Eastern League franchise (1970–1972) The first team to be dubbed the Pawtucket Red Sox debuted at McCoy Stadium in 1970 as a member of the Double-A Eastern League. The franchise, owned by former Major League shortstop
Joe Buzas, had spent the previous five seasons (1965–69) as the
Pittsfield Red Sox after playing in four different
Pennsylvania cities—
Allentown,
Johnstown,
York and
Reading—over seven years (1958–64). After three seasons, Pawtucket's Eastern League franchise moved to
Bristol, Connecticut, in 1973 to make room for the Triple-A PawSox, the former
Louisville Colonels of the International League.
Carlton Fisk, the future
Baseball Hall of Fame catcher, played for the Eastern League PawSox in 1970.
Shortstop Rick Burleson and
first baseman Cecil Cooper are among the players who toiled for both the Double-A and Triple-A versions of the team. This first edition of the PawSox franchise played for ten seasons as the
Bristol Red Sox and then spent 33 seasons (1983–2015) in
New Britain, Connecticut, the last 21 of them as the
Rock Cats. In 2016, the Rock Cats moved to
Connecticut's capital city, and were rechristened the
Hartford Yard Goats. The
Cleveland Indians had also placed an Eastern League club in Pawtucket, in 1966–67. The
Pawtucket Indians moved to
Waterbury, Connecticut, in 1968. The
Pawtucket Slaters, a
Boston Braves farm club in the Class B
New England League, represented the city from 1946 to 1949, when the NEL disbanded.
Roots in Toronto and Louisville The Triple-A team that became the Pawtucket Red Sox began in 1896 as the
Toronto Maple Leafs. It spent 72 consecutive seasons representing
Ontario's capital city and won ten league championships before a deteriorating
ballpark forced it to relocate to
Louisville, Kentucky, following the season. Louisville had spent the previous five years out of
Organized Baseball. After the
American Association and its
Louisville Colonels franchise folded in 1962 and the
American League owners voted down
Charlie O. Finley's agreement to move the
Kansas City A's to
Louisville in 1964, Louisville was ready for the return of baseball. In 1968 the Maple Leafs, the Red Sox' top minor league club since 1965, were bought by Walter J. Dilbeck and moved to Louisville where they became the new Louisville Colonels and retained their affiliation with the Red Sox. They played at
Fairgrounds Stadium on the Kentucky State Fairgrounds. While in Louisville, star players included
Carlton Fisk (1971),
Dwight Evans (1972), and
Cecil Cooper (1972). The Louisville Colonels made the International League playoffs in 1969 and 1972.
Early struggles and bankruptcy (1973–1976) In 1972, the Kentucky State Fair Board remodeled Cardinal Stadium so it could accommodate
football. The renovations made the stadium unsuitable for baseball; among other things, it was far too large for a Triple-A team. However, the stadium was later used by the latter-day
Louisville Redbirds club, setting minor league attendance records and outdrawing several major league teams. Following the 1972 season, the Louisville Colonels of the International League moved to McCoy Stadium and became the Pawtucket Red Sox, with Buzas taking over as owner. The first Triple-A team was a success on the field, led by future major leaguers Cooper and
Dick Pole, winning the 1973
Governors' Cup Championship in their inaugural year in the league over the
Charleston Charlies. Then, they followed up by defeating the
Tulsa Oilers of the American Association to win the
Junior World Series. The following season they finished 30 games below .500 and lost an estimated $40,000. Buzas then sold the team to Philip Anez, a
Smithfield advertising executive, in January 1975. While the parent club was on their way to the
1975 World Series, the 1975 PawSox finished with a 53–87 mark. The team changed its name to the
Rhode Island Red Sox for the 1976 season, but little changed on the field with a third straight sub-.500 season and falling attendance. Anez threatened to move his club to
Jersey City, New Jersey. After the season, the franchise went bankrupt, unable to pay off $2 million worth of debt. The International League took it over, then awarded it in December 1976 to Massachusetts businessman Marvin Adelson, who renamed the team the
New England Red Sox—and explored transferring it to Worcester. But after less than two months, in January 1977, the league revoked Adelson's franchise, alleging "nonperformance of terms and conditions".
The Ben Mondor era (1977–2015) Although it appeared the Red Sox's stay in the Pawtucket area was about to come to an end, retired
Lincoln businessman
Ben Mondor stepped in and made sure the team remained in the city. Mondor was granted a brand-new franchise and restored the name to the Pawtucket Red Sox. However, it retained the old team's history and affiliation with the big-league Red Sox. Mondor's tenure began inauspiciously. While the PawSox rebounded to win the regular-season
pennant, they only drew 1,000 fans per game—believed to be the fewest for a first-place team in the history of the International League. That year's edition of the PawSox fell in the Governors' Cup finals to Charleston in four straight games. However, it won its second league championship in 1984, and drew almost 199,000 fans, second in the league. For most of their first quarter-century in Rhode Island, the PawSox had to devote considerable resources to keeping McCoy Stadium at something approaching Triple-A standards. In 1998, Mondor and team president Mike Tamburro heavily renovated McCoy Stadium. The PawSox led the league in attendance in 2008, when 636,788 fans saw baseball at McCoy, an average of 9,097 for each of the 70 openings. In 2005, they set a franchise record with 688,421 tickets sold during the year.
Kevin Youkilis played for the team in 2003, and completed a streak he started while in Portland: he reached base in 71 consecutive games, tying future teammate
Kevin Millar's minor-league records for consecutive games reaching base. In addition to their success at the box office, the PawSox have excelled on the field. In 2000, Pawtucket set an all-time franchise record for victories with 82, as the team completed their fifth-straight winning season. Three years later the PawSox would top their own record by winning 83 games. In 2008, they won 85 games. The 1984 team defeated the now-defunct
Maine Guides 3–2 to win the 1984 Governors' Cup trophy for their second championship in Pawtucket Red Sox history. In 2012, the PawSox defeated the
Charlotte Knights to win the Governors' Cup for a third time. A fourth title was won in 2014 when the PawSox took down the
Durham Bulls in five games. The origins of the team's most popular nickname, "PawSox," dates to the first season in which Mondor owned the club. Three weeks before the 1977 season began the team lacked uniforms. BoSox vice president
Haywood Sullivan stepped in and sent Pawtucket 48 sets of old home and away uniforms from the parent club. Although the home uniforms were fine for the team to use, the road uniforms had "Boston" stitched across the chest, which was a problem. Tamburro suggested using the name "PawSox" across the front, with each unstitched "Boston" letter replaced with one that spelled "PawSox". Thus, the PawSox name was born out of the necessity of a uniform crisis. Mondor died on October 3, 2010, at the age of 85. His widow, Madeleine, became the new majority owner of the PawSox.
Sale and Rhode Island stadium plans (2015–2018) On November 29, 2014, it was reported that members of the Boston Red Sox' ownership group were in the process of purchasing the PawSox from Madeleine Mondor and two long-time executives who also held stock in the team: president Tamburro and vice president and general manager
Lou Schwechheimer. Nearly three months later, on February 23, the sale to Lucchino, Skeffington and their partners was formally announced. Lucchino added the title of chairman of the PawSox to his Boston responsibilities, and Skeffington became club president. Other partners included Rhode Island businessmen Bernard Cammarata, William P. Egan, Habib Gorgi, J. Terrence Murray and Thomas M. Ryan, as well as
Fenway Sports Management (a division of the BoSox' parent company,
Fenway Sports Group), and two limited partners in FSG, Arthur E. Nicholas and Frank M. Resnek. That day, the new owners also announced their intention to move the team out of McCoy Stadium, build a new baseball park six miles (9.65 km) to the south in downtown Providence, and begin play there as early as 2017. Skeffington said the club would be renamed the
Rhode Island Red Sox upon the move. However, Skeffington, 73, died from a heart attack while jogging near his
Barrington home on May 17, 2015, disrupting the team's efforts to secure an agreement with Rhode Island officials. Then, on August 1, Lucchino announced his retirement as the CEO and president of the Boston Red Sox, effective at the end of the season. In September,
Governor Gina Raimondo told Lucchino that the riverfront parcel, consisting of public land formerly occupied by
Interstate 195 and private property owned by
Brown University, "was not suitable and there were too many obstacles that remained." In the wake of the setback, Lucchino said that the team preferred to remain in Rhode Island, but neither he nor other PawSox officials immediately commented about possible alternative locations. In the ensuing weeks, reports surfaced that Worcester and two other
Massachusetts cities—
Springfield and
Fall River—might bid for the team. On November 5, Skeffington's position was filled when Dr. Charles Steinberg, longtime Lucchino aide and a senior public affairs and PR executive with four big-league teams, including the Red Sox, became club president. Tamburro remained on board as vice chairman, and Dan Rea III became the PawSox' new general manager, after Schwechheimer departed to join an ownership group that purchased the Triple-A
New Orleans Zephyrs. Amidst the uncertainty over its longterm home, Steinberg committed the team to remaining in Pawtucket for five seasons, through 2020, and to rebuilding its relationship with its fans. During the summer of 2016, the city, state and team began a
feasibility study to determine the extent of needed renovations to McCoy Stadium. That study concluded that renovating McCoy would cost $68 million, while building a new stadium on the site would cost $78 million. On May 16, 2017, a downtown Pawtucket stadium proposal, The Ballpark at
Slater Mill, was jointly announced by Lucchino and Pawtucket's mayor, Donald Grebien. The ballpark, to be built on a site bracketed by
Interstate 95 and the
Blackstone River, would cost an estimated $83 million, with the team footing $45 million, the state $23 million, and the city the remaining $15 million. But when the stadium project went before the
Rhode Island General Assembly in 2018, the financing formula was amended to shift the risk of borrowing money from the state to investors, thus exposing them to potentially higher interest rates. The amended bill passed, and was signed into law by Raimondo on June 29, 2018.
Final season and relocation to Worcester (2019–2021) The new financing arrangement was rejected by the PawSox ownership. On August 17, 2018, the team announced that it would relocate to a new stadium in
Worcester in April 2021. The stadium was to be part of a $240 million redevelopment of Worcester's
Kelley Square and Canal District. The move would end the team's history in Pawtucket after 51 seasons. Alluding to "controversy, disagreement and opposition", apparently on the part of Rhode Island legislators who changed the Pawtucket stadium's financing formula, Lucchino said that a 35-page letter of intent had been signed with Worcester's mayor and city manager for the downtown ballpark project to house the relocated team. The announcement capped a concerted three-year effort by Worcester and Massachusetts officials and local business leaders to woo the PawSox to anchor a downtown redevelopment that includes the stadium, new housing, a hotel, a parking garage and redesign of the Kelley Square intersection. During the 2019 season of the International League, Pawtucket finished last in the North Division, with a record of 59–81. The team's final game was played on September 2, 2019; it was a 5–4 home victory over the
Lehigh Valley IronPigs in 10 innings. in 2023 While 2020 was planned to be the team's final season of play in the International League, the Minor League Baseball season was cancelled, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. During the
2020 Major League Baseball season, McCoy Stadium served as the alternate training site for the Boston Red Sox. By December 5, the team began to sell off 1,000 pieces of memorabilia in an online auction hosted on the PawSox website as well as on
Cox Cable TV, while also announcing the team would be taking select artifacts to be put on display at
Polar Park in Worcester. The Pawtucket Red Sox' regular season record over the half-century (1970 through 2019) of their existence was 3,461–3,610, for a winning percentage of .490. On January 11, 2021, the City of Pawtucket announced that it would be filing a lawsuit against Pawtucket Red Sox Baseball Club LLC for breach of contract, in that McCoy Stadium was not kept up to standards or renovations, citing that "the City of Pawtucket will be exposed for the entire facility and upkeep which was originally the responsibility of the State and PawSox, leaving the burden on the taxpayers to fix or knock down the facility," In a statement, the PawSox were "Stunned to learn of this unfounded lawsuit from our friends and long-time partners at the City of Pawtucket, We will now allow the legal process to run its course, and therefore have no further comment at this time." =="The Longest Game"==