Wisconsin Timber Rattlers Founded in 1962 Grand Chute, Wisconsin
|  Team Logo |  Cap Insignia | | | Class-level | | | | Minor league affiliations | | | | Major league affiliations | | | | | Name | - Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (1995–present)
- Appleton Foxes (1967–1994)
- Fox Cities Foxes (1963–1966)
- Appleton Foxes (1962)
| | Ballpark | | | | Minor league titles | | | | League titles | 1964, 1966, 1967, 1969, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1984 | | | | Division titles | | | | Owner(s)/Operated by: Appleton Baseball Club, Inc. | | Manager: Terry Pollreisz | | General Manager: Rob Zerjav | Appleton Foxes logo from 1978 to 1992 Fang, mascot of the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers Timber Rattler pitcher warming up before a start The Wisconsin Timber Rattlers are a minor league baseball team of the Midwest League, and is the low Class A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers. They are located in Grand Chute, Wisconsin, and are named for timber rattlesnakes. The team plays their home games at Time Warner Cable Field at Fox Cities Stadium. Opened in 1995, the park seats 5,500 fans.[1] [edit] History The team began play as the Appleton Foxes in the Three-I League in 1958. This was five years after Appleton's previous minor league franchise, the Papermakers, folded along with the rest of the Wisconsin State League. Appleton joined the Midwest League in 1963 after the Three-I League disbanded. The franchise set its attendance record of 233,797 in 1996. The Rattlers signed a 4 year maximum deal with the Brewers for 2009 until up to 2012.[1] The Timber Rattlers are a non-stock club governed by Appleton Baseball Club, Inc., which is community-owned.[1] Appleton Baseball Club has a 12-person board of directors.[1] It has 168 active shareholders and 347 shares as of September 2008.[1] [edit] Roster Wisconsin Timber Rattlers roster | | Players | Coaches/Other | Pitchers - 10 Cody Adams ‡
- 22 Rigoberto Almonte
- 24 Evan Frederickson
- 38 Corey Frerichs
- 40 Pedro Lambertus
- 13 Maverick Lasker
- 28 Dan Meadows
- 36 Wily Peralta
- 34 R. J. Seidel
- 16 Nick Tyson
- 18 Trey Watten
| | Catchers - 35 Derrick Alfonso
- -- Corey Kemp
- 25 Sean McCraw †
- 39 Shawn Zarraga
Infielders
- 4 Steven Braun †
- -- Mike Brownstein
- 8 John Delaney
- 30 Kyle Dhanani
- 9 Jose Duran
- 31 Brock Kjeldgaard
- 3 Erik Komatsu †
- 23 Josh Prince
- 38 Brandon Sizemore
Outfielders
- 34 Chris Dennis †
- 4 Peter Fatse
- 27 Erik Miller
| | Manager Coaches
† Disabled list * On Milwaukee Brewers 40-man roster ∞ Reserve list § Suspended list ‡ Restricted list # Rehab assignment Roster updated 2009-10-22 Transactions · Coaching staff | [edit] Yearly results | Midwest League | | Season | Affiliation | Manager | Record | Win % | Finish | Attendance | Playoffs | | 1962 | Baltimore | Cal Ripken, Sr. | 61–63 | .492 | 7th | 41,323 | None | | 1963 | Baltimore | Billy DeMars | 55–65 | .458 | 8th | 43,412 | None | | 1964 † | Baltimore | Billy DeMars | 81–43 | .653 | 1st | 45,557 | Defeated Clinton 1–0 | | 1965 | Baltimore | Billy DeMars | 55–63 | .466 | 7th | 43,412 | None | | 1966 † | Chicago (AL) | Stan Wasiak | 77–47 | .621 | 2nd | 57,496 | Defeated Cedar Rapids 2–1 | | 1967 † | Chicago (AL) | Alex Cosmidis | 71–46 | .607 | 1st | 48,186 | Defeated Wisconsin Rapids 2–0 | | 1968 | Chicago (AL) | Gary Johnson/Tom Umphlett | 57–61 | .483 | 6th | 45,436 | None | | 1969 † | Chicago (AL) | Tom Saffell | 84–41 | .672 | 1st | 67,028 | Won both halves | | 1970 | Chicago (AL) | Ira Hutchinson | 64–60 | .516 | 5th | — | None | | 1971 | Chicago (AL) | Joe Sparks | 79–44 | .642 | 1st | — | Lost to Quad Cities 2–1 | | 1972 | Chicago (AL) | Bert Thiel | 76–51 | .598 | 1st | — | Defeated Wisconsin Rapids 1–0; Lost to Danville 2-0 | | 1973 | Chicago (AL) | Grover "Deacon" Jones | 44–76 | .367 | 10th | — | None | | 1974 | Chicago (AL) | Gordy Lund | 73–50 | .593 | 2nd | — | Defeated Wisconsin Rapid 2–0; Lost to Danville 2–1 | | 1975 | Chicago (AL) | Gordy Lund | 50–77 | .394 | 9th | — | None | | 1976 | Chicago (AL) | Jim Napier | 56–74 | .431 | 10th | — | None | | 1977 | Chicago (AL) | Gordy Lund | 54–84 | .398 | 8th | — | None | | 1978 † | Chicago (AL) | Gordy Lund | 97–40 | .708 | 1st | — | Defeated Waterloo 2–0; Defeated Burlington 2–1 | | 1979 | Chicago (AL) | Jim Breazeale | 63–72 | .467 | 5th | — | None | | 1980 | Chicago (AL) | Gordy Lund | 76–63 | .547 | 2nd | — | None | | 1981 | Chicago (AL) | Sam Ewing | 54–80 | .403 | 6th | 66,780 | None | | 1982 † | Chicago (AL) | Adrian Garrett | 81–59 | .579 | 3rd | 81,970 | Defeated Springfield 2–0; Defeated Madison 2–1 | | 1983 † | Chicago (AL) | John Boles Jr. | 87–50 | .635 | 1st | 68,751 | Defeated Waterloo 2–1; Defeated Springfield 3–1 | | 1984 † | Chicago (AL) | Sal Rende | 87–49 | .640 | 1st | 54,281 | Defeated Madison 2–1; Defeated Springfield 3–2 | | 1985 | Chicago (AL) | Sal Rende | 85–54 | .612 | 1st | 76,860 | Lost to Kenosha 2–1 | | 1986 | Chicago (AL) | Duke Sims/Rico Petrocelli | 56–83 | .403 | 11th | 60,001 | None | | 1987 | Kansas City | Ken Berry | 71–69 | .507 | 6th | 81,208 | None | | 1988 | Kansas City | Brian Poldberg | 58–82 | .414 | 13th | 85,310 | None | | 1989 | Kansas City | Brian Poldberg | 67–68 | .496 | 7th | 76,223 | None | | 1990 | Kansas City | Joe Breeden | 62–71 | .466 | 8th | 84,396 | None | | 1991 | Kansas City | Joe Breeden | 58–81 | .417 | 14th | 72,601 | None | | 1992 | Kansas City | Tom Poquette | 70–62 | .530 | 6th | 46,576 | Lost to Beloit 2–1 | | 1993 | Seattle | Carlos Lezcano | 62–73 | .459 | 9th | 56,036 | None | | 1994 | Seattle | Carlos Lezcano | 75–64 | .540 | 4th | 76,281 | None | | 1995 | Seattle | Mike Goff | 63–75 | .457 | 12th | 209,159 | None | | 1996 | Seattle | Mike Goff | 77–58 | .570 | 2nd | 233,797 | Defeated Peoria 2–1; Defeated Quad City 2–1; Lost to West Michigan 3–1 | | 1997 | Seattle | Gary Varsho | 76–63 | .547 | 2nd | 227,104 | Lost to Kane County 2–0 | | 1998 | Seattle | Gary Varsho | 72–65 | .526 | 5th | 227,306 | Lost to Rockford 2–1 | | 1999 | Seattle | Steve Roadcap | 72–66 | .522 | 5th | 223,814 | Defeated Rockford 2–0; Defeated Lansing 2–0; Lost to Burlington 3–2 | | 2000 | Seattle | Gary Thurman | 78–60 | .565 | 3rd | 220,372 | Defeated Kane County 2–1; Lost to Beloit | | 2001 | Seattle | Gary Thurman | 84–52 | .618 | 2nd | 207,823 | Defeated Quad City 2–0; Lost to Kane County 2–0 | | 2002 | Seattle | Gary Thurman | 53–86 | .381 | 13th | 199,210 | None | | 2003 | Seattle | Daren Brown | 69–66 | .511 | 6th | 197,934 | Lost to Beloit 2–0 | | 2004 | Seattle | Steve Roadcap | 57–82 | .410 | 12th | 206,487 | None | | 2005 | Seattle | Scott Steinmann | 76–63 | .547 | 2nd | 211,927 | Defeated Beloit 2–1; Defeated Clinton 2–0; Lost to South Bend 3–2 | | 2006 | Seattle | Jim Horner | 54–86 | .386 | 13th | 209,033 | None | | 2007 | Seattle | Jim Horner | 53–85 | .384 | 14th | 197,511 | None | | 2008 | Seattle | Terry Pollreisz | 56–80[1] | .412 | 10th | 190,263[1] | None | [edit] Notable alumni - Tom Gordon pitched for the Appleton Foxes between getting drafted by the Kansas City Royals in 1986 and his promotion to the majors in 1988.
- David Ortiz, known as David Arias at the time, played for the Timber Rattlers in the 1996 season and led the club in hits that season.
- Alex Rodriguez played for the team for part of the 1994 season, until he was promoted to the major leagues.
[edit] References [edit] External links | Milwaukee Brewers | | | Formerly the Seattle Pilots • Based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin | | | The Franchise | | | | Ballparks | | | | Culture | | | | Important Figures | | | | Retired Numbers | | | | Key Personnel | | | | Minors | | | | League Pennants | American League: 1982 • National League: none | | | Division Titles | AL East: 1981 (second half) • 1982 • NL Central: none • Wild Card: 2008 | | | Seasons (42) | | | 1960s | 1960 • 1961 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 • 1969 | | | 1970s | | | | 1980s | | | | 1990s | | | | 2000s | | | | 2010s | | | | |