PDA

View Full Version : Minor League: Major Success



Tipped Off
10-19-2005, 11:59 AM
Silvertips: Minor leagues, major success

By Brian Alexander

Seattle Times Snohomish County Bureau

The evolution of Everett's teams

To fully appreciate the booming popularity of minor-league sports in Snohomish County, you don't need to hear the din of cowbells at a Silvertips hockey game or watch excited fans chat with players after an AquaSox baseball game.

You need to see Keith Stocker's corn maze.

The 10-acre maze on Stocker's farm near Snohomish is cut in the shape of the Everett Silvertips' logo and the team mascot, Lincoln the bear. Inside the maze, there's a trivia game about the team.

In years past, the maze has been cut in the shape of a haunted house and a bucking bronco. But Stocker's new theme, by all accounts, has been a raging success.

"It surprises me how many people show up at the maze in their Silvertips jerseys," he said.

Stocker has tapped into the county's burgeoning passion for minor-league sports. Since the 2003 opening of the Everett Events Center, the number of minor-league sports teams in the area has tripled with the addition of the hockey team and an indoor-football squad, the Everett Hawks, to the relatively long-standing minor-league baseball club, the Everett AquaSox.

Moving up


After one year in the National Indoor Football League, the Everett Hawks were named an expansion team for the arenafootball2 league. Spokane also has been awarded a franchise.

Many factors fuel that popularity, fans and team officials say. Lower ticket prices make games in Everett more affordable than in Seattle, particularly for families on tight budgets. Smaller, minor-league-size facilities put fans closer to the action and promote better access to players. Fans also say they can identify more with the minor-league athletes, many of whom hold second jobs in town or live with host families.

Success on the field — and on the ice — helps, too.

The Silvertips have reached the Western Hockey League playoffs in each of their first two seasons, including a trip to the WHL finals in 2004.

The Hawks reached the playoffs in their first season in the National Indoor Football League, going undefeated before falling in the conference semifinals.

The AquaSox are perennial contenders in the Northwest League, and have been a stop in the professional careers of several current Mariner players, including Willie Bloomquist and pitching phenom Felix Hernandez.

"The fans love us, and our players love them back," said Keith Gerhart, the play-by-play broadcaster for the Silvertips.

Attendance figures confirm the three teams' popularity. The Hawks had the second-highest home attendance out of 22 teams in their league, averaging 4,400 people a game at the events center, said Chris Dugger, the team's general manager.

"I just think we've got some tremendously passionate fans," Dugger said.

To make the numbers even more impressive, he added, indoor football isn't a sport that naturally has fans in Snohomish County — many had never seen it before.

The Silvertips' numbers have been even stronger, particularly during their run to the league finals in 2004, when sellout crowds of about 8,600 filled the events center for each home game.

The AquaSox have also seen strong attendance from longtime fans hoping to get a glimpse of the next generation of Seattle Mariners. The Everett team drew a record crowd of 5,104 for a doubleheader last season and had an average home attendance of nearly 2,900.

"Perfect" place to play

The 2003 debut of the events center opened the door to new minor-league-sports success in the county.

Before the Silvertips' first home game at the events center, a Western Hockey League commissioner called the facility "absolutely perfect" and "incredible in every way."

Fans have echoed that sentiment. They say its capacity offers a much more personal setting than Seattle's KeyArena, which can seat about 17,000 people and is home to the Silvertips' local rivals, the Seattle Thunderbirds.

Jim and Grace Kolthoff of Marysville attend most of the Silvertips' home games but usually won't travel to Seattle if the Silvertips are playing there, in part because they find that arena just too big.

Jim Kolthoff, who was sporting a Silvertips jersey and a well-worn green cowbell during a recent home game, said the appeal of a smaller venue also applies to the AquaSox, who play their home games down the street at Everett Memorial Stadium.

Family-friendly prices

Everett's minor-league teams recognize the importance of keeping games affordable, and each has made an effort to market to families, including those without a lot of money to spend.

Of course, lower ticket prices also mean lower team payrolls and players who aren't household names to most people. Everett Hawks players, for example, earned just $200 a week under a league-imposed salary cap.

But many fans appreciate that aspect, Larson said. Fans like knowing that most players on the Silvertips, AquaSox and Hawks are just regular folks who often stay with local families and/or hold second jobs.

"That's what really gets you into the game, is knowing the players. They're not anonymous like in the NHL [National Hockey League]," said Jim Kolthoff, who called the players by their first names at a Silvertips home game last week.

Brian Alexander: 425-745-7845 or balexander@seattletimes.com