Mercuries Tigers | |||
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League | Chinese Professional Baseball League | ||
Location | Taipei | ||
Ballpark | Taipei Municipal Baseball Stadium | ||
Year founded | 1989 | ||
League championships | 1990 1st Half | ||
Colors | Blue | ||
Uniforms | |||
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The Mercuries Tigers (三商虎) were a professional baseball team belonging to Taiwan's Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL) between 1990 and 1999.
The Tigers were owned and administered by the local Mercuries Corporation whose then chairman Chen He-dong (陳河東) was a classmate and a close friend of Brother Hotel and Brother Elephants's chairman Hung Teng-sheng (洪騰勝) in the National Taiwan University, and immediately promised to fulfill Hung's wishes to form a Taiwanese professional baseball league in 1988. This team was established accordingly in 1989 and took the now-demolished Taipei Municipal Baseball Stadium as its home throughout its history. Because the Mercuries Corporation itself was inexperienced in running sports clubs, in 1988 and 1989 it was mostly Hung Teng-sheng that built up the Tiger's roster as well as managing most business, with Chen He-dong sponsoring the necessary fund. This team therefore became the only one of the CPBL's founding teams without an amateur history: both Brother Elephants and Wei Chuan Dragons were original amateur teams, while the bulk of Uni-President Lions's players came from Taipower (台電).
With a strong initial roster, the Tigers won the first CPBL half-season championship in 1990, but ironically it was also the only one half-season championship it ever won throughout its history. Mainly due to the Mercuries Corporation's indifference and poor management, plus the team's lacking an amateur history which could have helped the unity among players, since the second half of 1990 this club had been marred by a chain of negative news including disunity, disobedience and factions among players and coaches[1]. This team was further widely suspected to be seriously involved in the first CPBL game fixing scandal, but did not come to light because the Tigers fired its involved players in advance in 1996[2].