ISSUE 01
vlad guerrero jr. &
PLUS PLAYER profiles lugnut charities
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Greetings from Ownership Letter from Minor League Baseball Letter from the Midwest League 2016 Team Statistics Road to the Show
2017 CONTENTS
Departments
Player Profiles Coaching Staff Fan Guide Meet the Front Office
Features 10
Generation Next
Guerrero, Bichette & Biggio following in their fathers’ footsteps
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Retooled For 2017
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Lugnut Charities
The Lugnuts Experience is Award-Winning & Still Improving
Publisher Sherrie Myers Editor Ryan L. Smith
Art Director Ryan L. Smith
LUGNUTS Magazine is published annually by Professional Sports Marketing 2506 N. Clark St. #163 Chicago, IL 60614 847.866.9889 www.prosportsmarketing.net Š Copyright 2017
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Greetings from Ownership
A Newwelcome Look & a New Fieldclub! for a New Season to the Dear Best Customer,
Welcome the 22nd year of Lansing Lugnuts baseball! Welcome to to another season of Lugnuts Baseball! Fourteen years thanks to you! We have spent the off-season speaking with many of you and learning what you, our best fans, want and need from us.
At the start of every season it is easy to think about how quickly time flies. It wasn’t
so long ago that introduced Lansing to pain Big Lug andunique the Lugnuts and first opened We have heard yourwe stories and, we too, feel your in these times. We are also looking for ways to keep our family entertained and feeling upbeat. the gates for baseball. But it isn’t enough to be nostalgic. There must also be change, bringing that same excitement and even energy that we’vetimes. shared last two decadesAs Midwesterners, we know how to work, in challenging We for alsothe know how to have good, wholesome fun! We aren't fancy, but we are loyal and we love plus. That’s why we renovated Cooley Law School Stadium last year, culminating with our is where the Lugnuts help andwe’re we want to provide a family the families. openingThis of The Outfield. And can that’s why adding to that feeling of freshness and friendly port in this "Michigan Storm." Look at what we've got for you: renewal this year with several major changes.
• Value Priced Tickets – as low as $8 for 3 hours of fun. • Exchangeable Tickets - Any ticket from season ticket packages is For the first time since 2004, the Lugnuts will wear brand new caps and uniforms: three exchangeable, so that you never waste the value of these tickets. signature, eye-catching baseball that are drawing raves around • Free Kids Activities - Everycaps Sunday is Kids Day with free kids’ crafts, the country, paired balloon animals, and animals from the Potter Park Zoo! with all new home, road and batting-practice jerseys and pants that give us one of the • New Food Service Vision - We overhauled the food operation, hired best looksaninaward-winning all of Minorchef, League Baseball. Jackson Field entirely new: replaced improved our menu quality and is arealso keeping and re-sodded during the offseason with a new warning track, improved irrigation and prices almost flat. • Free Food -drainage, Now on Sundays, kidshead 12 and under eat free! Zach Severns at the helm. re-grading, added and new groundskeeper • Cheap Eats - Tuesdays are Dollar Dog Tuesdays! • Value Beverages - Every Thursday we offer $2 beverages in celebration of Labatt Light Thirsty Thursday featuring draftinbeer The Lugnuts haveBlue a new flagship radio station this$2year Theand Game 730 AM, the top fountain sodas. sports radio station in Mid Michigan, bringing you the sounds of Midwest League • Food Coupons - We also provide food coupons for you to sample our baseball all summer Anddepending since lastonyear’s Crosstown Showdown presented by menus, worth long. $10 - $25, your ticket package.
Auto-Insurance was such a hit with the beautiful autumn weather and pregame Home
But if that isn’t enough, we want you to be our guest to our premiere special Run Derby, we’re keeping it in September again thisInsurance. season. event – the Crosstown Showdown presented by Auto-Owners
Free Ticket – Crosstown Lugnuts vs. Michigan Amidst•all of the changes, our Showdown, commitment to you remainsState, the same: to provide on Thursday, April 16th at 7:05pm. affordable, innovative entertainment and positively outrageous service, throughout this Share theand newsmany that the Lugnuts indeed family, fun. Thank you for season seasons toare come. Gear up affordable and Go Nuts! allowing us to earn your business.
Tom Dickson Tom Dickson Lugnuts Owner
Lugnuts Owner
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Sherrie Myers SherrieOwner Myers Lugnuts
Lugnuts Owner
“Chef” Brett Telder Memorial
It is with great sadness that I write this. Brett Telder passed away unexpectedly on March 19th at the young age of 46 after suffering a brain aneurysm. Brett, or “Chef” as we all knew him, had been the Director of Food Service for the Lugnuts since 2008. Brett is survived by his mother, Bonnie V’soske and step father, John V’soske; his four children, Jason, Kayla, Zach and Madison and his fiancé, Karla Clark. For those of us who knew Brett well, he was larger than life. From the Lugnuts and PSC tattoos he proudly wore, to his Harley-riding swagger and infectious personality, Brett was a friend to all who knew him. To meet Brett was to like Brett. I am lucky to have known Brett well. I fondly remember the day I interviewed him to come and work for the Lugnuts in the summer of 2008. He was so excited and anxious for the job, that he kept his suit jacket on throughout the interview, despite the 95 degree day, because he had completely soaked his shirt with perspiration. I also smile when I think about every trip I took to Lansing to see a game. Brett would have my favorite drink sitting in the owner’s suite, on a little table, all ready to go. He never forgot. Beyond the little things that Brett did, he was a true professional. He ran a fabulous operation and always delivered the bottom line that he promised. But more importantly, Brett always treated our fans and our employees like part of the family, and made everyone feel welcome around him. As many of you who knew Brett will remember, Brett would often say how “honored” he was to work for the Lugnuts and PSC. I can say that we are the ones who have been honored to know Brett. He will be terribly missed, and his memory will live with us forever. In his honor, the kitchen at Cooley Law School Stadium has been dedicated in his name: the Brett Telder Memorial Kitchen. - Tom Dickson
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Letter from MiLB
Dear Fans: On behalf of Minor Leagu e Baseball and the Lansi ng Lugnuts, I want to we School Stadium. Minor lcome you to Cooley La League Baseball’s arriva w l every spring and summe an old friend and it is gre r is like being reunited wi at to see you at the ballpa th rk! The 2017 season will see the launch of several new team names, logos and ma realignment in our Single scots, as well as -A classification. What rem ains the same is the quali entertainment in a clean ty, affordable family and safe environment tha t is a staple of Minor Le country. ague Baseball across the With 20 leagues and mo re than 250 clubs, Minor League Baseball is where of baseball’s brightest sta you will find the next wa rs on their way to the big ve leagues. The next Kris Br Kershaw just might be pla yant, Mike Trout or Clayto ying in the game you are n watching now! Minor League Baseball also remains an integral part of the sports landsc represents. Last season, ape, and of the communit Minor League Baseball’s ies it philanthropic endeavors approximately $39 millio included donating n in cash and value in kin d contributions to local and proud to support our Na tional Charity Partners: national charities. We are The ALS Association, the Big Brothers Big Sisters, American Cancer Society, The BairFind Foundation and Ed Randall’s Fans for worthy initiatives and cau the Cure, as well as other ses. In 2016, a remarkable 41 .3 MILLION fans attend ed Minor League Baseb with your continued sup all games and I am certai port, Minor League Baseb n that all will continue to prospe come. As stewards and r for many years to fans of the game, it is ou r responsibility to build, game for the future genera nurture and protect this tions of fans. great Thank you again for your passionate support of Mi nor League Baseball, and Lansing Lugnuts. I wish most importantly the you a healthy and enjoyab le season of baseball. Le t's play ball!! Sincerely,
Pat O'Conner President & CEO Minor League Baseball
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Letter from the MWL President
Celebrating 70 years of Midwest League baseball PRIMARY LEAGUE LOGO
PRIMARY LEAGUE LOGO ON DARK BACKGROUNDS
The trademark notices (“TM” or “® notice for each product upon submis
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Guerrero, Bichette & Biggio
GENERATION
NEXT
Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., Bo Bichette and Cavan Biggio following in their fathers’ footsteps
by Jesse Goldberg-Strassler Guerrero. Bichette. Biggio. Major League standouts. All-Stars. One Hall of Famer. In a year or two, maybe a second. Baseball is an intergenerational pastime, a tradition relayed from era to era, from father to son. With Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., Bo Bichette and Cavan Biggio rising up the Toronto Blue Jays’ system, baseball’s next generation comes even clearer into focus. This season, and in the years to come, three top prospects seek to make their own names in a game that their fathers dominated.
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Generation Next
But the first question invariably directed around Guerrero deals not with that contract, nor with the expectations it might raise. It is this: Does he hit like his father?
Vladimir guerrero jr.
The first Vladimir Guerrero was a phenomenon, a bare-handed, batwhipping, bad-ball-chasing (and badball-hammering) slugger with a rocket of an arm who lit up the final years of the Montreal Expos and then won the 2004 American League MVP Award in his first year with the Anaheim Angels. In 15 full seasons, Guerrero never batted below .290 – and that .290 season came in his final year in the Majors. He was a nine-time All-Star and an eight-time Silver Slugger, and it was equally glorious to see him hit a frozen rope at the plate or throw one from the outfield. It is especially worth remembering the 503-foot home run he hit on his way to winning the 2007 All-Star Home Run Derby, a homer that remains the longest blast in AT&T Park history. Does Junior hit like Senior? On Tuesday, September 6th, 2016, the day after the Midwest League regularseason came to an end, Vladimir Jr. suited up in the Lansing Lugnuts’ white, black and red, and competed in a different Home Run Derby – a pregame addition to the Crosstown Showdown presented by Auto-Owners Insurance. He did not win the event, but he did hit a baseball on a line off the video board. It was a shot that sent his teammates jumping up down the first-base line, awing the open-mouthed Michigan State Spartans down the third-base line.
Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. signed as a free agent with Toronto for $3.9 million on July 2nd, 2015. The Blue Jays had to make a sacrifice in order to offer the contract, trading prospects Chase De Jong and Tim Locastro to the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for three
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international slot values, thus lessening the penalty of an overage tax from two years to one year. It was worth it, Toronto felt. The 16-year-old Guerrero was the top international prospect in the 2015 class.
That longball in the Home Run Derby did not officially count toward Vladdy Jr.’s 2016 ledger, leaving him with eight home runs in his professional debut, spent as a 17-year-old with the Appalachian League’s Bluefield Blue Jays. Even more impressively, he walked only two fewer times than he struck out (33 to 35) and stole a surprising 15 bases in 20 attempts, considering that he had been prematurely labeled as slow-footed due to his 200-pound stature. His finest game was either on July 14th against
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Completed reconstruction of holes 6 and 7 with beautiful new water features!
Generation Next
Princeton (4-for-5 with a single, two doubles and a home run) or August 12th against Pulaski (3-for-4, with two homers, a walk, a steal and three runs scored). For his efforts, he was named both a Baseball America Rookie All-Star and MiLB.com Organization All-Star. In late September, Baseball America named Vladdy Jr. its No. 1 prospect in the Appalachian League. Wrote Hudson Belinsky, “Guerrero… lived up to the hype in his pro debut by more than holding his own despite being the youngest player in the Appy League for the entire season. Guerrero showed elite hard-hit ability, consistently squaring up pitches and covering the plate well. He shows plus bat speed, natural timing in the box, an understanding of the strike zone and an ability to recognize and track offspeed pitches.” In late October, Baseball America revealed that Guerrero was also its top Blue Jays prospect. “Guerrero does just about everything evaluators want to see in a teenage hitter,” editor-inchief John Manuel wrote. “He has tremendous hand-eye coordination and bat-to-ball skills, to the point he seems to have been born to hit.” Manuel, who ranked Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. as his 11th-best prospect in Major League Baseball, concluded that Vladdy Jr. “could make it hard for the Jays to keep him from getting to the big leagues by the time he’s 20.”
In the expansion draft of 1992, the Colorado Rockies selected an Atlanta Braves prospect named David Nied first overall. With their fifth pick, the Rockies took outfielder Kevin Reimer, whom they traded to the Milwaukee Brewers for 6-foot-3, 215-pound Dante Bichette. It was the day before Bichette’s 29th birthday. In five seasons in the American League, three full, he had batted .261, .210, .255, .238 and
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.287, and he had slugged .304, .326, .433, .393 and .406. Things would improve significantly for Bichette in Colorado. Partnered with Larry Walker, Andres Galarraga and Vinny Castilla in a hulking meat of the order, Bichette made the National League All-Star Team four times in the next six years. His batting averages: .310, .304, .340, .313, .308 and .331. His slugging percentages: .526, .548, a leagueleading .620 in 1995, .531, .510 and .509. He also led the Major Leagues in hits (197) and runs batted in (128) in 1995, ranking first in the National League with 40 home runs. In the playoffs, Bichette rose to the occasion against the eventual World Champion Atlanta Braves, hitting .588 with 10 hits in 17 at-bats, three doubles, and a home run off of Greg Maddux. He retired from baseball at the age of 37, finishing with a .299 career batting average and 274 career home runs. The first of the next generation of Bichettes to reach professional baseball was Dante Jr., drafted by the New York Yankees with the 51st pick in 2011. There was a personal connection – Dante Sr.’s old Rockies teammate, Joe Girardi, was the Yankees manager. Dante Jr. enjoyed a successful professional debut, hitting .342 in the Gulf Coast League, but then ran into a roadblock since, spending parts of each of the last three years with Double-A Trenton. As one observer noted, “He’s been the best player in his league one year, not so good the next year, and dealt with a lot of adversity and success so far.” That observer was Dante Jr.’s younger brother, Bo. “I’ve learned a lot from him on how to handle that [adversity and success] and stay positive through it all,” Bo told Minnia Feng of The Toronto Observer. Just like his older brother, Bo Bichette put forth a stunning pro debut, even as he missed major time due to appendicitis. In only 22 games, Bo collected 35 hits, scored 21 runs
and amassed 36 RBIs, leading to an easy nod toward Gulf Coast League Post-Season All-Star. There were four three-hit games, as well as four games with at least four runs batted in. Is the roadblock coming next? Or is Bo Bichette as sensational as he seems? Go back before he was drafted, when he became the first member of the Bichette family to be named the Gatorade Florida Player of the Year. Though homeschooled, Bo played his ball at Lakewood High School, swatting 24 home runs in three years and never batting below .492. As a senior, his 13 homers put him first in the state and tied for seventh in the country; his batting average, according to The Tampa Bay Times, sat at a lofty .569 (reported to be .576 with a .707 on-base percentage in a piece by Bright House Sports Network’s Katherine Smith). More honors accumulated: Class 5A Player of the Year. The Florida Dairy Farmers Mr. Baseball. All of this came a year after Bo suffered an elbow injury that cost him his junior season. Two days after being named Mr. Baseball, Bo Bichette was drafted 66th overall by Toronto, a second-round selection – and, arguably, a mutual selection. “The Blue Jays were one of the few teams who viewed me as a possibility for their first-round pick,” he told Clayton Richer of Jays Journal, “so I wanted to reward a team for valuing me the way I valued myself. Also, the team’s new front office is great with their player development and that was most important to me.” Bo’s professional debut season took a pair of turns before slowing down. He joined Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., in the Crosstown Showdown Home Run Derby in September, outhomering his fellow teenager before getting overpowered by Lugnuts outfielder Connor Panas. In the game itself, he delivered an opposite-field RBI triple in his first at-bat. And at the end of the month, he joined Dante Jr. on Team Brazil – their mother is Brazilian – playing shortstop in three World Baseball Classic qualifying games at MCU Park in Brooklyn.
Guerrero, Bichette & Biggio
Bo Bichette
Bo Bichette, only 19 years of age and on the lookout for roadblocks, is Baseball America’s No. 9 prospect in the Blue Jays’ organization, placed in higher esteem than first-rounders Jon Harris and Max Pentecost.
Trivia question: Who’s the only baseball player in the history of the game to reach at least 3,000 hits, 600 doubles, 400 steals and 250 home runs? The answer: Craig Biggio, a native
Long Islander now indelibly connected with the city of Houston. The second baseman from Seton Hall played 20 storied years with the Astros and ranks first in team history in games (2,850), at-bats (10,876), hits (3,060), walks (1,160), and three categories that deserve a closer look: runs scored, doubles and hit-by pitches. Biggio’s 1,844 runs rank 15th in baseball history, ahead of Ted Williams and Honus Wagner. His 668 doubles place him 5th all-time, behind only Tris Speaker, Pete Rose, Stan Musial and Ty Cobb. And his 285 HBPs are the 2nd-most in the whole history of the national pastime, two shy of Hughie “Ee-Yah” Jennings, who played at the turn of the 20th century. Jennings
was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1945. 70 years later, it was Craig Biggio’s turn for enshrinement in Cooperstown. Cavan Biggio was playing in the Cape Cod League in the summer of 2015, the starting second baseman for the Harwich Mariners. With Baseball Hall of Fame weekend approaching, he sent a message to Mariners manager Steve Englert, asking permission to leave the team. “I gave him a hard time about it,” Englert told The Boston Globe. Recalled Cavan, “He texted me and wrote, ‘No, it’s absolutely not OK. What do you think this is, you come and leave whenever you want?’ ”
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Generation Next
Cavan Biggio
After waiting a beat, Englert messaged his approval. Before Cavan departed for Cooperstown, there was one more contest still to be played: the Cape Cod League All-Star Game. It was the latest honor for the younger Biggio, a high school two-sport standout and now a star at the University of Notre Dame. While attending St. Thomas Catholic in Houston, Cavan played safety and wide receiver as a four-year member of the football team. In baseball, coached by his father, he reached greater heights. As a freshman, he batted .380 and hit five home runs, helping the Eagles win the Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools (TAPPS) state title. The next year, older brother Conor delivered a walk-off single in the state semifinal. One day later, it was Cavan’s third-inning home run in the state championship that provided the decisive blow in a 4-3 victory. It was his seventh home run of the year, capping a season with a .393 batting average and 46 RBIs. That batting average rose to .420 during his junior year, in which he was named a Perfect Game Underclass All-American and won the IBAF Junior AAU/18U World Championship with Team USA in South Korea. He hit .410 as a senior and was honored as Perfect Game’s top second baseman in the country, the No. 2 prospect in the state of Texas and the 21st-best high school baseball prospect in the nation. He was drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 29th round that June, but declined their offer. Instead, he matriculated at Notre Dame – “I had been a Notre Dame football fan my whole life,” he admits readily – joining Conor on the Irish baseball team. He played in every game during his freshman year and led the team in runs scored. Following his sophomore year, he was named the nation’s Rawlings Gold Glove winner for second basemen, making just five errors all season. That set the prelude for his summer with Harwich and a litany of
Guerrero, Bichette & Biggio
expectations, including Baseball America’s pick for Preseason First Team All-American. The season that followed saw Biggio hit .311 with a .473 on-base percentage, thanks to 121 times reaching base (61 hits, 54 walks, six times hit by a pitch) in 54 games. He was perfect in steals (14-for-14) and delivered Notre Dame’s first inside-thepark home run in eight years. On June 11th, 2016, the second day of the MLB Draft, Cavan’s name was called… with a twist. Conor Biggio, an intern in the commissioner’s office, did the honors. “That was definitely a surprise,” Cavan told Brian McTaggart of MLB.com. “I know he’s been working with the Draft all week and being in the room the past two days, but I honestly didn’t know really specifically what he was doing. After my name was
selected and I heard my name called, I said, ‘That voice kind of sounds a little familiar.’ ” He made his debut nine days later with the Vancouver Canadians, Vancouver’s fourth game of the season. In his second professional game, he went 4-for-4, smacking two singles and two doubles, and scoring two runs. He was named to yet another All-Star Team, representing the Northwest League on August 2nd against the Pioneer League, and played 53 games in all – one fewer than he had played that year for Notre Dame. Cavan finished the year with the Lansing Lugnuts, hitting safely and/or drawing a walk in his first eight Midwest League games. The only game that he failed to reach base: the final game of the year.
Cavan Biggio currently stands as Baseball America’s 25th-best prospect in the Blue Jays organization… and the No. 1 second baseman in the system.
Guerrero, Bichette, Biggio. Three familiar names in the baseball community, thanks to Vladimir Sr., Dante and Craig. Soon, Vladimir Jr., Bo and Cavan hope, from Lansing to Dunedin to New Hampshire to Buffalo to Toronto, baseball fans will associate those surnames with the next generation of baseball talent.
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RETOOLED
The Lugnuts Experience is Award-
by Bill
T
he final stages of downtown Lansing’s crown jewel have officially been completed, putting an emphatic full stop to the massive overhaul to Cooley Law School Stadium. After hundreds of workers, thousands of hours and millions of dollars, Lansing is left with one beautiful minor league park.
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Any Lugnuts fan who made it to a game (or even drove past) in the last two seasons will be quick to tell their fellow baseball fans about the new look to the outfield. What was once an open-ended centerfield with a simple batter’s eye surrounded by a playground and a picnic venue is now a 360-degree walkable concourse with more than 80 apartment units of all shapes, sizes, and colors,
creating an urban feel. Underneath the apartments are fully functional and thriving venues for groups of any size, enhancing the way people watch the game and improving their overall experience. There’s the rebranded and re-designed Chevrolet Terrace that can fit almost a thousand guests, Good Hops Craft Beer Bistro, where fans can sip their
FOR 2017 Winning and Still Improving Getschman
favorite IPA while enjoying the game from a covered patio, and there’s The VIEW, an immaculately decorated and well-kept multi-purpose event space that can hold as many as 150 of your most important guests. Situated between the three venues is the newly founded Michigan Baseball Hall of Fame, featuring local legends such as Pat O’Keefe (Grand Ledge High School), John Smoltz (Waverly High
School), and Jim Abbott (University of Michigan). It’s hard to miss these beautiful renovations that have thrust Cooley Law School Stadium into the conversation for prettiest ballpark in the Midwest. Fresh paint all across the color wheel as far as the eye can see. A new high-definition scoreboard and sound system. Spectacular LAFCU
Fireworks shows most Friday and Saturday nights. But the final piece of the puzzle is subtler, one that arguably took more physical labor than any other aspect of the renovation, one that every fan sees whether they sit down for nine innings or casually stroll down Cedar Street – and one that needed to happen in order to have baseball in Lansing at all: a brand new Jackson Field.
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Please Enjoy Leinie’s Responsibly
© 2017 Jacob Leinenkugel Brewing Co., Chippewa Falls, WI
Award-Winning & Still Improving
Crews resodding Jackson Field
The Game Before the Games When you think about it, the field is the crux of the renovation. Without a good field, this business and venue would change drastically. All across the nation and world, regardless of the number of seats that surround home plate, it has to be 90 feet to first and 60 feet 6 inches to the pitching rubber. Whether you are at Wrigley Field or the backyard clearing used in “The Sandlot,” if the surface isn’t flat, the grass isn’t mowed, and the lines aren’t straight, there cannot be baseball. In late 2016, the entire field was torn up to make way for a brand new one; new sod, fresh drainage and irrigation, a new grading system, the works. It was completed just before Thanksgiving. “New is nice,” said Lugnuts head groundskeeper Zach Severns. “There are going to be lots of eyes on it. If it doesn’t look good, the investment was futile.” Severns’s first day on the job was the day after the Super Bowl. He walked into a unique position in Minor League Baseball: not only a ballpark with apartments above his office, but a brand new field and groundskeeping area behind the left field fence. Zach and his assistant, Harley, a border collie, put in overtime from Day 1 in order to bring the Lugnuts the finest field seen in Mid Michigan in years. If well maintained, athletic venues usually overhaul their playing surfaces every five to seven years; it was 11 years since the last field renovation here. Also new to Jackson Field in 2017 are
25 added drains spaced roughly 20 feet apart on the warning track, a new warning track dirt mix, and re-grading of the field to assist in proper flow of irrigation and to prevent build-up of dirt or particles that could be harmful to the sod. Despite the frigid winter and waiting for the sod to take, building the pitching mounds was Severns’s biggest hurdle. There were seven total mounds that needed to be built; two in the batting cage, two in both bullpens down the foul lines, and the primary one, located at center stage. “We were in a time crunch down the stretch,” Severns said, “but we cowboyed up and worked through it.”
The field was also built for longevity. With a strong layer of fertilizer ready to go, Severns is prepared to maintain the field’s quality. “I approach this with a five-year plan,” he said. “We can’t only think about this season.” From aerating the field to different mowing patterns, there are many tips and tricks of the trade that Zach Severns has picked up over his years in the industry, from his time at Washington State University to his most recent post with the Augusta GreenJackets. All eyes are on his work come first pitch, day after day, all summer long.
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Retooled For 2017
Former Lugnut and current Detroit Tigers starter Daniel Norris proudly dons the new road cap.
Luggie, the beloved face of the team. The road uniforms introduce a sight never used on jerseys before, a gray “Lugnuts” with silver trim on a black jersey with gray pants – no red to be seen. “I see it as a refresher of the logos,” says Matt Hicks, director of retail operations for the club. “It isn’t a complete overhaul but it isn’t reverting to the past either. We’re simply adding to one of the most successful brands in Minor League Baseball.” New to the team as well are a lineup of hats for a variety of uses: a new alternate hat with a script double L, stylized after the Frisco RoughRiders’ doubled R look; a new batting practice hat that boasts a robust red crown, completed with a zoomed-in Luggie’s face on a black bill; and a sleek gray road cap with Luggie’s face sitting above a black brim. The Lugnuts now have five official hats, two fewer than the maximum allotment for MiLB clubs.
MAKING OVER THE LUGNUTS Fans attending their first Lansing Lugnuts game of the year might not recognize the product on the field immediately. For the first time in 12 years, the Nuts are donning new uniforms, a fresh blend of past and present, designed to the precise wishes
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of minor league ballplayers. Doing away with the polyester vest look, the new home jerseys are lightweight and slick all-white with simple black piping around the neck and down the legs. The “Lugnuts” across the front remains a traditional tackle-twill sewn on patch, but on the sleeves this year are three more patches, a tribute to former league president George Spelius, the Toronto Blue Jays’ affiliate logo, and
“It’s an exciting time for retail. The Minor Leagues are all about fun, and I think what we did with our new apparel really promotes that goal,” said Hicks. “We’ve had our cap appear on ESPN’s Mike & Mike, and be modeled by former Lugnuts like Daniel Norris and Matt Boyd with the Detroit Tigers, and Aaron Sanchez, Casey Lawrence, Kevin Pillar and Ryan Goins with the Blue Jays. “With what we’ve done with the stadium, the new field, the renovation,” added Hicks, “I didn’t want the uniforms to be the only thing left without a makeover. Now I’ve crossed that off my work bucket list.”
BP
ALTERNATE ROAD
Retooled For 2017
Miniature golf at Cooley Law School Stadium
Lansing Lugnuts events and meetings manager Malinda Barr, that was only the beginning. “My goal for 2017 is 188 events, not including baseball games, and 450 events in a few years,” Barr said. “That would put the Lugnuts at the top of the special events industry within Minor League Baseball.” Moving a special event to a unique facility such as Cooley Law School Stadium is a massive undertaking, but that isn’t the most challenging facet of Barr’s job. Her biggest obstacle is educating clients, guests, and even residents of Lansing that the park is open to bookings when the team is out of town or out of season. “What makes me good at my job is thinking outside the box and educating clients to use us for traditional purposes in a non-traditional venue,” said Barr, who was named the National Certified Tourism Ambassador of the Year in 2016, the most prestigious accomplishment in her field. “We’re not recreating the wheel, but rather just customizing it to the car we are driving.”
Thinking beyond the bases Despite the name, Cooley Law School Stadium is much more than just a stadium. Last year’s Miniature Golf at the Ballpark in September was a perfect representation of that, turning the field into an 18-hole mini-golf course that proved ideal
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for a family excursion or for a date night. With The VIEW, a capacity of 11,000, and a 360-degree concourse, it makes perfect sense to expand the stadium’s functionality and break into other sectors of business. In the last calendar year, Cooley Law School Stadium hosted over 140 events, not including Lugnuts baseball games. According to
This past February, Cooley Law School Stadium hosted the Polar Plunge, an annual fundraiser for the Special Olympics in which participants raise money in teams and jump into a freezing cold pool on a cold day. The event was wildly successful, both in terms of fundraising and in terms of execution, but the planning of the event took more than a year. “Literally every element was different [from their previous location],” Barr said, “and that’s typical of major events at a unique venue, but the more we execute major events like this, especially in the
Award-Winning & Still Improving
Beerfest at the Ballpark
winter months, the more the public knows about us.” Next year’s event is going to be a threeday weekend winter extravaganza called “The Capital Ice Games,” culminating with the Polar Plunge on a Sunday. The stadium has traditionally never held outdoor winter events, but now is not the time to be traditional. In 2017, the stadium will host four fundraising walks or runs in addition to the Polar Plunge, at least two concerts, a Beerfest at the Ballpark, spirit tastings, and countless other more traditional business meetings, receptions and luncheons. The next time you drive past Cooley Law School Stadium in the dead of winter or when
the Lugnuts are out of town, you can bet that the stadium is in use in some fashion.
award-winning and still improving What we have downtown on Michigan Avenue in the shadow of the Capitol Building is one of the prettiest settings and most unique backdrops that the Minor Leagues have to offer, but hosting 70 baseball games isn’t enough anymore. When so many people worked so hard to make Cooley Law School Stadium such a polished gem, it’s only right that we work as hard as
we possibly can to give back to the city in whatever means possible. That work has paid off. In addition to Barr’s CTA honor, Lugnuts general manager Nick Grueser was named the 2016 Midwest League Executive of the Year, and the stadium was awarded the 2016 Best Ballpark Renovation over $10 Million by Ballpark Digest. Installing a new field was a massive undertaking, a project that spanned more than just a few months. Now Cooley Law School Stadium’s facelift is finally complete. For Zach Severns, Matt Hicks, Malinda Barr and the other 22 members of the full-time staff, this is when the real work begins.
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Season Review
2016 Scorecard 2016 was nothing if not eventful for the 21st edition of the Lansing Lugnuts. The Nuts included three different firstround picks (2014’s Max Pentecost, 2015’s Jon Harris, and 2016’s T.J. Zeuch), experienced a skunk delay (lasting seven minutes in Dayton on August 22nd), and threw the second no-hitter in franchise history – in a loss (at Peoria on July 14th). Steered by first-year manager John Schneider, the Lugnuts boasted a talented starting rotation filled out with dominating performances. After allowing three runs on Opening Day, the aforementioned Harris gave up only one unearned run in his next 32 innings, including five straight scoreless starts. He was supplemented by a rotation featuring ace turns
from Sean Reid-Foley, Francisco Rios, Ryan Borucki, Jordan Romano, Justin Maese, and Midwest League Mid Season and Post Season All-Star Angel Perdomo, who led the league with 156 strikeouts in just 127 innings. Both Perdomo and Rios received their just due in mid July, representing the Blue Jays as members of the World roster in the All-Star Futures Game. The bullpen was similarly strong, led by Colton Turner, who notched nine scoreless appearances leading to first a promotion and then a trade to the Chicago White Sox, and Dusty Isaacs, who gave up only three earned runs in the first two months of the year. The starting lineup was led by AllStar leadoff hitter Andrew Guillotte, who played second base and all three
outfield positions and batted .360 in the first inning, and All-Star first baseman/ third baseman Juan Kelly, who put together a league-best 34-game onbase streak and took part in the Home Run Derby. At the end of the year, the lineup was further bolstered by the addition of 2016 draftees J.B. Woodman (2nd round), Joshua Palacios (4th round), and Cavan Biggio (5th round). Woodman, in particular, batted .441 in nine games, while Palacios notched a 19-game hitting streak between Vancouver and Lansing. At the big-league level, six former Lugnuts made their MLB debuts: pitchers Chad Girodo, Dustin Antolin, Danny Barnes, and Matt Dermody in the Toronto Blue Jays’ bullpen, Andy Burns in the Blue Jays’ lineup, and Ryan
F INAL BAT TING STATS Player POS G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS OBP SLG AVG OPS E J.B. Woodman CF 9 34 5 15 2 0 1 5 20 4 13 0 1 .487 .588 .441 1.075 1 Joshua Palacios CF 9 38 2 13 3 0 0 1 16 1 3 0 2 .375 .421 .342 .796 0 Max Pentecost C 62 239 36 75 15 3 7 34 117 21 51 4 2 .375 .490 .314 .864 Juan Kelly 1B 131 475 60 130 35 6 12 67 213 57 113 11 0 .356 .448 .274 .804 10 Gunnar Heidt SS 57 211 29 57 15 3 4 21 90 22 56 13 8 .351 .427 .270 .778 8 John La Prise 2B 64 239 42 61 12 1 0 20 75 25 76 4 3 .332 .314 .255 .646 8 Andrew Guillotte CF 115 455 65 115 27 3 4 44 160 39 77 20 10 .322 .352 .253 .674 3 Ryan Hissey C 111 410 43 101 19 3 4 36 138 36 97 5 1 .310 .337 .246 .647 7 Jake Thomas LF 57 213 24 52 7 4 0 17 67 24 49 4 3 .325 .315 .244 .640 3 Carl Wise 3B 84 304 36 73 15 0 4 27 100 21 72 1 3 .291 .329 .240 .620 20 Connor Panas LF 98 321 46 74 10 3 16 50 138 45 97 3 4 .343 .430 .231 .773 1 Cavan Biggio 2B 9 36 3 8 1 0 0 5 9 4 7 2 0 .310 .250 .222 .560 3 Josh Almonte CF 56 195 23 43 7 2 2 19 60 9 53 9 4 .266 .308 .221 .573 4 Lane Thomas CF 81 282 50 61 14 1 7 27 98 45 107 17 5 .330 .348 .216 .678 5 JC Cardenas SS 78 262 28 54 14 0 3 25 77 27 71 2 1 .279 .294 .206 .573 24 Aaron Attaway 3B 25 77 12 15 4 1 1 4 24 9 20 1 0 .287 .312 .195 .599 6 Justin Atkinson 1B 109 384 33 73 19 1 5 47 109 30 95 0 0 .248 .284 .190 .532 9 Austin Davis LF 33 102 5 18 1 0 0 4 19 10 30 0 1 .250 .186 .176 .436 0 Ryan Metzler SS 58 184 17 30 7 3 1 16 46 20 78 10 2 .257 .250 .163 .507 10 Juan Tejada OF 25 78 9 12 1 1 1 6 18 4 23 2 0 .202 .231 .154 .433 2 Jacob Anderson RF 27 96 4 14 4 1 1 10 23 6 34 0 0 .196 .240 .146 .436 0 Alex Maldonado 3B 3 8 0 1 1 0 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 .300 .250 .125 .550 0
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LANSING LUGNUTS
Schimpf with the San Diego Padres. The 2016 season concluded with the first autumn edition of the Crosstown Showdown presented by Auto-Owners Insurance, having been postponed from April. A crowd of 8,432 on September 6th roared for an electric pregame Home Run Derby won by Lugnuts slugger Connor Panas, overpowering debuting teenage prospects Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., and Bo Bichette in the first round, and outhomering MSU’s Dan Durkin 14-10 in the final. In the game itself, Christian Williams swatted a tworun homer, Bichette lined an RBI triple, and Woodman supplied an RBI single, leading to a 4-1 Lugnuts win.
LEADERS
Batting Average
Hits
Luis Arraez, CR........................ .347 Will Maddox, WM................... .339 Eloy Jimenez, SB.................... .329
Will Maddox, WM.................... 173 Luis Arraez, CR......................... 165 Magneuris Sierra, PEO............ 161
Home Runs
Runs Batted In
Isan Diaz, WIS............................ 20 Casey Gillaspie, BG................... 19 3 Tied.......................................... 16
Zander Wiel, CR......................... 86 Eloy Jimenez, SB....................... 81 Brett Sullivan, BG...................... 81
Stolen Bases
Runs
Eliezer Alvarez, PEO................... 36 Derek Hill, WM........................... 35 2 Tied.......................................... 31
Magneuris Sierra, PEO.............. 78 Michael Russell, BG................... 76 2 Tied.......................................... 75
Wins
ERA
Genesis Cabrera, BG................. 11 3 Tied.......................................... 10
Evan Manarino, BEL............... 2.15 Ryan Borucki, LAN.................. 2.41 Carlos Hernandez, KC............. 2.55
Games
Innings Pitched
Steven De La Cruz, PEO............ 49 Nate Griep, WIS......................... 49 Matt Walker, CLI......................... 48
Boomer Biegalski, BEL......... 153.1 Shao-Ching Chiang, LC........ 152.1 Jordan Yamamoto, WIS....... 134.1
Saves
Strikeouts
Nate Griep, WIS......................... 23 Sarkis Ohanian, DAY................. 13 Matt Walker, CLI......................... 13
Angel Perdomo, LAN............... 156 Jordan Yamamoto, WIS.......... 152 Dennis Santana, GL................. 124
2016 SEASON REVIEW
MIDWEST LEAGUE
FINAL PITCHING STATS Player Angel Perdomo Tayler Saucedo Ryan Borucki Josh DeGraaf Jon Harris Jordan Romano Ryan Cook Dan Lietz Starlyn Suriel Sean Reid-Foley Justin Maese Tom Robson Dusty Isaacs Francisco Rios Kirby Snead Andrew Case Daniel Young Jackson Lowery Conor Fisk Patrick Murphy Nate Abel Colton Turner Gustavo Pierre T.J. Zeuch Evan Smith Geno Encina Griffin Glaude Aaron Attaway Austin Davis
W L ERA G GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR HB BB SO WHIP HLD GF 5 7 3.19 27 25 0 0 1 127.0 101 57 45 4 8 54 156 1.22 0 1 8 11 5.91 28 16 1 1 0 120.1 151 89 79 14 14 41 71 1.60 1 1 10 4 2.41 20 20 1 0 0 115.2 105 36 31 1 5 26 107 1.13 0 0 5 7 3.43 35 7 0 0 3 94.1 91 44 36 6 0 25 79 1.23 2 12 8 2 2.23 16 16 0 0 0 84.2 74 28 21 1 5 24 73 1.16 0 0 3 2 2.11 15 14 1 0 0 72.2 49 24 17 3 5 27 72 1.05 0 0 1 6 5.30 26 7 0 0 0 69.2 75 44 41 2 1 34 66 1.56 2 8 6 3 4.20 35 0 0 0 0 64.1 59 34 30 4 4 28 50 1.35 3 13 5 3 3.21 32 0 0 0 2 61.2 51 28 22 5 0 23 60 1.20 6 11 4 3 2.95 11 11 0 0 0 58.0 43 22 19 2 1 22 59 1.12 0 0 2 4 3.36 10 10 0 0 0 56.1 59 22 21 2 4 14 44 1.30 0 0 0 4 7.50 21 3 0 0 1 54.0 78 47 45 6 3 29 40 1.98 7 5 1 4 2.87 27 0 0 0 12 31.1 32 17 10 2 1 6 37 1.21 1 24 2 0 1.20 6 6 0 0 0 30.0 21 7 4 0 2 8 43 0.97 0 0 0 1 3.91 13 0 0 0 1 25.1 31 12 11 0 3 3 17 1.34 3 3 0 2 2.28 22 0 0 0 10 23.2 20 9 6 0 0 6 19 1.10 0 19 2 1 2.70 21 0 0 0 0 23.1 25 11 7 2 2 10 18 1.50 2 9 1 2 4.03 17 0 0 0 4 22.1 23 10 10 0 1 7 21 1.34 2 8 2 2 4.91 7 1 0 0 0 22.0 21 13 12 3 0 8 26 1.32 0 0 0 1 4.29 8 2 0 0 2 21.0 24 12 10 3 1 14 20 1.81 1 3 3 0 3.31 10 0 0 0 0 16.1 18 7 6 1 0 8 12 1.59 1 3 0 0 0.00 9 0 0 0 5 12.0 8 0 0 0 0 3 13 0.92 0 9 1 1 10.97 8 0 0 0 0 10.2 13 13 13 0 2 11 3 2.25 0 1 0 1 9.00 2 2 0 0 0 8.0 10 8 8 1 3 2 14 1.50 0 0 0 0 13.50 4 0 0 0 0 5.1 12 8 8 0 0 2 6 2.63 0 3 0 0 0.00 2 0 0 0 0 3.1 2 0 0 0 0 1 4 0.90 1 1 0 0 22.50 2 0 0 0 0 2.0 7 5 5 0 0 0 1 3.50 0 1 0 0 18.00 1 0 0 0 0 1.0 2 2 2 0 0 2 0 4.00 0 1 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 0 0 1.0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 2.00 0 1
27
The Lansing Lugnuts are a part of the Toronto Blue Jays organization. The Lugnuts are the Low A affiliate of the Blue Jays. That means they are near the bottom of the Toronto farm system, slightly higher than the Bluefield Blue Jays (another A affiliate) and the Gulf Coast Blue Jays (Rookie). Baseball players work their way up through the organization in hopes of getting to the big leagues. Toronto is in the American League and pulls its talent from these teams.
Toronto Blue Jays MLB - American League Toronto, Ontario (416) 341-1000 Buffalo Bisons International League (AAA) Buffalo, NY (716) 846-2000 New Hampshire Fisher Cats Eastern League (Class AA) Manchester, NH (603) 641-2005 Dunedin Blue Jays Florida State League (Class A) Dunedin, FL (727) 733-9302 Lansing Lugnuts Midwest League (Class A) Lansing, MI (517) 485-4500 Vancouver Canadians Northwest League (Class A) Vancouver, BC +1 (604) 872-5232 Bluefield Blue Jays Appalachian League (R) Bluefield, WV (276) 326-1326 Gulf Coast Blue Jays Gulf Coast League (R) Dunedin, FL (727) 734-8007
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LANSING LUGNUTS
presented by
june 19-20, 2017 AT DOW DIAMOND The brightest stars of the Midwest League will descend upon Dow Diamond for festivities surrounding the 2017 Midwest League All-Star Game presented by Go Great Lakes Bay. The excitement begins with the MWL Home Run Derby on Monday, June 19th and culminates with the MWL All-Star Game on Tuesday, June 20th. Tickets available at LOONS.COM or by calling 989.837.BALL
Player Profiles
Meet Your 2017 Lugnuts! Bo Bichette
SS/2B
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: March 5, 1998 School: Lakewood H.S.
Height/Weight: 6-0/200 Resides: Orlando, FL Drafted: 2nd round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’16 GCL Blue Jays TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .427 22 82 21 35 9 2 4 36 0-3 0 6 17 3 0 .732 .451 .427 22 82 21 35 9 2 4 36 0-3 0 6 17 3 0 .732 .451
Jared Carkuff Bats/Throws: R/R Born: August 25, 1993 School: Austin Peay
RHP Height/Weight: 6-3/180 Resides: Bell Buckle, TN Acquired: 35th round, 20 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’16
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 4-0 1.42 17 0 0 7 25.1 20 5 4 0 2 3 35 4 0 .217 0-0 6.75 1 0 0 0 1.1 3 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 .375 4-0 1.69 18 0 0 7 26.2 23 6 5 0 2 4 37 4 0 .230
Andrew Deramo Bats/Throws: R/R Born: May 26, 1995 School: Central Florida
RHP Height/Weight: 6-6/210 Resides: Panama City, FL Acquired: 29th round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’16
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LANSING LUGNUTS
CLUB Bluefield TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 0-3 7.71 14 1 0 0 23.1 42 22 20 5 2 8 18 9 0 .408 0-3 7.71 14 1 0 0 23.1 42 22 20 5 2 8 18 9 0 .408
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Height/Weight: 6-3/210 Born: November 11, 1994 Resides: Tegucigalpa, Honduras School: - Acquired: International free agent, 2013 Minor League Playing Record YR CLUB ’13 DSL Blue Jays ’14 DSL Blue Jays ’15 GCL Blue Jays Dunedin ’16 Bluefield Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 1-0 9.00 12 0 0 0 15.0 24 17 15 0 2 15 12 2 0 .393 4-4 3.91 14 9 0 0 53.0 45 28 23 4 4 16 49 8 0 .231 4-1 3.58 10 7 0 0 37.2 32 18 15 3 3 22 31 5 0 .232 0-1 12.00 1 1 0 0 3.0 7 4 4 0 0 2 3 2 0 .438 2-1 2.91 5 3 0 0 21.2 17 9 7 0 2 6 12 2 0 .215 1-5 7.71 7 7 0 0 28.0 30 25 24 2 2 28 14 7 0 .280 12-12 5.00 49 27 0 0 158.1 155 101 88 9 13 89 121 26 0 .260
Yennsy Diaz
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: November 15, 1996 School: -
Height/Weight: 6-1/193 Resides: Azua, DR Acquired: International free agent, 2014
2017 PLAYER PROFILES
Denis Diaz
Minor League Playing Record YR ’15 ’16
CLUB DSL Blue Jays GCL Blue Jays Bluefield TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 3-3 1.93 10 6 0 0 37.1 30 14 8 0 1 16 39 4 0 .217 1-1 4.74 5 3 0 1 19.0 24 11 10 0 0 7 19 3 0 .316 4-6 5.79 12 10 0 0 56.0 59 39 36 9 2 27 48 5 1 .267 8-10 4.33 27 19 0 1 112.1 113 64 54 9 3 50 106 12 1 .260
Mike Ellenbest Bats/Throws: R/R Born: August 20, 1994 School: Saginaw Valley St.
RHP Height/Weight: 6-4/205 Resides: Medina, OH Drafted: 24th round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’16 Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 1-3 4.45 11 5 0 1 30.1 40 17 15 1 3 9 21 1 1 .323 1-3 4.45 11 5 0 1 30.1 40 17 15 1 3 9 21 1 1 .323
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Player Profiles
Connor ElleR
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: January 23, 1994 School: Ouachita Baptist University
Height/Weight: 6-2/195 Resides: North Little Rock, AR Acquired: 22nd round, 2016
Minor League Playing Record YR ’16
CLUB Bluefield TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 4-2 2.60 17 2 0 7 34.2 23 13 10 3 1 9 33 1 0 .189 4-2 2.60 17 2 0 7 34.2 23 13 10 3 1 9 33 1 0 .189
Geno Encina
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Height/Weight: 6-4/220 Born: July 7, 1994 Resides: San Antonio, TX School: University of the Incarnate Word Drafted: 18th round, 2015 Minor League Playing Record YR ’15 ’16
CLUB Bluefield Dunedin Vancouver Lansing TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 1-3 3.86 12 5 0 1 44.1 45 22 19 4 0 10 45 3 0 .259 0-0 3.00 1 0 0 0 3.0 3 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 .231 0-0 2.03 10 0 0 0 26.2 23 6 6 1 0 4 28 1 0 .223 0-0 0.00 2 0 0 0 3.1 2 0 0 0 0 1 4 1 0 .167 1-3 3.0 25 5 0 1 77.1 73 30 26 6 0 16 78 5 0 .242
Griffin Glaude Bats/Throws: R/R Born: April 6, 1992 School: Lyon College
RHP Height/Weight: 5-9/175 Resides: Beebe, AR Signed: nondrafted free agent, 2015 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’15 ’16
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LANSING LUGNUTS
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Dunedin Lansing Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 3-1 2.20 16 0 0 5 28.2 14 10 7 1 1 7 37 3 0 .140 0-0 9.00 1 0 0 0 2.0 2 2 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 .250 0-0 22.50 2 0 0 0 2.0 7 5 5 0 0 0 1 0 0 .583 2-1 2.36 21 0 0 5 34.1 24 12 9 1 0 17 40 2 0 .194 5-2 3.09 40 0 0 10 67.0 47 29 23 2 1 25 81 5 0 .193
treat yourself...
Enjoy a game in our luxurious suite-level club or reserve The Clubhouse for your next event.
Tickets are only $25 in advance, $26 day of game. For more details or to order online, go to lansinglugnuts.com.
Player Profiles
Yeltsin GudiNo Bats/Throws: R/R Born: January 17, 1997 School: n/a
SS Height/Weight: 6-0/150 Resides: Maracay, VZ Signed: nondrafted free agent, 2013 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’14 GCL Blue Jays ’15 Bluefield ’16 Vancouver TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .145 40 138 17 20 3 0 0 12 0-3 1 13 28 0 1 .167 .219 .185 56 211 21 39 12 1 1 13 2-1 2 17 36 2 2 .265 .251 .226 54 186 18 42 4 1 0 15 3-2 4 29 43 0 1 .258 .338 .189 150 535 56 101 19 2 1 40 4-7 7 59 107 2 4 .237 .275
Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. Bats/Throws: R/R Born: March 16, 1999 School: n/a
3B
Height/Weight: 6-1/200 Resides: Don Gregorio, DR Signed: nondrafted free agent, 2015 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ‘16 Bluefield TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .271 62 236 32 64 12 3 8 46 0-5 2 33 35 15 5 .449 .359 .271 62 236 32 64 12 3 8 46 0-5 2 33 35 15 5 .449 .359
Osman Gutierrez Bats/Throws: R/R Born: December 15, 1994 School: -
RHP Height/Weight: 6-4/185 Resides: Leon, Nicaragua Signed: international free agent, 2011 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’12 DSL Blue Jays ’13 DSL Blue Jays ’14 DSL Blue Jays ’15 GCL Blue Jays ’16 Bluefield TOTALS
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LANSING LUGNUTS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 1-0 4.50 7 2 0 0 14.0 17 9 7 0 2 9 10 2 0 .309 0-1 3.86 8 2 0 0 11.2 17 7 5 0 0 6 7 3 0 .340 0-1 1.91 12 10 0 0 47.0 44 26 10 0 9 25 42 5 0 .256 4-3 4.66 11 9 0 0 46.1 50 29 24 3 3 15 41 7 0 .273 4-3 3.88 12 11 1 0 65.0 69 36 28 5 3 21 66 8 0 .264 9-8 3.62 50 34 1 0 184.0 197 107 74 8 17 76 166 25 0 .273
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: October 24, 1994 School: Old Dominion University
Height/Weight: 6-2/180 Resides: Katy, TX Drafted: 9th round, 2016
Minor League Playing Record YR CLUB ’16 Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 2-2 3.00 19 0 0 4 24.0 29 10 8 0 2 7 17 2 0 .299 2-2 3.00 19 0 0 4 24.0 29 10 8 0 2 7 17 2 0 .299
Juliandry Higuera Bats/Throws: R/R Born: November 15, 1996 School: -
LHP Height/Weight: 6-1/193 Resides: Azua, DR Acquired: International free agent, 2014
2017 PLAYER PROFILES
Nick Hartman
Minor League Playing Record YR ’15 ’16
CLUB DSL Blue Jays GCL Blue Jays Bluefield TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 3-3 1.93 10 6 0 0 37.1 30 14 8 0 1 16 39 4 0 .217 1-1 4.74 5 3 0 1 19.0 24 11 10 0 0 7 19 3 0 .316 4-6 5.79 12 10 0 0 56.0 59 39 36 9 2 27 48 5 1 .267 8-10 4.33 27 19 0 1 112.1 113 64 54 9 3 50 106 12 1 .260
Nash Knight
INF
Bats/Throws: L/R Born: September 20, 1992 School: Dallas Baptist University
Height/Weight: 6-0/200 Resides: Denton, TX Signed: nondrafted free agent, 2015
Minor League Playing Record YR ’15 ’16
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Bluefield Vancouver TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .207 47 140 17 29 5 0 2 18 0-4 0 28 39 2 1 .286 .331 .402 25 97 16 39 7 1 3 23 0-0 1 12 16 1 1 .588 .473 .261 24 92 16 24 1 0 0 12 0-0 0 11 17 1 1 .272 .340 .280 96 329 49 92 13 1 5 53 0-4 1 51 72 4 3 .371 .371
35
Player Profiles
Dan Lietz
LHP
Bats/Throws: L/L Born: June 1, 1994 School: Heartland C.C.
Height/Weight: 6-2/200 Resides: Chicago Heights, IL Drafted: 5th round, 2013 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’13 GCL Blue Jays ’14 Vancouver Lansing ’15 Vancouver Bluefield ’16 Lansing Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 2-3 4.75 12 6 0 0 36.0 47 33 19 4 5 11 35 3 0 .297 1-0 2.03 4 2 0 0 13.1 13 3 3 0 2 2 15 0 0 .265 1-1 5.73 9 7 0 0 33.0 37 24 21 2 2 22 27 5 1 .294 0-2 7.50 5 2 0 0 12.0 18 11 10 0 1 8 9 1 0 .346 0-2 5.26 10 3 0 0 25.2 17 16 15 0 2 23 11 6 1 .193 6-3 4.20 35 0 0 0 64.1 59 34 30 4 4 28 50 4 1 .245 1-0 1.69 3 0 0 0 5.1 5 1 1 0 0 2 5 2 0 .250 11-11 4.70 78 20 0 0 189.2 196 122 99 10 16 96 152 21 3 .267
Patrick Murphy
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: June 10, 1995 School: Hamilton H.S.
Height/Weight: 6-4/220 Resides: Chandler, AZ Drafted: 3rd round, 2013 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’14 ’16
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Lansing Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 0-1 11.25 3 2 0 0 4.0 8 6 5 0 0 2 4 1 0 .400 0-1 4.29 8 2 0 2 21.0 24 12 10 3 1 14 20 1 1 .286 4-5 2.84 13 13 0 0 69.2 71 28 22 0 3 23 48 11 0 .264 4-7 3.52 24 17 0 2 94.2 103 46 37 3 4 39 72 13 1 .276
Mitch Nay
INF
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: September 20, 1993 School: Hamilton High School
Height/Weight: 6-3/220 Resides: Chandler, AZ Drafted: 1st round supplemental, 2012
Minor League Playing Record YR CLUB ’13 Bluefield ’14 Lansing Dunedin ’15 Dunedin ’16 GCL Blue Jays TOTALS
36
LANSING LUGNUTS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .300 64 230 41 69 11 0 6 42 0-3 0 25 35 0 1 .426 .364 .285 120 473 57 135 34 3 3 59 0-3 3 39 79 6 2 .389 .342 .189 11 37 2 7 1 0 0 1 0-0 0 3 9 0 0 .216 .250 .243 109 391 32 95 18 5 5 42 1-8 5 32 75 0 1 .353 .303 .091 8 22 1 2 0 0 0 0 0-0 1 0 9 0 0 .091 .130 .267 312 1153 133 308 64 8 14 144 1-14 9 99 207 6 4 .373 .326
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: March 6, 1996 School: -
OF Height/Weight: 6-2/186 Resides: Caracas, VZ Signed: international free agent, 2014 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’14 ‘15 ‘16
CLUB DSL Blue Jays GCL Blue Jays Bluefield TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .314 40 140 31 44 5 3 1 22 1-1 11 20 23 12 3 .414 .436 .198 38 116 21 23 8 1 3 10 0-0 15 11 27 14 2 .362 .345 .273 15 55 8 15 3 1 1 6 0-1 1 5 12 1 2 .418 .339 .264 93 311 60 82 16 5 5 38 1-2 27 36 62 27 7 .395 .386
Rodrigo Orozco Bats/Throws: S/R Born: April 2, 1995 School: -
OF Height/Weight: 5-11/155 Resides: Panama City, Panama Acquired: International Free Agent, 2012
2017 PLAYER PROFILES
Edward Olivares
Minor League Playing Record YR ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16
CLUB DSL Blue Jays DSL Blue Jays Bluefield Vancouver Vancouver TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .269 40 130 21 35 10 2 2 22 3-1 3 19 21 5 4 .423 .373 .274 61 234 49 64 9 2 2 33 3-1 3 40 32 20 8 .355 .385 .300 58 223 34 67 16 1 4 25 7-0 0 24 35 4 3 .435 .568 .333 3 9 2 3 2 0 0 4 0-0 0 4 1 1 0 .556 .538 .241 55 187 24 45 9 0 0 11 2-2 2 30 29 5 5 .289 .348 .273 217 783 130 214 46 5 8 95 15-4 8 117 118 35 20 .375 .372
Joshua Palacios Bats/Throws: L/R Born: July 30, 1995 School: Auburn University
OF Height/Weight: 6-1/193 Resides: Brooklyn, NY Drafted: 4th round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’16
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Vancouver Lansing TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .265 13 49 10 13 3 0 0 4 0-0 1 3 6 4 1 .327 .321 .355 28 110 15 39 7 3 0 13 0-0 2 14 17 4 2 .473 .437 .342 9 38 2 13 3 0 0 1 0-0 1 1 3 0 2 .421 .375 .330 50 197 27 65 13 3 0 18 0-0 4 18 26 8 5 .426 .397
37
Player Profiles
Andy Ravel
RHP
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: October 12, 1994 School: Kent State University
Height/Weight: 6-2/165 Resides: Sinking Spring, PA Drafted: 7th round, 2016
Minor League Playing Record YR CLUB ’16 Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 3-1 5.12 11 5 0 0 31.2 40 18 18 5 2 9 18 3 2 .315 3-1 5.12 11 5 0 0 31.2 40 18 18 5 2 9 18 3 2 .315
Nick Sinay
OF
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: November 4, 1993 School: University at Buffalo
Height/Weight: 5-10/175 Resides: Marcellus, NY Drafted: 22nd round, 2015 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’15 Bluefield ‘16 Vancouver Bluefield TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .227 33 88 13 20 4 0 1 8 2-0 7 15 23 6 3 .307 .382 .200 1 5 0 1 0 0 0 1 0-0 1 0 2 0 0 .200 .333 .246 58 191 52 47 4 2 1 11 10-0 24 40 45 34 5 .304 .435 .239 92 284 65 68 8 2 2 20 12-0 32 55 70 40 8 .303 .418
Ridge Smith Bats/Throws: R/R Born: April 26, 1995 School: Austin Peay
C Height/Weight: 5-10/190 Resides: Cordova, TN Drafted: 12th round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’16 Bluefield TOTALS
38
LANSING LUGNUTS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .228 30 92 15 21 5 2 4 16 2-0 4 8 28 0 0 .457 .317 .228 30 92 15 21 5 2 4 16 2-0 4 8 28 0 0 .457 .317
C
Bats/Throws: R/R Born: December 28, 1993 School: -
Height/Weight: 5-11/180 Resides: Tucupita, VZ Signed: international free agent, 2012 Minor League Playing Record
YR CLUB ’12 DSL Blue Jays ’13 GCL Blue Jays Bluefield ’14 GCL Blue Jays Bluefield ’15 Bluefield ’16 Vancouver TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .305 43 105 17 32 5 0 1 14 0-0 9 10 23 8 4 .381 .411 .302 18 63 8 19 1 1 0 3 0-1 4 3 15 0 0 .349 .366 .200 12 25 2 5 2 0 0 0 1-0 1 3 3 0 0 .280 .310 .107 9 28 4 3 1 0 0 1 0-0 3 1 7 0 0 .143 .219 .200 13 30 2 6 0 1 0 1 0-0 2 1 9 1 0 .267 .273 .250 26 72 11 18 1 2 2 13 1-1 6 9 16 1 0 .403 .375 .200 29 95 7 19 3 0 1 11 0-1 4 6 19 0 0 .263 .274 .244 150 418 51 102 13 4 4 43 2-3 29 33 92 10 4 .323 .340
Christian Williams Bats/Throws: L/R Born: September 14, 1994 School: Gulf Coast C.C.
1B Height/Weight: 6-3/210 Resides: Stuart, FL Drafted: 15th round, 2015
2017 PLAYER PROFILES
Andres Sotillo
Minor League Playing Record YR ’15 ’16
CLUB GCL Blue Jays Dunedin Lansing Vancouver TOTALS
W-L ERA G GS CG SV IP H R ER HR HB BB K WP BK AVG 3-1 2.20 16 0 0 5 28.2 14 10 7 1 1 7 37 3 0 .140 0-0 9.00 1 0 0 0 2.0 2 2 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 .250 0-0 22.50 2 0 0 0 2.0 7 5 5 0 0 0 1 0 0 .583 2-1 2.36 21 0 0 5 34.1 24 12 9 1 0 17 40 2 0 .194 5-2 3.09 40 0 0 10 67.0 47 29 23 2 1 25 81 5 0 .193
J.B. Woodman Bats/Throws: L/R Born: December 13, 1994 School: Ole Miss
OF Height/Weight: 6-2/195 Resides: Orlando, FL Drafted: 2nd round, 2016 Minor League Playing Record
YR ’16
CLUB Vancouver Lansing TOTALS
AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI S-SF HB BB K SB CS SLG OBP .272 54 195 28 53 18 1 3 24 0-3 4 30 72 10 2 .421 .375 .441 9 34 5 15 2 0 1 5 0-1 0 4 13 0 1 .588 .487 .297 63 229 33 68 20 1 4 29 0-4 4 34 85 10 3 .445 .391
39
Coaches Profiles
2017 Coaches Manager
Cesar MartIn Martín, 35, was originally signed by the Blue Jays as a teenager out of San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic. A third baseman, he played three years in the Jays’ organization, advancing as high as Auburn in 2002. For the next 11 seasons, Martín worked as a coach with the Jays’ Dominican Summer League affiliate, managing the club to a 41-29 record in 2013. After one year as Bluefield Blue Jays hitting coach, Martín was named the manager for the rookie-level Gulf Coast League Blue Jays and posted impressive 39-19 and 39-17 campaigns in 2015 and 2016 respectively. He is the 14th manager in Lansing Lugnuts team history.
Hitting Coach
Donnie Murphy Murphy, 34, returns for his second season in the Midwest League, presiding over an offense in 2016 that featured All-Stars Juan Kelly and Andrew Guillotte. Murphy played parts of nine seasons in the Major Leagues, spanning from 2004-2014 with the Royals, Athletics, Marlins, Cubs and Rangers. A fifth-round Kansas City Royals pick in 2002, Murphy hails from Lakewood, California.
Pitching Coach
Willie Collazo Collazo, 37, is in his first year in Lansing after serving as Vancouver Canadians pitching coach in 2016. Originally drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the tenth round in 2001, he pitched in 368 minor-league games and made six relief appearances for the New York Mets in 2007. Collazo is a native of Carolina, Puerto Rico.
40
LANSING LUGNUTS
Chris Schaeffer Schaeffer, 29, has been a member of the Blue Jays system since the 2011 season, playing 28 games with the Lugnuts in 2012 and 13 games with the Lugs in 2014. A product of North Carolina State University, Schaeffer is in his fourth year as a coach with the organization. He is a native of Port St. Lucie, Florida.
2017 COACHES
Coach
Athletic Trainer
Drew MacDonald MacDonald enters his fifth straight season with the Lugnuts. He originally interned with Toronto in 2009 before joining the Baseball Canada Junior National Team in 2010. A native of Teeswater, Ontario, MacDonald moved up to Lansing after spending the 2011 season with the Bluefield Blue Jays and 2012 with the Vancouver Canadians.
Strength & Conditioning Coach
Kyle Edlhuber
Edlhuber, a graduate of Wisconsin Lutheran College, makes his Lansing debut in 2017 after spending his first two seasons in the Toronto Blue Jays organization alongside Cesar MartĂn with the Gulf Coast League Blue Jays. He was named the 2015 GCL Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Year by the Professional Baseball Strength and Conditioning Coaches Society. Edlhuber resides in Milwaukee.
41
Community Relations
By Jesse Goldberg-Strassler 42
LANSING LUGNUTS
Lugnuts Charities
Taking great pride in your community is a characteristic evident amongst so many in surrounding areas. That same sense of pride permeates the Lugnuts’ offices at Cooley Law School Stadium, creating a strong desire to give back to the greater Lansing region.
Lugnuts players themselves make appearances at events and clinics throughout the season. In 2016, Lugnuts players made hospital visits, appeared at numerous group outings and helped lead on-field clinics at Cooley Law School Stadium.
As the season approaches, members of the Lugnuts’ staff head out to elementary schools throughout the area to stress the importance of education and spread the message of baseball by the numbers – highlighting the importance of math in the game. Nine players on the field, three strikes, ninety feet to first base, going 2-for5 from the plate for a .400 batting average – everywhere you look, numbers and math define the game of baseball.
“We are proud of the support the Lansing community has for our Lugnuts,” said Myers. “They invest their time in our team, and we love being able to reciprocate and show our players the impact they make in MidMichigan.”
“We’re illustrating to kids that math is a part of our everyday lives, even when we’re playing—like in baseball. Stressing the importance of math in a fun way keeps learning exciting,” said Linda Frederickson, Lugnuts Assistant General Manager. “Our game of baseball trivia incorporates math, and Big Lug is right there to help the kids. It’s a great combination of education, baseball and fun.” In addition to visiting with students, Big Lug makes his way to all corners of Mid-Michigan – attending hundreds of local events while carrying with him a sense of Lansing Lugnuts pride. “Our goal is to bring smiles to as many faces as possible at events throughout the area,” said Lugnuts co-owner Sherrie Myers, “and Big Lug’s big smile does that in a big way.” While Big Lug is often the most popular attraction at every event he attends, he is happy to step aside as the Lansing
Outside of appearances, the Lugnuts are actively involved with supporting youth through Lugnut Charities. Lugnut Charities is dedicated to supporting existing programs to benefit youth in the greater Lansing community. For the 2017 season, Lugnut Charities are proud to partner with Impression Five Science Center, Capital Area United Way and the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Michigan. The organizations all have a custom designed package with the Lugnuts, using ballpark inventory to meet their key objectives. “We want to maximize the impact of minor league baseball and our active fan base to get their messages out to our fans,” Myers said. “Every season affords us an opportunity for new ideas and ways to focus our time and talents on giving back to the charitable organizations throughout the community.” One of the highlights every summer is Lugnut Charities Night, sponsored by Dan Henry Distributing. The annual event celebrates the efforts of the Lugnuts’ partners in the community. This season’s festivities commence on August 26th and will again feature the
popular “Jersey Off Their Back” silent auction. Fans can bid on authentic, game-worn jerseys from Lugnuts players. All proceeds from the evening will benefit the Capital Area United Way. By the end of the season, if we use our math skills to add the Lugnuts’ appearances in the community to the Lugnut Charities’ efforts, the end result equals the great sense of pride exhibited by Lugnuts players, front office staff and Big Lug in ensuring the Mid-Michigan community is well taken care of. For more information on Lugnut Charities or the Lugnuts’ involvement in the community, visit lansinglugnuts.com.
43
Fan Guide
Stadium Information The Lansing Lugnuts are celebrating their 22nd season! This Fan Guide is filled with stadium information as an overview of everything you need to know about the ballpark for your next visit. Have a great time and Go Nuts!
Alcoholic Beverages
Fans may not bring alcoholic beverages into or out of the ballpark. Guests purchasing alcohol at Lugnuts games must show proof of legal drinking age. Sales of beer and alcohol end after the first pitch of the 8th inning. The Lansing Lugnuts reserve the right to deny the sale of alcoholic beverages.
Animals
Pets are not permitted in the ballpark, with the exception of service animals. Dogs are welcome every Monday home game, as part of our Dog Days of Summer promotion.
Anthem Singers
If you are interested in singing the National Anthem at a Lugnuts game, please send a sample of your singing to the Lugnuts Marketing department. Due to limited opening, the Lunguts will only contact singers if there is an available opportunity.
44
LANSING LUGNUTS
ATM
The automated teller machine is located on the concourse level behind home plate.
Sparrow Autograph Area
Lugnuts players are available for 30 minutes, ending 20 minutes prior to the game in the Sparrow Autograph Area located on the concourse next to Nuts & Bolts prior to every game. Players may not sign autographs during a game.
Beverages, Food, Containers
No bottles, cans, food, beverages or containers may be brought into the ballpark.
Concessions
The Lugnuts offer a variety of food and beverages throughout the ballpark. Don’t forget to take note of the specialty portable carts located throughout the ballpark.
2017 FAN GUIDE
Employment
Dean Information Area
The Dean Information Area is located next to the Guest Services Desk behind home plate with information about travel to and from major events such as Cedar Point and area casinos.
Drinking Fountains
Drinking fountains at the ballpark are located on the concourse level behind sections D and M.
Elevators
There are three elevators for fans at the ballpark. The elevator on the concourse behind home plate serves luxury suites and the barrier-free seating behind home plate. The right field elevator accesses barrierfree seating only and the left field elevator accesses the Pepsi Porch.
The Lansing Lugnuts offer a variety of seasonal employment opportunities. For an employment applications, visit lansinglugnuts. com.
Fan Mail
Lansing Lugnuts Fan Mail 505 E. Michigan Ave. Lansing, MI 48912 The Lugnuts are not responsible for the return of any mailed items.
Fan Suggestions
Guests with a comment or suggestion may express it in person at the Guest Services Desk or call 517-485-4500.
Gates Open
The gates at the ballpark open one hour and five minutes before the scheduled start of a game (6:00pm for a 7:05pm start)
Lost Parents/Found Children Parents should report a lost child to a representative at the Guest Services Desk. A guest services representative will contact security immediately. We ask that parents instruct children visiting the ballpark to find a security officer, Lugnuts employee or go to the Guest Services Desk should they become separated from their parents.
Guest Services Desk
The Guest Services Desk is located on the concourse behind Section H.
Sparrow First Aid
The first aid facility is located on the concourse level in the corridor behind Section F.
45
WHAT THIS PLACE NEEDS
…IS YOU
VOLUNTEER
Find where you’re needed most Capital Area United Way Volunteer Center www.micauwvolunteercenter.org. Proud to be a member of the Lugnut Charities for the past 12 years.
2017 FAN GUIDE
Lugnut Charities
Lugnut Charities was established in 1996. Its mission is to support existing programs and create new opportunities to benefit youth in the greater Lansing area. Any donation requests can be faxed to 517-4854518 to the attention of Lugnut Charities. Lugnut Charities Night is sposored by Dan Henry and will occur August 26, 2017. A special player jersey auction will be held to raise money for charity.
Paging
Paging for guests in the park will be done only in an emergency. See a Lugnuts representative at the Guest Services Desk.
Parking Lugnuts Merchandise
To buy hats, t-shirts, and other cool Lugnuts gear during games, visit the Nuts & Bolts store on the concourse level behind Section G. Shop online at lansinglugnuts.com.
Lugnut Loot
Lugnut Loot is voucher currency that can be used throughout Cooley Law School Stadium. It can be used to buy food at any conession stand, to purchase retail items at the Nuts & Bolts store or buy game tickets. Lugnut Loot is prepaid and comes in $1 and $5 increments. It can be purchased at the Nuts & Bolts store or at the Lugnuts Box Office.
Public parking is available on streets, parking lots and parking ramps in a four-to-five block area around the ballpark.
Re-Entering the Ballpark
Fans may leave the ballpark and return during Lugnuts games. Before exiting, get your hand stamped at any gate by a ticket taker for re-entry into the ballpark.
Scoreboard Messages
To have your birthday greeting or anniversary announced, please come to the Guest Services desk before the end of the second inning. Due to limited time, the Lugnuts are not able to announce out of town guests or other special events.
Smoking
The ballpark is a smoke-free facility by city ordinance. Fans who wish to smoke during a game may exit and re-enter by showing their ticket to a ticket taker and having their hand stamped before exiting.
Special Events
Looking for a unique venue to host your next special event? The VIEW is the perfect alternative to your typical event space in a fun and unique way to take your event to the next level. This venue includes a luxurious indoor area seating 130 guests comfortably and spacious outdoor patio located in centerfield overlooking Cooley Law School Stadium. For more information, contact Malinda Barr (mbarr@lansinglugnuts.com) directly at 517-827-2482.
Website Information
To find the most up-to-date information on the Lugnuts, visit lansinglugnuts.com. To sign-up for Lugnuts Alerts, text LUGNUTS to 80373.
47
Fan Guide
Ticket Information
Box Office
Purchase tickets online at lansinglugnuts.com, or at: Box Office 505 E. Michigan Ave. Lansing, MI 48912 517-485-4500 ext. 252
Day-of-Game Ticket Prices
(Advance prices are in parentheses) The Clubhouse: $26 ($25) Executive Box: $15 ($14) Box: $12 ($11) / College Student: $5 Bleacher: $11 ($10) Barrier Free/Wheelchair Accessible, Concourse Level: $12 ($11) Pepsi Porch: $36 ($35)
Ticket Packages
Full Season (Executive Club): $980 Full Season (Box): $770 35 Pack (Box): $385 20 Game Pack (Box): $220 LAFCU 10 Game Pack (Box) $110 6 Game Pack (Box) $66
Box Office Hours
Monday-Friday: 10:00am to 5:00pm Game Day: 10:00am until the middle of the 6th inning.
Tickets By Telephone
Tickets for all Lansing Lugnuts games are available by phone during regular box office hours and can be charged to your Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express. Call 517-4854500. A service charge of $1.00 per ticket, plus $2.00 for shipping and handling, if mailed, will be added to each phone order.
Tickets Over the Internet
Buy tickets through the Lugnuts website at lansinglugnuts.com. A processing and handling fee of $1.50 per ticket will added to each online order. For your convenience, tickets may be printed at your location or left at Will Call at the box office if specified.
Ticket Resale
The resale of Lansing Lugnuts tickets on the ballpark grounds is prohibited. This includes the resale of tickets at face value and distribution at no charge.
48
LANSING LUGNUTS
Tickets for Babies/Toddlers
Children who have reached their third birthday require a ticket to enter the ballpark. They must have their own seat. If the child is under the age of three and requires his or her own seat, a ticket must be purchased.
Lost or Stolen Tickets
Please remember that game tickets are like money and should be secured like cash. Should tickets be lost or stolen, please contact the Lugnuts box office immediately.
Rain Checks
A game is considered official after five complete innings (4 ½ innings when the Lugnuts are leading). If a game is stopped before it becomes official or before it starts, your ticket will act as a rain check for a future game. Suspended game tickets cannot be exchanged. You can redeem your ticket at the box office for tickets to a future game, subject to availability. Rain checks are available at the box office or by mail. For mail exchanges, please send your ticket stubs along with three future game choices to:
2017 FAN GUIDE
Season Ticket Perks
Season ticket holders enjoy the advantages of Diamond Club benefits. Among the advantages: • Free Food Card • Free Crosstown Showdown ticket • Same great seats for every game • GAMEXCHANGE program allows you to exchange your tickets before or after a game is played for a free ticket of the same seat type to an upcoming game. • Free Lugnuts E-mail Newsletter • Priority for playoff tickets • First chance to upgrade tickets and seats for future seasons • Lugnuts Unused Ticket Donation Program Additional advantages for full season ticket holders include the following Diamond Club Select benefits: • Daily Game Notes • Lugnuts Magazine gift • Meet the Team Event at The Clubhouse at Cooley Law School Stadium, • Lunch Bunch Event • Fan Appreciation VIP Party • Guaranteed Auto-Owners Insurance Magnet Schedule Giveaway
Lansing Lugnuts Box Office 505 E. Michigan Ave. Lansing, MI 48912 Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. If you are a group leader, your representative will contact you to discuss your options.
Refunds
There are no refunds once a ticket has been purchased. However, if you are a season ticket holder you can exchange your tickets using the GAMEXCHANGE program of your Diamond Club benefits.
Will Call
Game tickets may be picked up at the Lugnuts box office during normal hours of operation. Tickets can only be released with a photo ID.
“Go Nuts” with a Group Outing
Last year approximately 100,000 people came to the ballpark as part of a group. Businesses, church groups, schools and associations of all sizes – from 20 to 4,000 – have discovered the delights of a night at the ballpark.
2017
FREE
A Lugnuts representative will be happy to help you select a special date, design the menu and develop special themes and prizing for your event. Pick the plan that fits your group’s size and budget. Group benefits include: • Everyone sits together • No waiting in ticket lines • No wondering about ticket availability • We’ll recognize your group on the scoreboard with a special PA announcement • Participate in a group raffle where one person in your group will win a special prize • Customized t-shirts for your whole group with a limited edition logo on the back (additional expense required – ask your Lugnuts repre sentative for further information) • No payment due until 45 days before your event • Honor someone in your group with a first pitch to start the game • Have a member of your group sing the National Anthem, subject to availability.
TICKET INS
IDE!
Call 517-485-4500 to learn more about special group outings with the Lugnuts.
Group Raffles
Groups receive recognition on the scoreboard and can win great raffle prizes nightly in our group raffles.
Delta Dental’s Smile Shots
All groups of 20 or more will have their photo taken by the Delta Dental’s Smile Shots Photographer. These complimentary photos will be available at lansinglugnuts.com or on the Lugnuts Facebook page.
49
Fan Guide
Venues
The $25.5 Million Cooley Law School Stadium includes these new group venue options that are sure to be hit with your guests this summer! Call 517-485-4500 or go to lansinglugnuts.com to learn more!
An ALL-NEW, upscale way to view the game! • Brand new, semi-private venue • Amazing location along third base line • Accommodates groups of 20-150 people
Experience the game like never before! • New “super suite” with private indoor/outdoor seating • High-end food options • Accommodates groups of 50-150 people
Newly renovated venue at a great value! • New covered seating for majority of venue • Same great food, new venue • Accommodates up to 2,500 people
It doesn’t get any better than this! • Newly renovated, fully furnished, heat and A/C • Private indoor/outdoor seating • Accommodates groups of 20-100 people
For more information, visit 50
LANSING LUGNUTS
lansinglugnuts.com
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Fan Guide
Finding Your Rep
If you need assistance, simply check in at the Guest Services Desk behind Section H and someone will locate your group sales representative. Or just ask one of the concierges in your section for help.
Game Broadcasts catch all 140 lugnuts games on
Jesse Goldberg-Strassler, Radio Broadcaster
In his ninth year as Voice of the Lugnuts, Jesse GoldbergStrassler grew up rooting for Alan Trammell, Lou Whitaker and the Detroit Tigers from his hometown in the Maryland suburbs. He graduated from Ithaca College in 2004, making broadcasting stops with the Brockton Rox, Montgomery Biscuits and Windy City ThunderBolts,
52
LANSING LUGNUTS
before joining the Lugnuts in 2009. During the offseason, Jesse can be heard broadcasting Central Michigan University women’s basketball. He is the author of two books, “The Baseball Thesaurus” (now in its second edition) and “The Football Thesaurus.”
2017 lugnuttiest days
All 17 Fireworks Shows presented by
April
A P R I L
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25
7:05
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6:05
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BG BG
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2:05
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6
KC SB LC
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26
KC SB GL
7:05
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7:05
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20
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KC SB GL
7:05
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WM WM
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FW
12:05
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10
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WM WM 7:05
23
7:05
2:05
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J U L Y
26
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WM WM WM 7:05
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CR 25
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31
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DAY
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CR 7:05
7:05
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Lansing Lugnuts Bowling Green Hot Rods Dayton Dragons Fort Wayne TinCaps Great Lakes Loons Lake County Captains South Bend Cubs West Michigan Whitecaps
Road Game
SB
7:05
26
7:05
FW
7:05
LC
27 28 29
Independence Day LAFCU Fireworks! Labatt Thirsty Thursday featuring Ladies Night Labatt Thirsty Thursday Craft Beer Night with Stein Giveaway Salute to Service Night featuring Military Eat FREE and LAFCU Fireworks! Michigan Baseball Hall of Fame Night featuring LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day celebrating Minions Summer Fun Day #1 with Dog Days of Summer – Bring your dog to the ballpark! Labatt Thirsty Thursday Country Night featuring Donnie Baker Social Media Night featuring LAFCU Fireworks! Farm Bureau Insurance Pure Michigan Night with Michigan Food Trucks and Beach Towel Giveaway; LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day celebrating Superheroes
1 10 11 12 13 18 19 20 21 25 26 27
Summer Fun Day #2 Labatt Thirsty Thursday ‘90s Night Jimmy Buffett Night feat. Live Music & Seafood Boil w/LAFCU Fireworks! Fifth Third Bank Stand Up to Cancer Night with LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day celebrating Princesses Seniors Eat FREE, Family Faith Night #2 and LAFCU Fireworks! Harry Potter Night with Golden Snitch Baseball Giveaway and LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day featuring Big Lug’s Birthday Celebration Business Person’s Special and Dog Days of Summer – Bring your dog to the ballpark! Oldsmobile Heritage Night and LAFCU Fireworks! Dan Henry Distributing Lugnut Charities Night Jersey Auction, Taco Throwdown and LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day LEGO-PALOOZA and Family Faith Concert presented by 88.1 Smile FM
MONDAYS:
Bring your dog to the ballpark!
TUESDAYS:
(Excludes July 4th September 5th)
WEDNESDAYS:
When the Lugnuts win, YOU win!
THURSDAYS:
$2 Beers & 1/2 Off Craft Beers!
SUNDAYS:
SEPTEMBER LC
2
DAY
7:05
Game times subject to change.
midwest league WEstern DIVISION BEL BUR CR CLI KC PEO QC WIS
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AUGUST
5
midwest league eastern DIVISION
16 Seniors Eat FREE, Family Faith Night #1 and LAFCU Fireworks! 17 Star Wars Night featuring LAFCU Fireworks! 18 Delta Dental’s Kids Day honoring Fathers
FW
DAY DAY MSU midwest league playoffs 2:05 1:05 7:05 Home Game
JUNE
30
7:05
22
7:05
7:05
GL
Grand Slam School Day #1 Kids Eat FREE, plus Grand Slam School Night feat. Mad Chad and LAFCU Fireworks! ComicCon Night, plus LAFCU Fireworks! Delta Dental’s Kids Day celebrating Frozen featuring Elsa & Anna Grand Slam School Day #2 Grand Slam School Day #3 Eat-A-Palooza #1 – All You Can Eat just $22 in advance! Delta Dental’s Kids Day celebrating Cars Memorial Day BBQ Bonanza
SB
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all-star game WM WM WM WM MWL Tuesday, June 20 • Midland, MI
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Opening Day with LAFCU Fireworks and Fan-Pick Giveaway! Delta Dental’s Kids Day Easter Egg Helicopter Drop Boy Scout Day and Delta Dental’s Kids Day Business Person’s Special
JULY
8
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DAY DAY DAY
13
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MAY
2:05
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Beloit Snappers Burlington Bees Cedar Rapids Kernels Clinton LumberKings Kane County Cougars Peoria Chiefs Quad Cities River Bandits Wisconsin Timber Rattlers
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Eat-A-Palooza #2 – All You Can Eat just $22 in advance! Delta Dental’s Kids Day Labor Day BBQ Bonanza and Fan Appreciation Day presented by the Lansing State Journal Crosstown Showdown presented by Auto-Owners Insurance with Home Run Derby and Hat Giveaway, plus LAFCU Fireworks!
517.485.4500 • LANSINGLUGNUTS.com
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Meet the Front Office
Nick Grueser
General Manager
Years with Lugnuts: 16 Walkup Song: Led Zeppelin – The Ocean
Linda Frederickson
Assistant General Manager, Marketing & Special Events
Years with Lugnuts: 14
Years with Lugnuts: 8 (1996–2000, 2015-present)
Favorite Baseball Movie: Major League
Walkup Song: Luke Bryan – That’s My Kind of Night
Favorite Ballpark Food: Good Hops “Hangover” Burger & Fries
Favorite Baseball Movie: 42 Favorite Ballpark Food: Chicken Tenders
Michigan or Michigan State: Ohio State
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Malinda Barr
Travis Bordes
Walkup Song: Eric Clapton – I’ve Got a Rock ‘n’ Roll Heart Favorite Baseball Movie: Moneyball Favorite Ballpark Food: Ballpark Frank loaded with ketchup, mustard & relish (no onions) Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Justin Burkett
Events and Meetings Manager
Catering Manager
Group Sales Representative
Years with Lugnuts: 2
Years with Lugnuts: 6
Years with Lugnuts: 3
Walkup Song: Earth, Wind & Fire – September
Walkup Song: KLF – Doctorin’ the Tardis
Walkup Song: Rolling Stones – Gimme Shelter
Favorite Baseball Movie: Bull Durham, Trouble with the Curve
Favorite Baseball Movie: A League of Their Own
Favorite Baseball Movie: Little Big League
Favorite Ballpark Food: Beer
Favorite Ballpark Food: All Beef Chicago Dog with EVERYTHING
Favorite Ballpark Food: Nachos
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
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Nick Brzezinski
Assistant General Manager, Sales
LANSING LUGNUTS
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Daniel Corrigan
Bill Getschman
Motion Graphics Designer
Operations Assistant Manager
Years with Lugnuts: 10
Years with Lugnuts: 2
Years with Lugnuts: 3
Walkup Song: Bon Jovi – Wanted Dead or Alive
Walkup Song: Rush – Spirit of the Radio
Walkup Song: Muse – Madness
Favorite Baseball Movie: Major League
Favorite Baseball Movie: The Sandlot
Favorite Ballpark Food: Philly Nachos
Favorite Ballpark Food: Poutine
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan
Michigan
Jesse GoldbergStrassler
Michigan or Michigan State:
Matt Hicks
Favorite Baseball Movie: The Sandlot Favorite Ballpark Food: Hot dog and at least 32 ounces of beer Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan
Mikaela Higgins
Assistant Director of Retail
Manager of Fan Engagement
Radio Broadcaster
Years with Lugnuts: 13
Years with Lugnuts: 2
Years with Lugnuts: 9
Walk Up Song: Pink Floyd – Money
Walkup Song: Keri Hilson – Pretty Girl Rock
Favorite Baseball Movie: Bull Durham
Favorite Baseball Movie: Major League
Favorite Ballpark Food: The most unique item on the menu
Favorite Ballpark Food: Pulled Pork Sandwich
Walkup Song: Protein – Lemonade Favorite Baseball Movie: The Naked Gun Favorite Ballpark Food: Pizza and a Pretzel Michigan or Michigan State: Maryland
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
2017 STAFF
Dennis Busse
Director of Stadium Operations
Michigan or Michigan State: ON WISCONSIN!
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Meet the Front Office
Greg Kruger
Brianna Pfeil
Corporate Partnerships Manager
Finance Manager
Years with Lugnuts: 8
Years with Lugnuts: 6 full-time, 13 overall
Years with Lugnuts: 3
Walkup Song: Led Zeppelin – When the Levee Breaks Favorite Baseball Movie: Mr. Baseball Favorite Ballpark Food: Loaded Nachos Michigan or Michigan State: Western Michigan
Kevin Pierce
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Ashley Loudan
Season Ticket Specialist
Walkup Song: Justin Timberlake – Can’t Stop the Feeling Favorite Baseball Movie: The Bad News Bears Favorite Ballpark Food: Chili Cheese Fries Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Eric Pionk
Walkup Song: Dierks Bentley – Sideways Favorite Baseball Movie: Field of Dreams Favorite Ballpark Food: Nachos Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Andrew Pitlock
Sales Assistant
Group Sales Representative
Corporate Partnerships Assistant
Years with Lugnuts: 1
Years with Lugnuts: 3
Years with Lugnuts: 1
Walkup Song: Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know?
Walk Up Song: Nelly – Heart of a Champion
Walkup Song: Johnny Cash – God’s Gonna Cut You Down
Favorite Baseball Movie: The Benchwarmers
Favorite Baseball Movie: Field of Dreams
Favorite Baseball Movie: Moneyball
Favorite Ballpark Food: Foot-long Hot Dog
Favorite Ballpark Food: A good hamburger
Favorite Ballpark Food: Roasted Almonds
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
LANSING LUGNUTS
Angela Sees
Zach Severns
Community Relations Manager
Head Groundskeeper
Years with Lugnuts: 3
Years with Lugnuts: 10
Years with Lugnuts: 1
Walkup Song: Prof – A Month From Now
Walkup Song: Missy Elliott – Get Ur Freak On
Walkup Song: John Parr – St. Elmo’s Fire (Man in Motion)
Favorite Baseball Movie: The Sandlot
Favorite Baseball Movie: Major League
Favorite Baseball Movie: Bull Durham
Favorite Ballpark Food: Pulled Pork Sandwich
Favorite Ballpark Food: Nachos
Favorite Ballpark Food: Brats
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Michigan or Michigan State: Washington State
Michigan or Michigan State: Central Michigan
John Thompson
David Tyler
Heather Viele
Assistant Director of Food Services
Business Development Executive
Director of Finance
Years with Lugnuts: 9
Years with Lugnuts: 1
Years with Lugnuts: 12
Walkup Song: John Cafferty – Hearts on Fire
Walkup Song: Journey – Don’t Stop Believin’
Favorite Baseball Movie: A League of Their Own
Favorite Baseball Movie: The Sandlot
Favorite Ballpark Food: Kosher Hot Dog
Favorite Ballpark Food: Pulled Pork Parfait
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan
Walkup Song: Jimmy Dean – Big Bad John Favorite Baseball Movie: A League of Their Own Favorite Ballpark Food: Classic Hot Dog Michigan or Michigan State: Michigan State
2017 STAFF
Keith Schwartz
Box Office Supervisor
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Team Doctors
Team Doctors: Keeping the Lugnuts healthy
Dr. Dodds
Dr. Malsheske
Dr. Straus
Dr. Norris
Dr. Takagishi
The Michigan State University Sports Medicine Program and Mid-Michigan Physicians Sports Medicine work together to keep the Lugnuts their healthiest throughout the season. The 2017 Lugnuts Team Doctors volunteer their time to provide hands on service to the team including locker room visits, diagnostic testing and regular communication with the on-site trainer and Toronto Blue Jays staff. Volunteering as this year’s Team Doctors are: Julie Dodds, M.D., in Sports Medicine, Dan Malsheske, PA-C, Robert Norris, M.D., Patrick Noud, M.D., , Michael Straus, PA-C, Dr. Joshua Takagishi, M.D.,FAAP, David Waterson, D.O., and Luke Wilcox, D.O. Dr. Dodds is an orthopedic surgeon and part of Mid-Michigan Physicians Sports Medicine. Her sports medicine training has been at Iowa State University, University of Iowa and University of Wisconsin. She has helped provide medical care for the Lugnuts since they began in 1996. Active in the community, she also serves as a team physician for many area high schools and youth sporting events. Dan Malsheske is a Certified Physician Assistant with MidMichigan Physicians and began covering the Lugnuts in 2012. Dan received his Bachelor’s Degree from Castleton State University and his Master’s from Northeastern University, Bouve College of Human Sciences. Dr. Norris completed medical school at Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine. He completed a Fellowship in Primary Care Sports Medicine at MSU. Dr. Norris is a team physician for MSU hockey, baseball, and volleyball and he has been with the Lugnuts since 2001.
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LANSING LUGNUTS
Dr. Noud
Dr. Waterson
Dr. Noud grew up in Okemos, MI. He received his medical degree at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Dr. Noud completed a residency in Orthopedic Surgery at the University of Vermont, Burlington, VT and a Fellowship in Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery through the San Diego Arthroscopy and Sports Medicine Fellowship Program, San Diego, CA. While in CA, he served as a Team Physician for the San Diego Padres and San Diego State University. Dr. Noud’s focus is on sports related injuries, arthroscopic and open shoulder/knee surgery, and on-field management of injuries. Michael Straus is a Certified Physician Assistant with MSU Sports Medicine. He traveled overseas twice with USA Men’s Field Hockey and volunteered for the Atlanta Summer Olympic Games in both cycling and archery. Michael is also the Team Physician’s Assistant for MSU field hockey and wresting. He has been helping cover the Lugnuts organization since 2003. Dr. Takagishi completed medical school at Loyola University of Chicago and obtained his primary care sports medicine fellowship at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. He is board certified in pediatrics and primary care sports medicine, and provides care to children and young adults at Lansing Pediatric Associates and MSU Sports Medicine. Currently a team physician for East Lansing High School, he also works on a regular basis at the Saturday Injury Clinic at MSU. Dr. Waterson completed medical school at Michigan State University and completed a Fellowship in Sports Medicine from Western Michigan University. Dr. Waterson started covering the Lugnuts organization in 2013.
Host your special event or meeting at Cooley Law School Stadium on the field, concourse, or in The View! 517-485-4500 | lansinglugnuts.com
THE ORIGINAL LIGHT BEER
©2017 MILLER BREWING CO., MILWAUKEE, WI Av. analysis (12 fl oz): 96 cals, 3.2g carbs, ‹1g protein, 0.0g fat