Today, Sept. 25, is National One-Hit Wonder Day. Why not take a moment to remember some guys, those who had one career at-bat and one hit? It's no small feat to bat 1.000. Welcome to the Baseball Traveler newsletter. Let's talk about Minor League Baseball. |
AFTER 42 SEASONS, I-CUBS' BERNABE "EASES INTO RETIREMENT" |
Few Minor League Baseball executives have been in the game longer than Iowa Cubs president Sam Bernabe, who has enjoyed a 42-year tenure with the Des Moines-based Triple-A franchise. Following the final I-Cubs game of the 2025 season, it was announced that Bernabe is "stepping back from his role in daily operations as he eases into retirement." He retains his team president title, but the International League club will now be led on a day-to-day basis by general manager Randy Wehofer. Thus marks a new and presumably less hectic chapter in Bernabe's career, which started at the 1983 Baseball Winter Meetings in Nashville, Tenn. "I was from Des Moines and I knew the [Iowa Cubs] owners. They didn't know me," said Bernabe, speaking with me at Principal Park earlier this season. "They were coming out of the [Gaylord Opryland] Jack Daniels Bar and I was walking in. I introduced myself, said 'I'm looking for a job.'" Ken Grandquist, who owned the team until his death in 1999, gave him one. Bernabe said that it "worked out really good. I could live with my dad and save some rent money, and [Grandquist] paid me $300 a month." |
Bernabe quickly worked his way up the ranks, becoming director of operations and then, in November of 1986, general manager. The I-Cubs, and Minor League Baseball in general, operated differently in those days. The front office consisted of just five full-time employees, working out of Sec Taylor Stadium. This facility, constructed in 1947, had fallen into a severe state of disrepair by the time Bernabe arrived. "Every once in a while I get somebody that’ll say, 'Don't you just kind of miss the old Sec Taylor Stadium?'" said Bernabe. "I just emphatically say, 'Hell no.' I couldn't get out of it fast enough. There was no real qualified groundskeeper at the time, so we were doing everything -- cooking hot dogs to washing the umpire's towels to dragging the diamond to cleaning the park to selling the tickets. … Even in the smallest markets and in the smallest operations, you couldn't get away with that now. The business of the game is just way too big." |
The I-Cubs' operation grew a lot bigger during the '91-92 offseason. Sec Taylor Stadium was torn down and replaced with Principal Park at the same location, in downtown Des Moines at the confluence of the Des Moines and Raccoon Rivers. "We knocked the old one down and built a new one in 208 days, and that was in the dead of winter in Des Moines, Iowa. Included 10 days of asbestos removal on top of that," said Bernabe. "Earl Santee was the principal architect of HOK, [now] Populous, and he always hated it when he heard me touting that fact. … Because he had to listen to everybody feel like they could do it in their market as well. But, I mean, we were battling. It was bolting seats and doing all we could to get ready to go for April 16, and we made it. It was a crummy night and was raining. We had 11,000 people in the ballpark, and it was the new jewel." |
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Hard as it is to believe, that jewel is now the oldest of Triple-A baseball's 30 ballparks. "I think that would be more surreal if the park was in worse shape than it's in," said Bernabe. "Our partnership with the city is just as important as our partnership with the [Chicago] Cubs, and that's all related to how [Principal Park] has held up for being 35 years old." |
After Grandquist's death in April of '99, Bernabe became part of a new I-Cubs ownership group led by attorney and journalist Michael Gartner. The team was sold to Diamond Baseball Holdings (DBH) in 2021, the first entry in a portfolio that now includes 45 teams. Bernabe will remain a consultant for DBH, still working out of Principal Park. After all these years, it's hard to walk away from the game entirely. "The thing I like most about what I do is the noise,” he said. "When everybody's having a good time. You know, we hit a walk-off home run, or after the fireworks are finished, or somebody's hit a triple in the corner. It's the noise that goes with all that. I thrive on it." |
SORRY, GOOSE, BUT IT'S TIME TO BUZZ THE TOWER |
In case you missed it, or in case you need a refresher: Minor League Baseball's newest team was unveiled to the masses last Thursday evening. The Ontario Tower Buzzers will debut in 2026, playing in the California League as the Single-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Tower Buzzers’ aviation-themed, "Top Gun"-referencing identity is complemented by the name of their ballpark, ONT Field. This is the three-letter code for the Ontario International Airport. READ ABOUT THE ONTARIO TOWER BUZZERS AND THE STORY BEHIND THE NAME HERE |
THIRD ANNUAL MiLB AWARDS SHOW SET TO AIR SEPT. 29 |
That’s right, folks, the 2025 MiLB Awards Show airs on MLB Network on Sept. 29 at 8 p.m. ET. Most of the awards are related to on-field performance, but I will be paying special attention to the "Best New Alternate Identity" category. Will anyone be able to beat the heretofore unstoppable juggernaut that are the Erie Moon Mammoths? Oh, and yours truly (a.k.a. me) will be a part of the broadcast as well! Tune in, won’t ya? |
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SAYING HELLO -- AND GOODBYE -- TO RICHMOND'S THE DIAMOND |
The Diamond, Richmond's venerable Minor League ballpark, hosted its first game on April 17, 1985 and its final game on Sept. 14 of this season. Two milestones, separated by four decades, and broadcaster Dan Lovallo was on the call for both. He was there to say hello and he was there to say goodbye. READ ABOUT DAN LOVALLO'S UNIQUE LINK TO THE DIAMOND HERE (And while you’re at it, check out my Instagram tribute to Richmond baseball fan Ed "Chappy" Loyd HERE) |
LISTEN UP: PODCAST EXPLORES BUFFALO'S "NATURAL" CONNECTION |
On last week's episode of The Show Before the Show podcast, Sam Dykstra and I spoke with Buffalo Bisons president Mike Buczkowski about his team's association with the classic baseball film "The Natural." Please lend us your ears, and RIP Robert Redford. LISTEN TO LAST WEEK'S THE SHOW BEFORE THE SHOW EPISODE HERE |
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SO LONG, FAREWELL, UNTIL WE MEET AGAIN |
As you can see, the end of the season does not mean an end of things to write about. Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more ballpark reports over the course of the offseason. If you enjoy this newsletter then please tell everyone in your orbit to subscribe. Also, please follow me on Instagram (@thebensbiz) and X (@bensbiz). I appreciate you. |
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