Tampa has had a long history of minor league baseball, beginning in 1919, when the original
Tampa Smokers began play as charter members of the
Florida State League. The Smokers moved to the
Florida International League before both the league and the team folded in 1954, temporarily leaving Tampa without a professional baseball team. The city built
Al Lopez Field in 1954, and the Tampa Tarpons became the ballpark's first tenant when they began play there in 1955 as a new member of the
Class D Florida State League. The Tarpons were an independent minor league team until 1957, when they became an affiliate of the
Philadelphia Phillies. In 1961, they began a long affiliation with the
Cincinnati Reds. They won three league championships, in 1957, 1959 and 1961. In 1964 minor league baseball was realigned, and the Florida State League became a Class A league (now
Class A-Advanced). During the 1980s talk spread of a major league team coming to the
Tampa Bay Area, which would threaten the viability of the Tarpons and other minor league teams in the region. Prior to the 1988 season the Reds moved their
spring training from Tampa to
Plant City, Florida, and moved their Class A franchise to
Greensboro, North Carolina (the
Greensboro Hornets). The Chicago White Sox subsequently moved their Class A affiliation to Tampa for the 1988 season, amid rumors that the major league White Sox would be moving to the area soon thereafter. That season the club, renamed the
Tampa White Sox, drew 55,900 fans, seventh in the 14-team FSL, and went 35–35 in the first half before they won the western division second-half title at 36–24. They fell in the second round of the playoffs to the
St. Lucie Mets 2 games to 0. The club was managed by
Marv Foley and had one FSL All-Star, pitcher
Jerry Kutzler. Foley won FSL Manager of the Year honors. After the 1988 season, owner Mitchell Mick sold his franchise to the Chicago White Sox, who relocated the club to
Sarasota, Florida, as the
Sarasota White Sox. The franchise exchanged major league affiliates and nicknames several times before 2010, when they became an affiliate of the
Pittsburgh Pirates and were moved and renamed the
Bradenton Marauders. Meanwhile, Tampa was without professional baseball until the
Tampa Yankees re-joined the Florida State League in 1994. After the 2017 season, that team rebranded itself as the Tarpons. ==Notable Tarpon alumni==