Everett AquaSox

Everett AquaSox
Founded in 1984
Everett, Washington
Team logoCap insignia
Class-level
Current Class A Short Season (1984–present)
Minor league affiliations
League Northwest League (1984–present)
Division North Division
Major league affiliations
Current Seattle Mariners (1995–present)
Previous San Francisco Giants (1984–1994)
Minor league titles
League titles (2)
  • 1985
  • 2010
Division titles (4)
  • 1985
  • 1987
  • 2002
  • 2010
Team data
Nickname Everett AquaSox (1995–present)
Previous names
Everett Giants (1984–1994)
Colors Navy, aqua, light green, orange, white
                        
Mascot Webbly
Ballpark Everett Memorial Stadium (1984–present)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
7th Inning Stretch, LLC
Manager José Moreno
General Manager Danny Tetzlaff

The Everett AquaSox are a Minor League Baseball team of Northwest League and are the Class A Short Season affiliate of the Seattle Mariners. They are located in Everett, Washington, and play their home games at Everett Memorial Stadium which opened in 1984 and has a seating capacity of 3,682. The team was known as the Everett Giants from 1984 to 1994, but changed its name after ending its affiliation with the San Francisco Giants.

The AquaSox have won four division titles and two league championships. Most recently, they won the Northwest League championship in 2010. They previously won the championship in 1985.[1]

One of the team logos, used on road caps and jerseys, is based on the "trident" insignia used by the Mariners in the early 1980s (rotated to look like the letter "E" for Everett, instead of "M" for Mariners). Their mascot is Webbly, a frog.[2] According to long-time team radio broadcaster Pat Dillon, "The frog is a cross between a Pacific tree frog and a Central American red-eyed tree frog—and Brooks Robinson."[3] Previously, the mascot for the Everett Giants was a giant hot dog named Frank.

The manager in 2014 was Dave Valle, a former catcher with the Seattle Mariners. The current manager is José Moreno.

Playoffs

  • 1985: Defeated Eugene 1–0 to win championship.
  • 1987: Lost to Spokane 2–1 in finals.
  • 2002: Lost to Boise 3–0 in finals.
  • 2010: Defeated Vancouver 2–1 in semifinals; defeated Spokane 2–1 to win championship.
  • 2012: Lost to Vancouver 2–0 in semifinals.
  • 2013: Lost to Vancouver 2–0 in semifinals.
  • 2015: Lost to Tri-City 2–0 in semifinals.
  • 2016: Lost to Eugene 2–1 in finals.
  • 2018: Lost to Spokane 2–1 in semifinals.

Roster

Everett AquaSox roster
Players Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 37 Dayeison Arias
  • 48 Jheyson Caraballo
  • 18 David Ellingson
  • 32 Ivan Fortunato
  • 39 AJ Franks
  • 23 Joey Gerber
  • 40 Logan Gilbert
  • 47 Carlos Hernandez
  • 12 Cody Mobley
  • 28 Penn Murfee
  • 21 Ulises Perez
  • 13 Michael Plassmeyer
  • 11 Orlando Razo
  • 10 Max Roberts
  •  9 Jamal Wade
  • 38 Noah Zavolas

Catchers

  • 30 Jake Anchia
  • 34 Troy Dixon
  • 29 Geoandry Montilla

Infielders

  • 15 Cash Gladfelter
  •  3 Bobby Honeyman
  •  8 Connor Hoover
  •  1 Connor Kopach
  • 16 Ryne Ogren
  • 17 Nick Rodriguez
  •  4 Matt Sanders

Outfielders

  • 31 Ryan Garcia
  • 19 Charlie McConnell
  •  2 Cameron Perkins #
  • 36 Jansiel Rivera
  • 27 Ronald Rosario
  • 25 Josh Stowers

Manager

  • 20 José Moreno

Coaches

  • 45 Danielin Acevedo (pitching)
  • -- Eric Farris (hitting)
  • -- Moises Hernandez (pitching)


7-day disabled list
* On Seattle Mariners 40-man roster
# Rehab assignment
∞ Reserve list
‡ Restricted list
§ Suspended list
† Temporary inactive list
Roster updated June 28, 2018
Transactions
→ More rosters: MiLB  Northwest League
Seattle Mariners minor league players

References

  • "Everett, Washington". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  1. "Northwest League Past Champions". Northwest League. Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  2. "Everett Aquasox Mascot Appearances". Everett AquaSox. Minor League Baseball. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  3. Caputo, Paul (2015-05-02). "Soggy Froggy, Man: The Story Behind the Everett AquaSox". SportsLogos.net. SportsLogos.net. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
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