Sonoma Stompers Adding Two Women To Roster

The Sonoma Stompers have added two women to the roster: Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno. The duo will start for the team on Friday night in a home game at People's Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field.Rick Bolen/Sonoma Stompers

The Sonoma Stompers have added two women to the roster: Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno. The duo will start for the team on Friday night in a home game at People's Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field.

Rick Bolen/Sonoma Stompers

Originally Published: The Press Democrat

Lori A. Carter, Reporter

Two female players will join the Sonoma Stompers professional baseball team in July, adding to the list of barriers the Sonoma team has broken.

The Stompers, part of the independent Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, will be the first coed professional baseball team since the 1950s when Toni Stone, Mamie “Peanut” Johnson and Constance Morgan became the first women to play along men in the Negro Leagues, according to the club.

Starting July 1, 17-year-old outfielder-pitcher Kelsie Whitmore of Temecula and 25-year-old pitcher-infielder Stacy Piagno of St. Augustine, Fla., will suit up with the other Stompers.

The visiting San Rafael Pacifics visit for three games, followed by the Pittsburg Diamonds.

Last year, the Stompers made international news when pitcher Sean Conroy became the first openly gay player to ever play at the professional level. He remains with the Stompers.

In 2014, the year the team began, former Boston Red Sox and Montreal Expos left-handed pitcher, Bill “Spaceman” Lee threw for the Stompers, becoming the oldest player to win a professional baseball game.

The move to go co-ed comes in part from a sponsorship the team has entered into with Francis Ford Coppola’s Virginia Dare Winery in Geyserville.
 
Openly gay player making historic start for Sonoma Stompers
“In an effort to promote the recruitment, development and advancement of women in baseball,” an announcement from the director’s company said, the team began “ … searching for the best women baseball players in the United States to come and join the team.”

“My family would play co-ed baseball games and inevitably the star player would always be an aunt who could run and hit and that made the games so much more fun,” Coppola said in the announcement.

“When watching major league baseball, I always wondered why there couldn’t be a co-ed team. It’s the one major sport in which weight and strength come less into play. So when my Sonoma (County) winery became involved with the Stompers, I had the opportunity to turn this thought into a reality and recruit these amazing women capable of playing alongside men.”

Theo Fightmaster, Stompers’ general manager, said there should be more opportunities for women to join the sport professionally.

“We hope this sends a message to the rest of the baseball world that there is room for women and girls in this game — from Little League to the Major Leagues,” he said.

In September, Whitmore and Piagno are set to play for Team USA in the Women’s Baseball World Cup in South Korea.

Whitmore, who recently graduated from Temecula Valley High School, will attend Cal State Fullerton on a softball scholarship next season.

Piagno, who threw a no-hitter for the United States team when they captured a gold medal at the 2015 Pan Am Games in Toronto, played softball at the University of Tampa.

The Stompers opened the season May 31 and were 13-10 going into Tuesday’s game against the Pacifics.

Games begin at 6 p.m. at Arnold Field in Sonoma. For tickets and more information: www.stompersbaseball.com.

The Sonoma Stompers Are Set To Make More History By Signing Two Women To Their Roster

Kelsie Whitmore signs her professional contract with the Sonoma Stompers on Wednesday. She and Stacy Piagno will make their debuts with the Stompers on Friday.Tim Livingston/Sonoma Stompers

Kelsie Whitmore signs her professional contract with the Sonoma Stompers on Wednesday. She and Stacy Piagno will make their debuts with the Stompers on Friday.

Tim Livingston/Sonoma Stompers

Originally Published: MLB.com

Michael Clair, Cut4

The world of independent baseball is filled with unique promotions and even stranger giveaways. For the Sonoma Stompers of the Pacific Association, they're a bit more forward-thinking than a simple bobblehead or cat video festival, though. Last year they became the first team to cede control to a couple of sabermetrically inclined baseball writers and were the first team to have an openly gay professional player on their roster. 

While many teams host LGBTQ pride nights, the Stompers celebrated theirs by moving Sean Conroy from the bullpen to the rotation -- his teammates wearing rainbow-colored socks and armbands in support.

Now they'll be the first professional team to have women on the field since Toni Stone, Mamie "Peanut" Johnson and Constance Morgan played in the Negro Leagues back in the 1950s. 

On Friday, July 1, when the Stompers take on the San Rafael Pacifics, 17-year-old Kelsie Whitmore will start in left field while 25-year-old Stacy Piagno will take the mound, armed with a knuckle-curve, slider and fastball.

But don't think this is just a one-game stunt. Theo Fightmaster, the brilliantly named GM for the Stompers, told MLB.com in a phone call:

"This isn't a one-day event. That's been done a dozen times. Let's give women a chance to be part of a team, let's give women a chance to play against men. What will they learn? What have they not been coached because they haven't had the same coaching as boys? I remember being really disappointed with my sister's coaches because they coached the girls a lot different than how I was coached." 

He hopes that this is just the start of a women's baseball movement. While other countries like Japan have girls high school baseball, that simply doesn't exist in America. "There's not enough places or ways for women to play baseball in this country," Fightmaster says. "Women get funneled into softball -- if they want to play baseball, they end up playing softball." 

As for how the two players made it to the team, that's all thanks to Francis Ford Coppola. Really. Fightmaster admits that while he grew up with his mom being the baseball fan in the house and his sister starring on the varsity baseball team, he likely would not have thought of this on his own.

During a meeting with Coppola and his wife at their vineyard in Geyserville, Calif., the director told Fightmaster of his hope to have co-ed baseball teams. Though the Stompers GM told Coppola how "crazy and difficult this was going to be," Coppola still wanted to try and the two made made a deal to put out a three-year search to make it happen. "When Francis tells you to try, you try," Fightmaster said. 

From there, the Stompers GM dove into the world of women's baseball. A friend who scouts for the D-backs put the Stompers in touch with Justine Siegal, the first female coach in the Majors. Soon Fightmaster was on a plane to see the 17-year-old Whitmore in a high school game. Though Fightmaster was skeptical at first, he was easily swayed. 

"After spending five minutes with Kelsie and shaking her hand, watching her throw and watching her be around with the guys, I was really comfortable," he said.

It was even easier once he saw her on the field. With a runner on second base, Fightmaster watched Whitmore field a grounder in left field. Rather than send the runner, the third-base coach already knew and respected Whitmore's arm and held the runner at third. It was a smart call. "She threw a one-hop throw to the catcher and the guy would have been dead to rights," Fightmaster said. 

After Whitmore took a pitch to the ribs and was "spitting up blood" while at first base during her next at-bat, Fightmaster says he "knew she was tough, knew she had a strong arm. She moved like a baseball player and had a good head on her shoulders."

The Stompers' scouting mission next sent them to the U.S. Women's National Team tryouts in Cary, N.C., where they spotted Piagno. While there were a number of women the team was interested in -- with players like Malaika Underwood and Tamara Holmes -- a number of them had jobs and careers they couldn't interrupt to "sign up for some independent pro team and move to the West Coast for the next 90 days or whatever it may be."

Not even on their shortlist, once they saw Piagno displaying a good arm while playing third base -- and saw that she had no-hit Puerto Rico at the Pan American Games -- they were quickly intrigued. 

As for how both women will do in the Pacific Association, Fightmaster can't say. "I've never seen [Piagno] pitch against grown men," he said. "It was girls and aluminum bats and it was a different environment." After getting their first starts on July 1, their roles (with Whitmore likely to get a chance on the mound) will be decided based on their performance. 

"Both of these girls are on the roster," Fightmaster said. "They're gonna play however much they earn. They are not gonna be in the starting lineup every night so we can sell more tickets. It's a big game on July 1 and they'll both be in the lineup and after that we'll see what their performance dictates."

No matter the outcome, Piagno and Whitmore aren't the end of the Stompers' foray into women's baseball. With the two leaving at the end of July -- Piagno to start her teaching career and Whitmore on a softball scholarship to Cal-State Fullerton -- Fightmaster said, "There's a couple more women we'd like to bring out throughout the season."

With at least a three-year endeavor with Coppola, Fightmaster hopes to "find a couple more women who come to us and say, 'Hey I've always wanted to play baseball and never had the chance. But here, I have this left-handed knuckleball that no one can hit in my men's league team that I play on.' That's the dream for me -- we start letting women and girls realize there's room for them in the game."

Sonoma Stompers Make History By Signing Two Women To Professional Team

Stacy Piagno celebrates with her USA Women's National Baseball teammates.Rob Schumacher/USA Today Sports

Stacy Piagno celebrates with her USA Women's National Baseball teammates.

Rob Schumacher/USA Today Sports

Originally Published: SB Nation

Catherine Slonskis, MLB National Reporter

A United States professional baseball team will carry women on its roster for just the third time since the 1950s. In this instance, not one, but two women have signed with the Sonoma Stompers, who are in the independent Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs. Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno will make their debut on July 1 and will be in the starting lineup against the San Rafael Pacifics.

Signing a woman to an all-male baseball team has been a delicate topic in the past. The game is played differently than with softball -- pitches are harder, the ball is smaller, pitchers throw from a mound instead of flat ground, and fields are larger than a softball field. Yet, Whitmore and Piagno have held their own and shown an ability to play at the same level as a professional baseball team -- thus, the signing.

Both ladies can pitch, though for Whitmore her primary position is as an outfielder. In Piagno's case, she pitches right-handed, in addition to playing on the infield. The former is on a softball scholarship with Cal State Fullerton next season following her graduation from the California Baseball Academy. Piagno was on the 2015 U.S. women's national baseball team for last year's Pan American Games when the team took home the Gold Medal.

This year, Whitmore (17 years old) and Piagno (25) are on the Team USA roster for the upcoming Women’s Baseball World Cup in South Korea in early September. Until then, though, they will be the first players on a professional co-ed baseball team since Eri Yoshida pitched in the Golden Baseball League in 2010.

Before Yoshida, Ila Borders pitched in a minor league game in 1997, and Toni Stone, Mamie Johnson and Constance Morgan played with the Negro Leagues in the '50s.

"My family would play co-ed baseball games and inevitably the star player would always be an aunt who could run and hit and that made the games so much more fun," team owner and movie director Francis Ford Coppola said in the press release. "When watching Major League Baseball, I always wondered why there couldn't be a co-ed team. It's the one major sport in which weight and strength come less into play.

"So when my Sonoma winery became involved with the Stompers, I had the opportunity to turn this thought into a reality and recruit these amazing women capable of playing alongside men."

The only other female who currently plays baseball on any professional level is French baseball player Melissa Mayeux. Last year she became the first woman ever to be added to the MLB international registration list -- making her eligible to be signed by any MLB team.

Whitmore has also played every position, including goalkeeper, for her Golden Bears varsity soccer team. She has played baseball -- not softball -- since the age of 7. As for Piagno, she's been facing the "she's not good enough" argument since before her junior year of high school. Eventually, she overcome the naysayers and went on to throw a medal-winning no-hitter at the Pan American Games last year.

Pacific Association's Sonoma Stompers Sign Two Female Players

Kelsie Whitmore is the first female player to sign a contract in the history of the Stompers franchise. Her and Stacy Piagno will start on Friday night, July 1st.Tim Livingston/Sonoma Stompers

Kelsie Whitmore is the first female player to sign a contract in the history of the Stompers franchise. Her and Stacy Piagno will start on Friday night, July 1st.

Tim Livingston/Sonoma Stompers

Originally Published: Sports Illustrated

Sports Illustrated Wire Services

The Pacific Association’s Sonoma Stompers are adding two female players to their roster.

The independent league club announced Wednesday that it has signed Kelsie Whitmore, 17, and Stacy Piagno, 25. Both will start Friday’s game against the San Rafael Pacifics, Whitmore in left field and Piagno on the mound.

“This isn't a one-day event,” Stompers general manager Theo Fightmaster told MLB.com. “That's been done a dozen times. Let's give women a chance to be part of a team, let's give women a chance to play against men. What will they learn? What have they not been coached because they haven't had the same coaching as boys? I remember being really disappointed with my sister's coaches because they coached the girls a lot different than how I was coached.”


“Both of these girls are on the roster,” Fightmaster said. “They're gonna play however much they earn. They are not gonna be in the starting lineup every night so we can sell more tickets. It's a big game on July 1 and they'll both be in the lineup and after that we'll see what their performance dictates.”

The Stompers also notably hosted an LGBTQ pride night last season and started openly gay pitcher Sean Conroy on the mound. They allowed baseball writers Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller to work in baseball operations in 2015 as well, which they detailed in the recently-published book The Only Rule is it has to Work.

Stompers Struggle With DeBarr In 6-3 Loss To Pacifics

Matt Hibbert provided a large portion of Sonoma's offense Wednesday in a 6-3 loss to the San Rafael. Hibbert finished the game 3 for 5 with an RBI and one run scored.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Matt Hibbert provided a large portion of Sonoma's offense Wednesday in a 6-3 loss to the San Rafael. Hibbert finished the game 3 for 5 with an RBI and one run scored.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Geoff Safford, Media Relations Assistant

Sonoma knew the challenge that they were facing Wednesday night in game two of their series in San Rafael. The Stompers had a good showing in game one, and the Pacifics fell behind the Stompers in the Pacific Association standings. The Pacifics played with a different energy Wednesday, and had a lot of help from a great pitching performance. 

Both teams know that whoever wins this series will be in the drivers seat for first place in the Pacific Association. The Pacifics turned to veteran starter Nick DeBarr to try to turn the tide in the series. DeBarr has been around the block a time or two as he has suited up for 17 different minor league teams since 2002. 

DeBarr’s job was to shut down the Stomper lineup that has been great this season to pull the Pacifics back to a tie for first in the Pacific Association. The tall right-hander was not fazed by the importance of this game, pitching a beauty in a 6-3 win for San Rafael over the Stompers.

DeBarr really set the tone for the game in his seven innings of work. Sonoma (14-11) scored one in the first inning to jump out front early, but that would be the only earned run Sonoma would get off of him. Sonoma only mustered two hits after the first inning as well. DeBarr struck out a season-high eight while walking only one. He was able to get ahead of hitters early in the count on a consistent basis.

Stompers starter Jose Flores also threw seven innings but did not fare as well as his counterpart picking up the loss. The fourth and fifth innings were key for San Rafael (14-11), as five runs came in during those two innings off Flores. He also had a few balls not bounce his way, as the Stompers defense committed three errors behind him. The Stompers defense has been a bit off in the series, having committed seven errors in the two games so far. Flores allowed nine hits and five earned runs while striking out four.

Matt Hibbert had almost half of Sonoma’s seven hits as he finished the game 3 for 5 with a run scored and an RBI.

First place will be on the line tomorrow in the Pacific Association, and the Stompers will send Sean Conroy to the mound. The Stompers opening day starter has started to find his groove in his last two starts, and Sonoma will look for a clutch performance from the right-hander. Conroy has not faced the Pacifics this season, but will have familiarity with some of the Pacifics players from last season. There will be a lot riding on the performance from Conroy to decide who will lead the Pacific Association after Thursday night. 

Tickets for upcoming Stompers home games are available on stompersbaseball.com. Fan Merchandise, and tickets are also available for purchase at The Fan Shop located at 234 West Napa Street in beautiful Sonoma. Contact the Stompers with any questions at info@stompersbaseball.com.

Box Score

Sonoma Stompers Independent Baseball Team Signs Two Female Players

People's Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field will be the site on Friday night for a momentous occasion in baseball history. Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno will start for the Stompers that night.Ben Lindbergh/Sonoma Stompers

People's Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field will be the site on Friday night for a momentous occasion in baseball history. Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno will start for the Stompers that night.

Ben Lindbergh/Sonoma Stompers

Originally Published: New York Daily News

Kate Feldman, Columnist

Batters up.

Two female baseball players will join the Sonoma Stompers on July 1, the Independent League team announced.

Seventeen-year-old Kelsie Whitmore, a pitcher and outfielder from Temecula, California, and 25-year-old Stacy Piagno, a pitcher and infielder from St. Augustine, Florida, will be in the lineup on Friday against the San Rafael Pacifics.

Whitmore graduated from the California Baseball Academy and will attend Cal State Fullerton on a softball scholarship next season.

Eight women breaking barriers in men’s sports
Piagno won gold with the U.S. women’s national baseball team at the 2015 Pan American Games, including throwing the first no-hitter on July 23, and played softball at the University of Tampa.

Both women are on the roster for Team USA in the Women’s Baseball World Cup in South Korea, which begins in September.

When Whitmore and Piagno take the field on Friday, the Stompers will become the first co-ed professional baseball team since Toni Stone, Mamie Johnson and Constance Morgan played in the Negro Leagues.

Virginia Dare Winery, owned by “Godfather” director Francis Ford Coppola, sponsored the Stompers “in an effort to promote the recruitment, development and advancement of women in baseball.”

“My family would play co-ed baseball games and inevitably the star player would always be an aunt who could run and hit and that made the games so much more fun,” Coppola said in the press release.

“When watching Major League Baseball, I always wondered why there couldn’t be a co-ed team. It’s the one major sport in which weight and strength come less into play. So when my Sonoma winery became involved with the Stompers, I had the opportunity to turn this thought into a reality and recruit these amazing women capable of playing alongside men.”

The Stompers joined the Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs in 2014 after the Sonoma County Crushers folded in 2002.

In August 2014, Red Sox Hall of Fame pitcher Bill Lee became the oldest person to win a professional baseball game when he threw 5.2 innings at the age of 67.

Sean Conroy became the first openly gay active professional baseball player when he pitched a three-hit shutout for the Stompers in June 2015.

Sonoma gained national recognition when sabermetric writers Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller, co-hosts of Baseball Prospectus’ “Effectively Wild” podcast, took over baseball operations for their New York Times bestseller “The Only Rule Is It Has to Work: Our Wild Experiment Building a New Kind of Baseball Team.”

“The Stompers share the passion and vision of Francis Ford Coppola, and are dedicated to the advancement of women in baseball,” General Manager Theo Fightmaster said.

“While many believe it's only a matter of time before we see a woman playing in the MLB, I've learned over the past several months that there are many steps in between where we are and where we should be in terms of women in this sport. We hope this sends a message to the rest of the baseball world that there is room for women and girls in this game – from Little League to the Major Leagues.”

Jackson Jr. Leads Stompers Past Pacifics In 9-3 Win

Mike Jackson Jr. pitched beautifully in Sonoma's 9-3 win over the San Rafael Pacifics Tuesday. The righty allowed no earned runs on six hits in six sinnings while striking out five.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Mike Jackson Jr. pitched beautifully in Sonoma's 9-3 win over the San Rafael Pacifics Tuesday. The righty allowed no earned runs on six hits in six sinnings while striking out five.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Geoff Safford, Media Relations Assistant

During batting practice, infielder Yuki Yasuda has been asked countless times if he was going hit a ‘Yuki Bomb’ in the game. Yasuda, being the humble and quiet man that he is would just smile back. He had never hit a homer in a Stomper uniform coming into today. It did not take long Tuesday for Yasuda to change that.

The Stompers used a much more patient approach at the plate and a great pitching performance from Mike Jackson Jr. to cruise to a game one victory over the Pacifics by the score of 9-3 to regain first place in the Pacific Association by themselves. Interestingly enough, Sonoma had not won a game played on a Tuesday this season.

In Sonoma’s loss Sunday to the Admirals, the Stompers were swinging at pitches out of the strike zone and it led to Sonoma only scoring two runs. It was a much different story tonight as the Stompers worked starter Patrick Barnett to 123 pitches in only 5 2/3 innings. Even Sonoma hitters that were retired scratched and clawed in their at bats and it paid off for them in the end. Barnett allowed five earned runs in the start. 

Nothing went right for Mike Jackson Jr. in his last start in Pittsburg on June 22. The Diamonds hit him hard, the defense made errors behind him, and the game was out of control early. Tuesday, the veteran went to the mound with first place on the line and delivered with a fantastic outing. Jackson Jr. pitched six innings, allowing six hits and no earned runs while striking out five. He did the job and was rewarded with his third win of the season, improving to 3-2. 

Jackson Jr. had his slider working tonight and used it as his kill pitch on many occasions. The pitch would seem like it was coming right over the plate and would drop at the last moment right off the table. 

Jackson Jr. received support from his offense right out of the shoot as Yuki Yasuda hit a towering homer over the left field wall to give Sonoma the 1-0 lead. The Stompers offense did well at the plate despite the fact that they received little contribution from their third, fourth, and fifth hitters in the order. The trio went 0 for 13 for the game.

Mark Hurley had another solid night offensively finishing 3 for 5 with two RBIs and three runs scored. Yuki Yasuda was the RBI leader with three and finished the game 2 for 4. Yasuda has the most hits (11) of any Stomper over the last seven days. 

Sonoma is scheduled to hand the ball off to righty Jose Flores in game two of their road series against the Pacifics. Flores has started to turn the corner in his last two outings, and Sonoma has won in his last two starts. Sonoma (14-10) will look to extend its one game lead in the Pacific Association over the Pacifics (13-11) tomorrow night. 

Tickets for upcoming Stompers home games are available on StompersBaseball.com. Fan merchandise and tickets are also available at The Fan Shop located at 234 West Napa Street in downtown Sonoma. For more information, contact the Stompers at info@stompersbaseball.com

Box Score

Francis Ford Coppola and Sonoma Stompers Promote Recruitment, Development and Advancement of Women in Baseball

In a historic announcement, Virginia Dare Winery, Francis Ford Coppola's newest venture and premier partner of the Sonoma Stompers, have blazed a trail for the advancement of women in baseball by bringing two of the most talented female baseball pla…

In a historic announcement, Virginia Dare Winery, Francis Ford Coppola's newest venture and premier partner of the Sonoma Stompers, have blazed a trail for the advancement of women in baseball by bringing two of the most talented female baseball players in the United States to begin playing with the Stompers on July 1, 2016.

GET YOUR TICKETS FOR THIS HISTORIC EVENT!

Sonoma Stompers Staff & Virginia Dare Media Services

In an effort to promote the recruitment, development and advancement of women in baseball, Francis Ford Coppola’s Virginia Dare Winery in association with the Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club, an independent professional baseball team, have been actively searching for the best women baseball players in the United States to come and join the team. It was announced today that 17-year-old outfielder/pitcher Kelsie Whitmore from Temecula, California and 25-year-old pitcher/infielder Stacy Piagno from St. Augustine, Florida have been recruited and will play with the Stompers beginning on July 1st when Sonoma hosts the San Rafael Pacifics. The two female players will be in the Stompers starting lineup on Friday.

“My family would play co-ed baseball games and inevitably the star player would always be an aunt who could run and hit and that made the games so much more fun,” said Francis Ford Coppola. “When watching Major League Baseball, I always wondered why there couldn’t be a co-ed team. It’s the one major sport in which weight and strength come less into play. So when my Sonoma winery became involved with the Stompers, I had the opportunity to turn this thought into a reality and recruit these amazing women capable of playing alongside men.”

The Stompers, which are part of the independent Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, will be the first co-ed professional baseball team since the 1950s when Toni Stone, Mamie “Peanut” Johnson and Constance Morgan achieved the distinction of becoming the first women to play alongside men in the Negro Leagues.

“The Stompers share the passion and vision of Francis Ford Coppola, and are dedicated to the advancement of women in baseball,” said Theo Fightmaster, VP & General Manager of the Sonoma Stompers. “While many believe it's only a matter of time before we see a woman playing in the MLB, I've learned over the past several months that there are many steps in between where we are and where we should be in terms of women in this sport. We hope this sends a message to the rest of the baseball world that there is room for women and girls in this game – from Little League to the Major Leagues.”

In September, Whitmore and Piagno are also slated to play for Team USA in the Women’s Baseball World Cup in South Korea. Whitmore, who recently graduated from Temecula Valley High School, will attend Cal State Fullerton on a softball scholarship next season. Piagno, who threw a no-hitter for the United States team when they captured a gold medal at the 2015 Pan Am Games in Toronto, Canada, played softball at the University of Tampa.

The Stompers have always looked to push the envelope since their inception in 2014 when former Boston Red Sox and Montreal Expos left-handed pitcher, Bill 'Spaceman' Lee, became the oldest player to win a professional baseball game. In 2015, the Stompers agreed to let nationally acclaimed baseball writers, Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller, implement a data-driven approach to evaluating and signing players. Lindberg and Miller chronicled their experience in the New York Times best-selling book, "The Only Rule is it Has to Work: Our Wild Experiment Building a New Kind of Baseball Team." Also in 2015, the Stompers made international news when pitcher, Sean Conroy, became the first openly gay player to ever play at the professional level.

The July 1st game from Peoples Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field in Sonoma, California will be available via a live streaming broadcast on BAOSN.TV (Bay Area Online Sports Network) with veteran announcer Joe Castellano calling the play-by-play, reporter Kate Rooney and Stompers broadcaster Tim Livingston. The broadcast will begin at 5:45 pm PT with a special pre-game show prior to the 6:00 pm PT first pitch. Tickets to this historic game are on sale now at StompersBaseball.com.

As the premier sponsor of the Sonoma Stompers, the Virginia Dare Winery in Sonoma County is partnering with the team over the next three years. The Stompers opened the season May 31, 2016, and started their home season in Sonoma on Tuesday, June 7, at 6 p.m. against the Vallejo Admirals. Full Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets and single-game tickets are on sale at www.Stompersbaseball.com.

ABOUT THE SONOMA STOMPERS

The Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club was founded in 2014 and is a member of the Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs. It plays its home games at Peoples Home Equity Ballpark at Arnold Field, just a block away from Sonoma’s historic plaza. The independent baseball club has had two players in its history signed by Major League Baseball organizations, as Sonoma’s own Jayce Ray was signed by the Boston Red Sox in 2015 and Santos Saldivar was signed by the Milwaukee Brewers shortly before the 2016 season. For more information on the team, visit StompersBaseball.com or visit the team’s Fan Shop located at 234 West Napa Street, Sonoma, CA 95476.

ABOUT VIRGINIA DARE WINERY

Virginia Dare Winery, American wines since 1835, pays tribute to America’s winegrowing heritage. The existence of the 400-year-old scuppernong “Mother Vine,” a variety of muscadine, growing on Roanoke Island, North Carolina is intertwined with the story of one of the first English settlements in the New World, which later mysteriously disappeared without a trace, leaving nothing but a spellbinding story of mythical and mysterious characters – each of which grace the labels of our wines. Crafted with grapes from the finest viticulture regions in California, our wines are rich with characteristics befitting an American legend: Pure. Natural. Distinctive. Learn more by visiting Virginia Dare Winery located at 22281 Chianti Road, Geyserville, CA 95441.

Eighth Inning Rally By Admirals Key In Stompers 4-2 Loss

Yuki Yasuda reached base four times in Sonoma's 4-2 loss to the Vallejo Admirals Sunday while also playing fabulous defensively. Yasuda finished 2 for 3 with two walks in the game.James Toy III

Yuki Yasuda reached base four times in Sonoma's 4-2 loss to the Vallejo Admirals Sunday while also playing fabulous defensively. Yasuda finished 2 for 3 with two walks in the game.

James Toy III

Geoff Safford, Media Relations Assistant

 

Mark Hurley caught a break to put Sonoma in the hit column in the second inning. Hurley hit what looked to be a routine ground ball to the shortstop Raul Navarro and the ball took a hop right over the top of Navarro’s head into left field. The ball hopped up like a basketball on the hardwood and there was nothing Navarro could do about it. This bad bounce would be a sign of things to come.

Entering the bottom of the eighth the game was tied at 2-2, and one of Sonoma’s most reliable bullpen arms was in the game in the late inning situation. Taylor Thurber has been rock solid out of the pen this season, but ran into some trouble in the eighth. Gadiel Baez and Lydell Moseby reached on a walk and a double to put runners at second and third.

Cyle Figueroa came up to the dish next in an interesting situation.  He came into the game because of a player ejection earlier in the contest. This was his first at bat of the day and it came with two men on, and two out in the bottom of the eighth in a tie game.

 Figueroa hit a ball on the ground just to the left of the first base bag that looked to be playable for first baseman Daniel Baptista. Baptista laid out to make the play, but was victimized by a bad hop and the ball ended up in right field for a hit. Both runners scored and that would be all the Admirals would need as they defeated the Stompers 4-2 Sunday at Wilson Park.

Sonoma struggled to get the big hit offensively as they stranded 11 runners on base during the game. The only RBIs in the game came on a two run blast by Joel Carranza in the sixth inning that at the time tied the game at 2-2. Yuki Yasuda's performance at the plate was the highlight as he finished 2 for 3 with two walks.

Sonoma found themselves in position to put an inning together in the ninth as the first two batters reached. But Yuki Yasuda getting caught trying to steal second base was a huge blow to the inning and the rally ultimately fell short.

Gregory Paulino kept his club in the ballgame by allowing two runs on six hits in five innings of work, and did not have a decision.  The offense did not do enough for Paulino to get a win. The Stomper offense has averaged just over 1 run in the last three games that Paulino has started.

Taylor Thurber (1-2) picked up the loss for Sonoma, as the ball literally did not bounce the right way for him in the eighth. Marquis Hutchinson (2-1) got credit for the win out of the pen and Joe Watson (3) picked up the save for Vallejo (10-14).

After a day off Monday, Sonoma will begin a week of play that may decide who will finish on top of the Pacific Association in the first half. Sonoma (13-10) is tied for first with the San Rafael Pacifics, and will face them seven times this week. The slate includes a double-header on July 3 with one of the games being a make-up game from June 16.

Veteran Mike Jackson Jr. (2-2) is scheduled to get the start Tuesday for Sonoma, and will look to bounce back from a sub par outing in his last start against the Diamonds on June 22. Jackson Jr. has faced San Rafael once this season and pitched a good ballgame in a 3-1 loss on June 15. There will be a lot on the line Tuesday at Albert Park as first place in the Pacific Association will be on the line.

Tickets for upcoming Sonoma Stompers home games are available on StompersBaseball.com. Stompers fan Merchandise, and tickets are also available at The Fan Shop located at 234 West Napa Street in downtown Sonoma. Contact the Stompers with any questions at info@stompersbaseball.com.

Box Score

 

Statistics Level Baseball's Playing Field

Santos Saldivar pitching for the Sonoma Stompers on August 4, 2015. The Milwaukee Brewers signed him a month ago.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Santos Saldivar pitching for the Sonoma Stompers on August 4, 2015. The Milwaukee Brewers signed him a month ago.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Originally Published: The Wall Street Journal

Ben Lindberg & Sam Miller, Guest Columnists

Last summer, an independent-league baseball team in California called the Sonoma Stompers entrusted its season to us, two writers with backgrounds in baseball statistics. We signed players, guided strategy and told the fielders where to stand for the most effective defense. We had no experience running a team, but we did have data, and we promised the owner of the Stompers that we would use it to build a new kind of baseball team.

But we also had a blind spot: There wasn’t much reliable data on our own performance. How do you measure a manager? More daunting: How do managers measure themselves?

Baseball is made for number-crunching. The matchup between pitcher and batter is one-on-one combat with a clear resolution. The metrics are tidy. But our own contributions fell outside the bounds of baseball statistics. At the end of the season, we knew our team’s record but not which wins we had helped to create. We slouched away unsure of how well we had done.

Until a Stompers pitcher named Santos Saldivar got signed by a major-league club.

To understand Mr. Saldivar’s career, you have to know the baseball hierarchy. Each of the 30 big-league teams has a farm system of minor-league affiliates, stocked largely by high-school and college players taken in the annual amateur draft. The independent leagues exist outside of that farm-system structure, employing players who washed out or weren’t wanted but are still trying to catch a scout’s eye.

A year ago, Mr. Saldivar believed that his statistics at Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., would make him one of the fortunate few. As a senior, he had broken the school’s single-season strikeout record, set by his former teammate, Jose De Leon, who had been drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2013 and become one of baseball’s highest-ranked prospects.

After completing his college schedule, Mr. Saldivar stayed sharp by signing with the River City Rascals of the independent Frontier League, expecting a brief stay before getting the call to follow in Mr. De Leon’s footsteps. The hoped-for notification never arrived.

Mr. Saldivar is short. That’s the whole story of why he wasn’t drafted. Tall pitchers have advantages: They release the ball closer to the plate, giving batters less time to react. They throw “downhill,” making their pitches harder to hit squarely. Their bigger bodies make them more durable, and they are seen as “protectable,” that is, able to add bulk and strength as they age. A pitcher like Mr. Saldivar—who’s about 5-foot-8—is easy for scouts to overlook.

Mr. Saldivar’s stint with the Rascals didn’t last long. He was released after just one start, replaced by a pitcher who had a bum shoulder but was 6-foot-6 and a former major-league draftee.

When we took over the Stompers, we didn’t know that Mr. Saldivar existed. Most pro teams outside of affiliated ball are filled from the informal network of players who know other players and vouch for one another, or from the cast of wannabes who email baseball resumes to scores of teams, hoping for a hit. But the vast majority of qualified 22-year-olds don’t enter this network. They just disappear.

We weren’t content to limit our view to the network. One of our consultants, former San Diego Padres analyst Chris Long, cautioned us that “99.9% of the talent is sucked away in the draft.” But he gave us hope that within the remaining .1% we could find promising players whom the major-league teams had missed. Using spreadsheets crammed with college statistics, we discovered and signed Mr. Saldivar.

Our hope paid off. In his 13 games for the Stompers, he displayed an impressive array of pitches, ranging in speed from the mid-60s to the low-90s. He finished with a 2.04 earned-run average—the best in the league by a starting pitcher—and almost 11 strikeouts per nine innings.

Last month, a friend in the Milwaukee Brewers front office emailed us about our experience overseeing the Stompers. We mentioned, offhandedly, that he should sign Mr. Saldivar. More vital than our recommendation was the data we had accumulated.

If any Brewers scout had seen Mr. Saldivar during his college career, he hadn’t bothered to write a report. So we sent all of the information from his stint with the Stompers: the stats we had parsed and presented; the PITCHf/x data we had collected by persuading a company called Sportvision to install its expensive camera/computer system at our small-town field; the video we had filmed and edited after hours of road trips.

Two days later, the Brewers bit. Just as we had done last summer, they signed Mr. Saldivar without watching him pitch in person—making him the first Stompers player ever to be signed by a big-league club—and assigned him to their Rookie League team in Helena, Mont.

Hardly anyone plays independent baseball because they love it. They play because they want to move up, to get the call that Mr. Saldivar got from the Brewers. Most aren’t good enough. Even those who are rarely reach a major-league organization. It’s just too hard to attract the right team’s attention.

For most of last season, we struggled to assess how well our tactics were working. The players said that our stat-driven scouting reports had helped, but there was no way to be sure. Now, at last, we know that our data made a difference. “Having the full combination of the PITCHf/x, video and stats is really helpful,” our Brewers contact told us, “especially since I doubt we’d get eyes on [Mr. Saldivar] otherwise.” Our greatest triumph hadn’t been adding an underappreciated player to the roster but helping him to leave.

In retrospect, we should have played up that possibility. When we introduced ourselves to the team, we soft-pedaled our devotion to data, wary of being perceived as “Poindexters” or, worse, Big Brother. But our numbers-based approach wasn’t a threat. It was a lifeline for players such as Mr. Saldivar, whom traditional methods had missed. Technology like PITCHf/x promises to flatten fields; it sold the Brewers on Mr. Saldivar because they could accurately compare his stuff to that of other professional pitchers, despite differences in stature, setting and quality of competition.

In baseball or any other industry, quantifying performance provides a competitive advantage to companies that aren’t at the top of the food chain. Prospective employees are more likely to view a less glamorous job as an appealing option if they know that their contributions can be measured and shared. Losing Mr. Saldivar hurts the Stompers in the short term, but dropping his name during recruiting calls will help them to reseed their roster for years to come.

Good management produces its own data points: the employees who get called up to The Show. Mr. Saldivar’s promotion suggested that we had done our work pretty well.