Colorado Springs Sky Sox Founded in 1988 Colorado Springs, Colorado |
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Class-level | |||||
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Current | Triple-A (1988–present) | ||||
Minor league affiliations | |||||
League | Pacific Coast League (1988–present) | ||||
Conference | American Conference | ||||
Division | Northern Division | ||||
Major league affiliations | |||||
Current | Milwaukee Brewers (2015–present) | ||||
Previous |
Colorado Rockies (1993–2014) Cleveland Indians (1988–1992) |
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Minor league titles | |||||
League titles (2) |
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Division titles (2) |
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Team data | |||||
Nickname | Colorado Springs Sky Sox (1988–present) | ||||
Colors | Red, white, navy blue |
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Mascot | Sox the Fox | ||||
Ballpark | Security Service Field (1988–present) | ||||
Previous parks
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Spurgeon Stadium (1988) | ||||
Owner(s)/
Operator(s) |
Elmore Sports Group | ||||
Manager | Rick Sweet | ||||
General Manager | Tony Ensor |
The Colorado Springs Sky Sox are a minor league baseball team in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The team's colors are red and blue. The team plays in the Pacific Coast League (PCL) and is the Triple-A affiliate of the major league Milwaukee Brewers. The Sky Sox won the PCL title in 1992 and again in 1995.
Originally, the Colorado Springs Sky Sox were a Class A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox in the Western League from 1950–1958, when the league folded. The Sky Sox's nickname originated with their affiliation with the White Sox.
The Pikes Peak region was without professional baseball for 30 years until 1988, when the Hawaii Islanders of the PCL relocated to Colorado Springs and became the second incarnation of the Sky Sox. From 1988–1992 the Sky Sox were the Triple-A affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. When Denver was awarded a major league franchise for the 1993 season, the new Colorado Rockies arranged for the Sky Sox to become their top farm team.
During their first season, the Sky Sox moved from Spurgeon Stadium (in Memorial Park) to the brand new Sky Sox Stadium, now known as Security Service Field. The ballpark, on the eastern edge of Colorado Springs, originally cost $3.7 million to build and seats 8,500 spectators. In recent years, the Sky Sox have invested over $8 million on ballpark renovations which included a new video scoreboard, redesigned entrance plaza, new picnic facility and banquet hall. It is the highest professional ballpark in the United States: its natural grass field sits at 6,531 feet (1,991 m) above sea level.