The
Washington Senators moved quickly and replaced the Red Sox in 1970, and the
Pittsfield Senators (later
Rangers when the parent team moved to Dallas-Fort Worth) remained through 1975. The
Milwaukee Brewers replaced the Rangers in 1976, and the team played a season as the
Berkshire Brewers. With fan support at a new low — only 23,500 fans came through the turnstiles all season — the franchise moved to
Holyoke, Massachusetts, as the
Holyoke Millers, and Pittsfield was again left without baseball, this time for eight seasons. But in 1985, the
Buffalo Bisons moved up from the EL to the Triple-A
American Association, creating a need for an eighth Eastern League franchise, and the
Chicago Cubs placed their Double-A affiliate in Wahconah Park. The
Pittsfield Cubs played through 1988, fielding such players as
Rafael Palmeiro and
Mark Grace, and winning the 1987 regular season title. But the Cubs' attendance was mired at the bottom of the league. After 1988, the Eastern League reorganized, replacing Pittsfield and other under-performing markets with new cities. However, Pittsfield continued to participate in professional baseball at a lower classification, in the Short Season Class A
New York–Penn League (1989–2001) and in various
independent baseball leagues since 2002. The
Pittsfield Mets of the New York–Penn League would shatter the attendance marks of the higher-classification Eastern League teams, despite playing in a
short-season league with fewer than 40 home games each season. ==Future Major League Pittsfield Red Sox==