Misplaced Pages

Washington Wild Things

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Canton Crocodiles) Independent professional baseball team based in Washington, Pennsylvania
Washington Wild Things
Team logo Cap insignia
Information
LeagueFrontier League (Central Division)
LocationWashington, Pennsylvania
BallparkWild Things Park
Founded1997
League championships1 (1997)
Division championships9 (2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2024)
Playoff berths
15
1997
1998
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2014
2017
2018
2021
2022
2024
Former name(s)
  • Canton Crocodiles (1997–2001)
ColorsRed, black, white
     
Retired numbers12 (Chris Sidick)
OwnershipStu and Francine Williams
General ManagerSteve Zavacky (Managing Director)
ManagerTom Vaeth
MediaObserver–Reporter MSA Sports Network
Websitewww.washingtonwildthings.com

The Washington Wild Things are a professional baseball team based in Washington, Pennsylvania The team competes in the Frontier League (FL) as a member of the Central Division in the Midwest Conference, and is owned by Stu and Francine Williams. They play their home games at Wild Things Park, a 3,200-seat stadium built 30 miles southwest of Pittsburgh.

The Wild Things franchise won the Frontier Cup in their inaugural season in 1997 (as the Canton Crocodiles), defeating the Evansville Otters 2 games to 0.

Season-by-season record

Canton Crocodiles (Frontier League)
Year W–L Win % Place Postseason
1997 45–35 .562 2nd in FL East
1998 41–38 .519 2nd in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Chillicothe Paints 2–1.
1999 33–51 .393 5th in FL East Did not qualify
2000 38–46 .452 5th in FL East Did not qualify
2001 47–37 .560 3rd in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Chillicothe Paints 2–1.
Total 204–207 .496
Playoffs 6–4 .600 3 Playoff appearances, 1 championship.
Washington Wild Things (Frontier League)
2002 56–28 .667 1st in FL East
2003 54–34 .614 2nd in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Gateway Grizzlies 2–0.
2004 62–34 .646 1st in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Evansville Otters 3–0.
2005 63–32 .663 1st in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Chillicothe Paints 3–2.
2006 59–37 .615 1st in FL East Frontier League Division Series: Lost vs. Chillicothe Paints 3–1.
2007 55–40 .579 1st in FL East
2008 48–48 .500 3rd in FL East Did not qualify
2009 43–53 .448 4th in FL East Did not qualify
2010 38–57 .400 5th in FL East Did not qualify
2011 42–52 .447 5th in FL East Did not qualify
2012 44–52 .458 6th in FL East Did not qualify
2013 41–55 .427 6th in FL East Did not qualify
2014 57–39 .593 3rd in FL East Frontier League Playoffs: Defeated Evansville Otters in wildcard game. Lost in 2nd round to River City Rascals 2–0.
2015 42–54 .437 T-9th in FL Did not qualify
2016 46–49 .484 6th in FL Did not qualify
2017 53–43 .552 3rd in FL Frontier League Playoffs: Lost in 1st round to Florence Freedom 3–1.
2018 54–42 .563 1st in FL East
2019 37-59 .385 5th in FL Did not qualify
2020 -- -- -- Season not played due to COVID-19
2021 56-40 .583 1st in FL
2022 62-34 .646 1st in FL West Frontier League Division Series: Lost to Schaumburg Boomers 2–0.
2023 47-49 .490 4th in FL Did not qualify
2024 67-28 .705 1st in FL West Frontier League Division Series: Defeated Lake Erie Crushers 2–0.
Frontier League Championship Series: Lost to Quebec Capitales 3–1.
Total 781–634 .541
Playoffs 16–25 .390 8 Division titles, 12 Playoff appearances.

Current roster

Washington Wild Things roster
Active roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 98 Griffin Baker ‡
  • 23 Malik Barrington
  • 24 Alex Carrillo
  • 16 Jordan DiValerio
  • 30 Aaron Forrest
  •  3 Kobe Foster
  •  8 Dariel Fregio
  • 20 Justin Goossen-Brown
  • 34 Christian James
  • 27 Gyeongju Kim
  • 21 Zach Kirby
  •  9 Nick MacDonald
  • 22 Ryan Munoz
  • 13 Brendan Nail
  • 83 Lukas Young


Utility players

  • 99 Daniel Harris
 

Catchers

  •  5 Ricardo Sanchez
  • 33 JC Santini

Infielders

  • 10 Evan Berkey
  •  4 Tommy Caufield
  •  2 Carson Clowers
  • 28 Andrew Czech
  • 11 Jalen Miller
  • 31 Tyreque Reed
  • 19 Ethan Wilder

Outfielders

  • -- Anthony Boccio §
  •  1 Robert Chayka
  •  6 Wagner Lagrange
  • -- Quincy Latimore ‡
  • 26 Brandon McIlwain
  • 17 Caleb McNeely
  • -- Alexander Ovalles
 

Manager

  • -- Tom Vaeth

Coaches

  • -- Alex Boshers (pitching)
  • -- Ryan Whithorn (bench)

Disabled list
‡ Inactive list
§ Suspended list

 updated July 16, 2024
Transactions

Highlights

  • First ever perfect game in Frontier League history, (Matt Sergey, August 24, 2014)
  • Frontier League Organization of the Year Award (2002, 2004, 2005)
  • Second team in Frontier League history to make playoffs four straight years (Evansville, 1997–2000)
  • Led Frontier League in wins four straight seasons
    • 2002 (56–28)
    • 2003 (54–34)
    • 2004 (62–34)
    • 2005 (63–32)
  • In 2005:
    • 35–12 second half of season (Since July 18)
    • 23–5 the month of August
    • 13-game winning streak (July 27 – August 9)
    • 11-game winning streak (August 12 – August 23)
    • 14 straight home wins (August 3 – August 23)
  • Hosted the Frontier League All-Star Game in 2005 and 2013

New Frontier League records up to 2005

  • Only perfect game in Frontier League history (August 24, 2014, thrown by Matt Sergey)
  • Wins in a season: 63 (old record – Washington Wild Things, 2004)
  • Triples: 46 (old record – 33; Springfield, 1999)
  • Runs: 645 (old record – 612; London, 1999)
  • At Bats: 3,357 (old record – 3329; Rockford, 2004)
  • Hits: 999 (old record – 962; Rockford, 2004)
  • RBI: 567 (old record – 550; London, 1999)
  • Base on Balls: 433 (old record – 427; Dubois County, 2002)
  • Saves: 34 (old record – Washington Wild Things, 2004)
  • Total chances: 3740 (old record – 3,687; S/O 2004)
  • Individual saves by a closer, Jonathan Kountis

Managers

  • 2002–2003: Jeff Isom (110–62)
  • 2004–2007: John Massarelli (239–143)
  • 2008: Greg Jelks (48–48)
  • 2009: Mark Mason (43–53)
  • 2010–2011: Darin Everson (80–110)
  • 2012: Chris Bando (44–52)
  • 2013–2014: Bart Zeller (72–74)
  • 2014: Bob Bozzuto: (36–18)

Following the 2003 season, Jeff Isom resigned as manager and moved to the Joliet Jackhammers of the Northern League. After the 2007 season, Massarelli and the Wild Things parted ways. He took 2008 off and was named the first manager in Lake Erie Crushers history. In 2008, Greg Jelks was named the new manager of the Wild Things, but failed to lead them to the playoffs and finished the season at 48–48.

Mark Mason returned to the Wild Things in 2009 as manager after coaching the Paints for two seasons. In November 2009, Mason left the Wild Things to become pitching coach of the Atlantic League's York Revolution. On February 16, 2010, they announced Darin Everson as their new manager. After the 2011 season, Darin Everson and the Wild Things parted ways following an 80–110 record over two seasons. On October 18, 2011, the Wild Things hired former MLB catcher and Triple-A coach Chris Bando as the 6th manager in Wild things history. In March 2013, Bando announced that due to complications from hip surgery in January he would resign as manager. Recently hired Bench coach Bart Zeller, who had managed the Joliet Slammers the last two seasons and won a championship, was promoted to manager. During the 2014 season at 31–19 headed into the All-Star break, manager Bart Zeller resigned due to health concerns. He was scheduled to manage the Eastern All-Stars. After the break, Bob Bozzuto took over as manager.

Notable alumni

Championships and awards

  • 2002 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2002 Frontier League Organization of the Year
  • 2002 Jared Howton, Most Valuable Pitcher
  • 2002 Jeff Isom, Manager Of the Year
  • 2003 Josh Loggins, Most Valuable Player
  • 2004 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2004 Frontier League Organization of the Year
  • 2004 John Massarelli, Manager Of the Year
  • 2005 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2005 Frontier League Organization of the Year
  • 2006 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2006 John Massarelli, Manager Of the Year
  • 2007 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2018 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2021 Frontier League Eastern Division Champions
  • 2022 Frontier League West Division Champions

References

External links

Frontier League
East Division
West Division
Pennsylvania Sports teams based in Pennsylvania
Australian Rules Football
USAFL
Philadelphia Hawks
Baseball
MLB
Philadelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
IL
Lehigh Valley IronPigs
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders
EL
Altoona Curve
Erie SeaWolves
Harrisburg Senators
Reading Fightin Phils
ALPB
Lancaster Stormers
York Revolution
MLBDL
State College Spikes
Williamsport Crosscutters
FL
Washington Wild Things
PL
Johnstown Mill Rats
Basketball
NBA
Philadelphia 76ers
TBL
Reading Rebels
ABA
Central Pennsylvania Kings
Delco Desperados
Erie Elite
Philly Thunder
Steel City Yellow Jackets
Wyoming Valley Clutch
ECBL
Philly Raiders
Cricket
MiLC
The Philadelphians
Football
NFL
Philadelphia Eagles
Pittsburgh Steelers
AF1
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Mavericks
PAFL
Erie Express
WFA
Pittsburgh Passion
Ice hockey
NHL
Philadelphia Flyers
Pittsburgh Penguins
AHL
Hershey Bears
Lehigh Valley Phantoms
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins
ECHL
Reading Royals
OHL
Erie Otters
NAHL
Johnstown Tomahawks
EHL
Philadelphia Little Flyers
Pennsylvania Huntsmen
USPHL
Hershey Cubs
West Chester Wolves
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Knights
Inline hockey
PIHA
Harrisburg Lunatics
Hatfield Scorchers
Hershey Typhoon
Marple Gladiators
Pittsburgh Inferno
Pottstown Team Blue
Lacrosse
NLL
Philadelphia Wings
PLL
Philadelphia Waterdogs
Roller derby
WFTDA
Black Rose Rollers
Brandywine Roller Derby
Dutchland Derby Rollers
Erie Roller Derby
Harrisburg Area Roller Derby
Lehigh Valley Roller Derby
MRDA
Philadelphia Hooligans
Pittsburgh Roller Derby
Soccer
MLS
Philadelphia Union
MLS Next Pro
Philadelphia Union II
USLC
Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC
USL2
Lehigh Valley United
Philadelphia Lone Star FC
Reading United AC
West Chester United SC
USLW
Pittsburgh Riveters SC
NPSL
Electric City Shock SC
Erie Commodores FC
Hershey FC
Pennsylvania Classics
Philadelphia Union DS
Steel City FC
WPSL
Beadling SC
Erie FC
Fever SC
Hershey FC
Hex FC Tempest
LVU Rush
Keystone FC
Penn Fusion SA
Pennsylvania Classics
Philadelphia Ukrainian Nationals
Reading United AC
West-Mont United
UWS
Black Mountain Torrent
Erie Commodores FC
Lancaster Inferno FC
Steel City FC
Steel United
Indoor soccer
MASL
Harrisburg Heat
Ultimate
UFA
Philadelphia Phoenix
Pittsburgh Thunderbirds
College athletics
(NCAA Division I)
Bucknell Bison
Drexel Dragons
Duquesne Dukes
La Salle Explorers
Lafayette Leopards
Lehigh Mountain Hawks
Mercyhurst Lakers
Penn Quakers
Penn State Nittany Lions
Pittsburgh Panthers
Robert Morris Colonials
Saint Francis Red Flash
Saint Joseph's Hawks
Temple Owls
Villanova Wildcats
Sports in Pittsburgh
Baseball
Basketball
Football
Hockey
Soccer
Other
Venues
Historical
Baseball
Basketball
Football
Hockey
Soccer
Venues
Washington in Washington County, Pennsylvania
Historic sites
Museums and attractions
Transportation
Education
Industry and commerce
Sports
Media
Houses of worship
Other
CategoryCommonsWikisource
Categories: