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Las Vegas, Toronto birds of a feather in baseball




In a marriage born out of necessity, the 51s soon are expected to become the new Triple-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays.

When the dust settles from this year's affiliation shuffle, Las Vegas is expected to be the only Triple-A city and the Blue Jays the only big league team left without a partner, leaving the unlikely pair no choice but to join forces.


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  • "It sounds like that's the way it's going to shake out," 51s president Don Logan said Saturday.

    Calls to the Blue Jays for comment were not returned.

    Toronto would become Las Vegas' first American League affiliate after 26 years as National League partners with the San Diego Padres (1983-2000) and Los Angeles Dodgers (2001-2008).

    Citing inadequate facilities at Cashman Field for their prospects, the Dodgers on Thursday ended their eight-year affiliation with Las Vegas by agreeing to a two-year player development contract with the Albuquerque (N.M.) Isotopes.

    Likewise, the Syracuse (N.Y.) Chiefs recently ended their 31-year partnership with the Blue Jays, reportedly because the team earned only five playoff berths while enduring 23 losing seasons over the past decade, including a 69-73 finish this year.

    Since most major league teams prefer to keep their farm clubs in close proximity, Toronto -- located in Ontario, Canada -- would have liked to affiliate itself with Buffalo, N.Y., the closest Triple-A city. But the New York Mets, who left New Orleans this year, are expected to partner with the Bisons, the New York Daily News reported.

    The Washington Nationals and Florida Marlins also were potential candidates for Las Vegas. But Washington agreed Saturday to a deal with Syracuse, The Syracuse Post-Standard reported, and Florida tentatively agreed Saturday to a deal with New Orleans, according to the Times-Picayune.

    An official announcement regarding Florida's deal with New Orleans is expected Monday, leaving Las Vegas and Toronto to try to make their long-distance relationship work.

    While the distance between the cities isn't ideal -- it's more than 2,200 miles, with a 41/2-hour direct flight between the two -- the partnership could be.

    Las Vegas would become the fifth AL affiliate in the 16-team Pacific Coast League, joining current AL affiliates Sacramento (Oakland A's), Salt Lake City (Los Angeles Angels), and Oklahoma City (Texas Rangers), all of which finished first in their respective divisions this year. Sacramento beat Oklahoma City for its second straight PCL title and captured its second consecutive Triple-A crown.

    Also, after 26 years of watching pitchers bat at hitter-friendly Cashman Field, 51s fans will get the chance to watch games played with designated hitters.

    The DH rule could lead to higher-scoring games and, in turn, provide 51s fans with free shrimp cocktails.

    Derek Stevens, part-owner of the Golden Gate casino and head of the Stevens Baseball Group, which owns the 51s, implemented a "Golden 10-Run Rule" at Cashman Field this season that awarded free shrimp cocktails to each fan in attendance whenever the 51s score 10 or more runs.

    "That's going to be a lot of shrimp cocktails, baby," Logan said to Stevens on Saturday.

    The 51s, who went 74-69 last season, have surpassed 300,000 fans in attendance in each of the last 26 years and attracted their third-highest total last season: 374,780, for an average of 5,279 per game.

    Logan said the switch to an AL team shouldn't hurt attendance.

    "Because we're going to do a bigger and better job of promoting this," he said. "Our stadium has a deficiency, but our operation doesn't, and it's only going to get better."

    Because of the delay in finding a parent club for next season, Logan said the team is expected to put its planned name change on hold and remain the 51s for at least another year.

    "We're going to talk about that, but we've already missed the deadline to order (merchandise), so it makes more sense to stick with the 51s," he said. "We're definitely going to change the name" in the future.

    One other benefit for the 51s if they partner with the Blue Jays is the fact the team won't have to alter its "Dodger blue" decor at Cashman Field.

    "We won't have to repaint everything and (change the) uniforms, so that's good," Logan said.

    Contact reporter Todd Dewey at tdewey @reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0354.

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    TonyVegas921 wrote on September 25, 2008 06:24 AM: You want a major league team? The triple A stadium we have is a dump!!! We're lucky to have triple A, we should only have single A!


    Tom in Reno wrote on September 25, 2008 06:11 AM: Derek Stevens shouldn't have to worry about to many free shrimp cocktails...the Jays farm system is terrible!!! Get ready for a last place finish.


    Dave wrote on September 21, 2008 06:41 PM: um, no thanks. I wouldn't go see AAA baseball for free. Maybe if I lived in Reno or Albuquerque. Vegas can do much better.


    Michael wrote on September 21, 2008 04:13 PM: Most AAA players love to be where they are. They are getting paid to play baseball and are one step short of reaching their goal. This is good baseball at a reasonable price. AAA baseball for under $15 total or $50 for MLB game tickets and parking. And John, just look at it from your perspective; you don't feel pathetic working the fry station because one day you may get bumped up to the burger grill and be a true burger flipper.


    John wrote on September 21, 2008 03:19 PM: It doesn't matter if it was Toronto or the New York Yankees, AAA baseball is a joke. Just a bunch of pathetic guys trying to make the bigs. Not one of the those players wants to be here. Let some other b.s. town have a AAA team, we don't need it.


    mark wrote on September 21, 2008 02:59 PM: 23 losing seasons in the past decade??? That has to be a record only Einstein could figure out.


    Mike wrote on September 21, 2008 01:23 PM: Can't we just get rid of AAA baseball and wait for a real team??? It's soooo boring.


    Billy Tibbetts wrote on September 21, 2008 09:01 AM: I spent 6 months in jail there.


    John Lowe wrote on September 21, 2008 08:47 AM: Wow, the Blue Jays AAA teams have been bad. 23 losing seasons in one decade. That's impossible.


    Some U.S. Americans don't have maps wrote on September 21, 2008 05:41 AM: Thanks for telling us where we can locate Toronto, Todd. That's very helpful.