincher

Infielders

  •  7 Maick Collado
  • 27 José Devers
  • 30 Angel Genao
  •  6 Alex Mooney
  • 22 Tyresse Turner

Outfielders


Manager

Coaches

  • 12 Kevin Erminio (pitching)
  •  8 Marc Mumper (bench)
  •  2 Ordomar Valdez (hitting)

60-day injured list

  • -- Reid Johnston
  • -- Shawn Rapp

7-day injured list
* On Cleveland Guardians 40-man roster
~ Development list
# Rehab assignment
∞ Reserve list
‡ Restricted list
§ Suspended list
† Temporarily inactive list
Roster updated June 24, 2024
Transactions
→ More rosters: MiLB • Midwest League
Cleveland Guardians minor league players

Notable franchise alumni

CC Sabathia

Captains Call-Up Club

The names of all Captains players and franchise alumni who have advanced to play Major League Baseball are enshrined in the Lake County Captains Call-Up Club at Classic Park. The Call-Up Club also includes former Captains coaches and managers who've made it to Major League Baseball coaching staffs. A new wall of bronze plaques was installed at the main entrance of Classic Park in August of the 2017 season. The previous "Walk of Fame" started in the outfield of Classic Park and was moved to an interior wall of the ballpark near the right field corner of the stadium.

References