Neha Patil (Editor)

Waterloo Hawks (baseball)

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Previous
  
Class A, Class B, Class D

Previous leagues
  
Midwest League (1958-1993) Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League (1946-1956, 1938-1942, 1910-1911) Western League (1936-1937) Mississippi Valley League (1922-1932) Central Association (1913-1917, 1908-1909) Iowa League of Professional Baseball Clubs (1904-1907) Eastern Iowa League (1895)

Previous
  
San Diego Padres (1990-1993) Cleveland Indians (1977-1988) Kansas City Royals (1969-1976) Boston Red Sox (1958-1968)

League titles
  
12 1907, 1908, 1914, 1924, 1928, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1975, 1976, 1980, 1986

Previous names
  
Waterloo Diamonds (1989-1993) Waterloo Indians (1977-1988) Waterloo Royals (1970-1976) Waterloo Hawks (1958-1969, 1940-1942, 1922-1932, 1936) Waterloo White Hawks (1946-1956) Waterloo Red Hawks (1938-1939) Waterloo Reds (1937) Waterloo Lions (1917) Waterloo Shamrocks (1916) Waterloo Jays (1913-1915) Waterloo Boosters (1910-1911) Waterloo Lulus (1908-1909) Waterloo Cubs (1907) Waterloo Microbes (1904-1906)

Previous parks
  
Red Hawk Stadium (1940-1942) Riverfront Stadium (1943-1993)

The Waterloo Hawks was the primary name of the minor league franchise that existed on-and-off for 79 seasons between 1895 and 1993 in Waterloo, Iowa. The franchise relocated to Springfield, Il in 1994,before eventually becoming today's Lansing Lugnuts of the Midwest League. Waterloo won 12 league championships, playing in the Mississippi Valley League (1922-1932), Western League (1936), Illinois-Iowa-Indiana League (1940-1942) and the Midwest League (1958-1993). The Hawks were affiliated with the Chicago White Sox (1932, 1940-1942), Boston Red Sox (1958 to 1968), Kansas City Royals (1969-1976), Cleveland Indians (1977-1988) and San Diego Padres (1990-1993). Baseball Hall of Fame Inductees Carlton Fisk and Luis Aparicio played for Waterloo.

Contents

The ballparks

In 1936 and from 1940 to 1942, they played their home games at Red Hawk Stadium. From 1943 to 1993, they played their home games at Riverfront Stadium.

Championships

The franchise won seven Midwest League titles (1958), (1959), (1960), (1975), (1976), (1980), (1986), two Mississippi Valley League championships (1924) (1928), one Central Association title (1908) and one Iowa State League championship (1907). The 1975 Waterloo Royals finished 93-35 and are listed at #60 on MiLB.com Top 100 Teams.

Hall of Fame Alumni

  • Luis Aparicio (1954) 9 x GG; 13 x MLB All-Star; 9 × AL Stolen Base Leader (1956–1964); 1956 AL Rookie of the Year; Baseball Hall of Fame (1984)
  • Carlton Fisk (1968) GG; 11 xMLB All-Star; Baseball Hall of Fame (2000)
  • Year-by-year record

    (from Baseball Reference)

    References

    Waterloo Hawks (baseball) Wikipedia