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Bernie Brewer 4

A photo of Bernie Brewer.

This is a list of current and former Major League Baseball mascots, sorted alphabetically.

The tradition in the Major League Baseball mascot began with Mr. Met, introduced for the New York Mets when Shea Stadium opened in 1964. Although some mascots came and went over time, the popularity of mascots skyrocketed when The San Diego Chicken started independently making appearances at San Diego Padres games in 1977. Philadelphia Phillies management felt they needed a mascot similar to the Chicken, so they debuted the Phillie Phanatic in 1978.

Today, all but three major-league teams have mascots (Angels, Dodgers and Yankees). Three team mascots — the Phillie Phanatic, Mr. Met, and Slider (Cleveland Indians) — have been inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame. Several others have been nominated since the Hall's creation in 2005.

Current mascots[]

The Bird (Baltimore)[]

File:PYLrulz.jpg

The Baltimore Orioles mascot, The Bird, with a rival fan

The Oriole is the official mascot of the Baltimore Orioles and is a cartoon version of the bird of the same name. The Bird was "hatched" on April 6, 1979 out of a giant egg at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore. According to Orioles.com, The Bird's favorite foods are bird seed and the Maryland Crab Cake.

Dinger (Colorado)[]

File:Rockiesdinger.JPG

Dinger at Coors Field.

Dinger is the official mascot of the Colorado Rockies. He is an anthropomorphic purple triceratops. The choice of a dinosaur, specifically this type, was inspired by the discovery of a number of dinosaur fossils—most notably a Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSmidTemplate:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/mid, Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSonTemplate:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/on triceratops skull—at Coors Field during its construction. His name "Dinger" is one of many slang terms for a home run.

The Rockies triceratops is often seen on the field before and after the game and roaming around the stadium during the game. He has been the Colorado Rockies biggest fan since he first hatched from his egg at Mile High Stadium on April 16, 1994 [1]. Dinger works year-round promoting physical fitness and literacy for thousands of elementary school students in the Rocky Mountain Region. He acts out his own Dinger Story for the kids. He also makes appearances at The Children's Hospital and Denver Health. He makes appearances at Rockies events including the 5K Home Run, and the Rockies Rookies Kids Fan Club.[2]

Fredbird (St. Louis)[]

Main article: Fredbird
File:Fredbird.jpg

Fredbird entertaining the crowd between innings during a Cardinals game at Busch Stadium.

Fredbird is the official mascot for the St. Louis Cardinals. He is an anthropomorphic cardinal wearing the team's uniform. A person dressed up as Fredbird can often be found entertaining young children during baseball games at Busch Stadium. His name is derived from "Redbird", a synonym for the cardinal bird and for the Cardinals themselves.

Fredbird was introduced in 1979 by the Cardinals, then owned by Anheuser-Busch, to entertain younger fans at the games. He quickly became popular with fans for his dancing, habit of "beaking" the heads of supporters, and for throwing t-shirts into the stands. In later years, he has been joined by "Team Fredbird", a group of young women employed by the club who help him with his t-shirt toss and occasionally in other duties. He is one of baseball's best-known mascots, and he makes hundreds of appearances year-round in the St. Louis area.

Fredbird

Gapper (Cincinnati)[]

File:Gapper.jpg

Gapper in 2005 signing a Gapper doll for a fan.

See also: #Mr. Redlegs (Cincinnati) and #Rosie Red (Cincinnati)

Gapper is one of the current mascots for the Cincinnati Reds. He was first introduced as the furry companion to Mr. Red, the long-time mascot in the winter of 2002 as the franchise was preparing to move to their new home, Great American Ball Park. The mascot was created by David Raymond's Raymond Entertainment Group, the founder being the man inside the Phillie Phanatic costume from 1973 to 1993. A young fan won two season tickets for submitting the winning name; he is named after the "gap" in the stands in the seats of Great American, which provides a view into and out of the stadium. The term "gapper" is also a slang phrase for a batted ball which falls into the "gap" between outfielders (generally a ball hit to either left-center or right-center field which rolls to the fence).

Gapper

Homer (Atlanta)[]

Homer is the mascot of the Atlanta Braves. He has a baseball shaped head, and looks a little like Mr. Met. Before having the baseball head however, Homer was the personification of the old "Screaming Warrior" logo the Braves used before dropping it in 1988.

Homer's full name is Homer the Brave. This is meant to sound like "home of the brave", the last words of the National Anthem.

Homer

Junction Jack (Houston)[]

File:Jack, Jesse, Julie.JPG

Junction Jack alongside his family, Cousin Jesse and Junction Julie.

Junction Jack has been the mascot character for the Houston Astros since March 2000. He is a Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSmidTemplate:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/mid rabbit dressed as a railroad engineer. Other characters include Junction Julie and Junction Jesse. He walks around Minute Maid Park, greeting visitors, shaking hands, and posing for pictures, and he also greets young kids and gives them hugs and makes them happy.

Outside of the stadium he will generally attend Astros-related promotional events, as well as charities.

Junction Jack replaced Orbit when the team moved from the Astrodome to Minute Maid Park. The new stadium was originally called "The Ballpark at Union Station" because it was built on the site of the historic railway station in downtown Houston. In keeping with this new theme for the Astros, Orbit was replaced by the engineer. The character was designed by Logan Goodson and named by Duone Byars, both former Astros employees.

Junior (Toronto)[]

Junior is the younger brother of Ace. He made his mascot debut in 2011. He is half the size of Ace so he wears the number 1/2. He only appears on Jr.Jays Saturdays. In the game he and Ace stand in two different asiles and they run in slow motion and hu (Boston)

Wally the Green Monster[]

Lou Seal (San Francisco)[]

Lou seal giants mascot

Lou Seal has served as mascot of the San Francisco Giants since 1996.

Lou Seal is the official mascot of the San Francisco Giants. "Born" on July 25, 1996, Luigi Francisco Seal has been a regular part of the Giants baseball home games and events around San Francisco, and the United States. The name is a play on the name "Lucille." Todd Schwenk, an Oakland Athletics Fan, named the mascot in a KNBR Sports Radio phone-in contest. Schwenk named Lou for the Seals always hanging out on the wharfs at Fisherman's Wharf. It also refers to the San Francisco Seals, the baseball club which was a mainstay of the Pacific Coast League from 1903 until 1957.

Mariner Moose (Seattle)[]

Main article: Mariner Moose

The Mariner Moose is the mascot of the Seattle Mariners. In 1990, a contest for children 14 and under was held to select a mascot, after 2500 entries the club chose the "Mariner Moose" The Moose made his debut on April 13, 1990 dancing on the field at the Kingdome. During the 1995 American League Division Series between the M's and the New York Yankees, the Moose gained national attention when he broke his ankle crashing into the outfield wall at the Kingdome while being towed on inline skates behind an ATV in the outfield. Inline skating behind an ATV would continue to be a fan favorite until 1999, when the team moved to Safeco Field and a natural grass playing surface. Since then, the Moose has become quite adept at driving his own ATV around Safeco Field's warning track while performing various tricks and having water coolers emptied on him by bullpen pitchers.

The Moose makes several hundred appearances in the community each year in addition to Mariners home games, at everything from hospitals to wedding receptions. The Mariner Moose was featured on the ballot for the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2006 and 2007. He also nearly ran over Coco Crisp with his ATV in 2007, raising the ire of Red Sox pitching coach John Farrell.

Mr. Met (New York Mets)[]

Main article: Mr. Met

Mr. Met is the official mascot of the New York Mets. He is a baseball-headed humanoid being who wears a Mets cap and uniform. He can be seen at Citi Field (and previously at Shea Stadium) during Mets home games. He also has appeared in several commercials as part of ESPN's This is SportsCenter campaign, and was selected in 2007 into the Mascot Hall of Fame.

Mr. Redlegs (Cincinnati)[]

See also: #Gapper (Cincinnati) and #Rosie Red (Cincinnati)

Mr. Redlegs is a mascot of the Cincinnati Reds. He was reintroduced in 2007 to play a supporting role, along with Mr. Red. Mr. Redlegs appeared as a patch on the Reds' uniforms for two seasons in the 1950s (the team briefly assumed the nickname as a response to the second red scare). In 2008, Mr. Redlegs gained national notoriety by falling off of an ATV during pre-game antics. This caused the large, baseball-shaped head to fall off of the Mr. Redlegs costume, exposing the head of the person inside the costume. He was seen a few days later wearing a neck brace as a joke.

Paws (Detroit)[]

Main article: Paws (mascot)

Paws is the mascot of the Detroit Tigers. He is a Tiger.

Phillie Phanatic (Philadelphia)[]

File:Phillies Phanatic.jpg

The Phillie Phanatic is the official mascot of the Philadelphia Phillies

Main article: Phillie Phanatic

Phillie Phanatic is the official mascot of the Philadelphia Phillies. He is a fat furry green creature with a cylindrical beak containing a tongue that sticks out. He was created by Harrison/Erickson, who thought that the team needed a mascot similar to The San Diego Chicken. The character is named for the fanatical fans of the team and, according to current owner and former team vice president, Bill Giles, was to bring more families to Veterans Stadium, the Phillies ballpark at the time. He can be seen riding around on an ATV at home games.

Pirate Parrot (Pittsburgh)[]

Main article: Pirate Parrot

The Pirate Parrot is the mascot of the Pittsburgh Pirates, debuting in 1979. He is a large green parrot who wears a Pirates jersey and cap. The character of a parrot was derived from the classic story Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson, most notably the one owned by Long John Silver named "Captain Flint". He is often seen dancing on the dugouts and sitting on some fans; not to mention shaking his large green belly.

The original Pirate Parrot, Kevin Koch, was a key contributor to the Pittsburgh drug trials, buying cocaine and introducing it to several players, and even going as far as introducing the players to the drug dealers he bought the cocaine from. The Bucs kept the Pirate Parrot mascot after Koch's role as the Pirate Parrot ended due to the drug trials.

Great Pierogi Race (Pittsburgh)[]

Main article: Great Pierogi Race
File:Pierogie race august 2006.jpg

A Pierogi Race and the Pirate Parrot.

The Great Pierogi Race is a promotion between innings during Pittsburgh Pirates baseball games that features four contestants racing in giant pierogies costumes: Jalapeño Hannah (green hat), Cheese Chester (yellow), Sauerkraut Saul (red) and Oliver Onion (purple). It was inspired by the Milwaukee Brewers' Sausage Race.

Captain Jolly Roger (Pittsburgh)[]

Captain Jolly Roger serves as a second mascot for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He is a cartoon version of a pirate, dressed in a captain's outfit. The name was derived from the flag that is flown by pirates, the Jolly Roger.

The Presidents (Washington)[]

Main article: Presidents Race

The Washington Nationals have Presidential races during their games. The four Presidents are the ones on Mount Rushmore: George Washington; Thomas Jefferson; Abraham Lincoln; and Teddy Roosevelt. Each has a uniform number (George - 1; Tom - 3; Abe - 16; Teddy - 26) corresponding to their place in the order in which they held the office. They have become an instant success and make multiple public appearances, notably Abe Lincoln on The Illinois float for President Obama inauguration parade. A running gag with the Presidents is that Teddy Roosevelt can never win a race.

Rangers Captain (Texas)[]

File:Rangerscaptain.jpg

Rangers Captain is the mascot of the Texas Rangers.

Rangers Captain is the mascot for the Texas Rangers. Introduced in 2002, he is a palomino-style horse, dressed in the team's uniform. He wears the uniform number "72" in honor of 1972, the year the Rangers relocated to the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex.

The mascot also has multiple uniforms to match each of the variants the team has. Rangers Captain's chosen uniform for the game matches the uniform choice made by the team for that particular game. Captain's outfits sometimes match a theme the team is promoting; on Apr 24, 2010, he was dressed up like Elvis as part of an Elvis Presley themed night.

Raymond (Tampa Bay)[]

File:RaymondTampaBayDevilRaysMascotSeptember2007.jpg

Raymond, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays mascot in September 2007.

Raymond is the mascot of the Tampa Bay Rays.[1] Raymond is a furry blue creature wearing a large pair of sneakers and a backwards baseball cap, completed with a Rays jersey. He is described officially as a "seadog." Raymond was awarded an honorable mention in the GameOps.com Best Mascot contest for 2006.[2]

Rosie Red (Cincinnati)[]

See also: #Gapper (Cincinnati) and #Mr. Redlegs (Cincinnati)

Rosie Red is the female mascot of the Cincinnati Reds. She was introduced in August 2008 as the new companion of Gapper and Mr. Redlegs, and her name comes from a female fan who became famous in 1940 for cheering for the team, and is also derived from a female fan group founded to prevent the team from moving from Cincinnati in 1963 and is a philanthropic group associated with the team. The official group name comes from the acronym of "Rooters Organized to Stimulate Interest and Enthuiasm in the Cincinnati Reds."

The Sausages (Milwaukee)[]

Main article: Sausage Race

The sausages are unofficial mascots of the Milwaukee Brewers. They are stylized in the appearance of sausages from around the world. When they were first debuted in the mid 80's there were only three the German Bratwurst, The Polish Kielbasa, and The Italian Sausage. In the mid 90's the Hot Dog became a racer. In 2006 a fifth sausage was debuted, The Spanish Chorizo. They are a favorite of fans and make sports highlights reels occasionally.

Screech (Washington)[]

File:Screech standing.jpg

Screech, the Washington Nationals mascot before his 2009 growth spurt.

Main article: Screech (mascot)

Screech is the mascot of the Washington Nationals. He is a bald eagle who wears the home cap and jersey of the team. He was "hatched" on April 17, 2005 at the "Kids Opening Day" promotion at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium. A nine-year-old fourth grade student in Washington, Glenda Gutierrez, designed the mascot and won a contest sponsored by the team, explaining that it was "strong and eats almost everything." A new "matured" edition of the mascot was unveiled March 2, 2009. The Springfield Falcons of the American Hockey League also have a mascot named Screech.

Slider (Cleveland)[]

Slider is the mascot for the Cleveland Indians. He is a large, furry fuchsia-colored creature. He has a large yellow nose and shaggy yellow eyebrows.[3] He was best known for an injury during the 1995 American League Championship Series when he fell six feet off an outfield wall and tore knee ligaments. He was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2008.

Sluggerrr (Kansas City)[]

Sluggerrr is the official mascot of the Kansas City Royals. This crown-wearing lion made his debut On April 5, 1996. The word slugger also refers to a powerful batter with a high percentage of extra base hits.

Southpaw (Chicago White Sox)[]

File:Southpaw.jpg

Southpaw, the mascot of the Chicago White Sox

Southpaw is the mascot of the Chicago White Sox. His name is a reference to a left-hand pitcher and is also a reference to Chicago's South Side, where the team plays. He was on a float for Illinois at Barack Obama's inauguration, along with the Washington Nationals racing president representation of Abraham Lincoln.

Stomper (Oakland)[]

Stomper is the mascot of the Oakland Athletics. An elephant adorned with an A's uniform of the number 00. The use of an elephant to symbolize the Athletics dates from the early years of the franchise, when a group of Philadelphia businessmen, headed by industrialist Benjamin Shibe, became the team's first owners. When asked to comment, John McGraw, manager of the New York Giants of the rival National League said something to the effect that "Shibe had bought himself a white elephant." In response, A's manager (and future owner) Connie Mack selected the elephant as the team symbol and mascot. From time to time the elephant has appeared on the Athletic uniform, including 1988 to present.

In 1997, the A's created a new character and called him Stomper. Stomper has performed at several Major League Baseball All-Star Games, and has appeared in a Public Service Announcement against chewing tobacco.

Swinging Friar (San Diego)[]

File:Swinging friar san diego padres mascot.jpg

The Swinging Friar is the mascot for the San Diego Padres.

The Swinging Friar is the mascot of the San Diego Padres.

The Swinging Friar has been a mascot with the team as early as 1958, when the Padres were still a member of the Pacific Coast League, a minor league baseball organization. He was named after Spanish missionaries settled by Franciscan friars, who were prominent figures when the city of San Diego was founded centuries ago. The Padres joined Major League Baseball in 1969 and kept the popular mascot. He was even on the team emblem until 1984. Wanting a more "professional" image, the owners introduced a more corporate logo. In 1996, he was brought back as a sleeve patch for the club's blue alternate jerseys, and though the team has changed its logo and colors since then, the Friar remains there to this day.

The Swinging Friar is a cartoon-like character, pudgy, balding and always smiling. He is dressed as a friar with a tonsure, sandals, a dark hooded cloak, and a rope around the waist. He swings a baseball bat; but reportedly, in some years he swings left-handed, in other years he swings right-handed, he may be ambidextrous, or even a switch hitter. On home game Sundays, the Friar wears a special camouflage cloak as the team honors the military background of San Diego with similar uniforms.

Originally, The Swinging Friar was represented at the ballpark as a real man wearing a friar outfit. Since his return, the character has been a full mascot costume.

Some in the past have confused The Famous Chicken as the mascot of the Padres. Although he does make appearances occasionally at San Diego sporting events, he has never been the official mascot of any San Diego sports team.

T. C. Bear (Minnesota)[]

T. C. Bear is the mascot for the Minnesota Twins. He was first introduced to Minnesota on April 3, 2000. T. C. is loosely modeled after the Hamm's Beer Bear, a mascot used in advertisements for Hamm's Brewery, an early sponsor for the Twins. The "T. C." stands for the "Twin Cities", Minneapolis and St. Paul.[4]

Wally the Green Monster (Boston)[]

File:Wally the green monster.jpg

Wally the Green Monster

Main article: Wally the Green Monster

Wally the Green Monster is the official mascot for the Boston Red Sox. His name is derived from the Green Monster nickname of the Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSonTemplate:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/on wall in left field at Fenway Park. Wally debuted in 1997 to the chagrin of many older Red Sox fans. Although he was a hit with children, the older fans did not immediately adopt him as part of the franchise.

According to the Red Sox promotions department, Wally was a huge Red Sox fan who decided to move inside the left field wall of Fenway Park, since it "eats up" hits that would easily be home runs at other parks, in 1947. Apparently, he was very shy and lived the life of a hermit for 50 years. On the 50th anniversary of the Green Monster being painted green in 1997, he came out of the manual scoreboard and has been interacting with players and fans ever since.[5] Thanks to former Red Sox second baseman and current broadcaster Jerry Remy, some older fans have embraced him.

Former mascots[]

This is a list of former Major League Baseball mascots. Some of these mascots may still be used, but are not considered "official" mascots.

BJ Birdie[]

BJ Birdie served as the official mascot for the Toronto Blue Jays from 1979 to 1999.[6] He was ejected from a game in 1993 for "showing up" the umpire, after making gestures the umpire found offensive.[7][8] He was replaced in 1999 with Ace and Diamond. BJ was created and played by the same person, Kevin Shanahan, for his entire 20 year career as the Jays' mascot. Shanahan lost 3 toes on his left foot in an automobile accident during the 1991 off season, but managed to return as the Jays mascot, missing only the first home game of the season.

Bonnie Brewer[]

Bonnie Brewer is a former official mascot for the Milwaukee Brewers, appearing at Milwaukee County Stadium from 1973 to 1979. Bonnie was portrayed as a young blonde woman in a gold blouse and short blue lederhosen, wearing a baseball cap and frequently carrying a blue-and-gold broom which she would use to sweep the bases.

Bonnie was first introduced as the female companion to the Brewers' mascot Bernie Brewer. Bernie and Bonnie were created by then-team vice president Dick Hackett as part of an effort to create a lively atmosphere at County Stadium, which also included hiring organist Frank Charles to play a Wurlitzer during the games. As Hackett remembers it, Bernie and Bonnie were added over the objections of team owner Bud Selig.

Bonnie was noted mainly for her colorful antics during the seventh-inning stretch. As the grounds crew swept the infield, Bonnie wielded her signature broom, sweeping off each base in turn. After sweeping third base, she would playfully swat the opposing team's third-base coach on the backside with her broom, following it up with a kiss on his cheek.

Bonnie was discontinued after the 1979 season, although no clear reason has ever been given for her "firing". Bernie Brewer was discontinued as a mascot in 1984, although he was brought back as a costumed mascot in 1993, complete with full-body costume and large foam head. Bonnie Brewer returned as part of the nostalgia-heavy final home stand at County Stadium, September 18–28, 2000. anne haines was the last bonnie brewer Template:As of, Bonnie is part of the Brewers' "Retro Fridays" promotions at Miller Park, incorporating the traditional base sweeping as well as dancing with Bernie on Bernie's Dugout during the fans' singing of The Beer Barrel Polka in the seventh inning stretch.

Charlie-O[]

Main article: Charlie-O

Charlie-O the Mule was the mascot used by the Kansas City Athletics and Oakland A's from 1963 to 1976. The mule was named after their colorful owner at that time, Charles O. Finley.

When the A's moved to then heavily Democratic Missouri, where the official state animal is the mule, Warren Hearnes gave a mule to Finley for his barnyard menagerie at Municipal Stadium which also include sheep and goats that scampered up the hill behind right field.[9] The Municipal Stadium menagerie also included Warpaint, the horse mascot of the Kansas City Chiefs. As questions swirled about whether Finley would be loyal to Missouri, he embraced the mule and removed the elephant from the A's logo and changed the A's colors from blue, red and white to green, gold, and white.

Finley took the sorrel Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSmidTemplate:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/mid mule around the country, walking him into cocktail parties and hotel lobbies, and on one occasion even into the press room after a large feeding to annoy reporters.

Chester Charge[]

In April 1977 the Houston Astros introduced their very first mascot, Chester Charge. Chester Charge was a 45 pound costume of a cartoon Texas cavalry soldier on a horse. Chester appeared on the field at the beginning of each home game, during the seventh inning stretch and then ran around the bases at the conclusion of each win. At the blast of a bugle, the scoreboard would light up and the audience would yell, “Charge!” The first Chester Charge was played by Steve Ross who was then an 18-year-old Senior High School student. The creation of Chester Charge and the (incredible for its day) scoreboard graphics were created by Ed Henderson.

Chief Noc-A-Homa[]

Main article: Chief Noc-A-Homa

Chief Noc-A-Homa was the original mascot of the Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves from 1950s until 1986. The name was used for the "screaming Indian" sleeve patch worn on Braves jerseys. From at least the early 1960s, while still in Milwaukee County Stadium, until the early 1980s at Atlanta's Fulton County Stadium, this mascot "lived" in a tipi in an unoccupied section of the bleacher seats.

Crazy Crab[]

The Crazy Crab was a mascot of the San Francisco Giants for the 1984 season. As opposed to other mascots, Crazy Crab was meant as an "anti-mascot", satirizing on the mascot craze that was going on at the time. Fans were encouraged to boo the mascot (played by actor Wayne Doba) and manager Frank Robinson appeared in a commercial with the crustacean where Robinson was restrained from attacking him. This encouragement may have worked too well, as Giants fans regularly threw various dangerous objects at Crazy Crab, including beer bottles and batteries, and Crazy Crab's suit had to be reinforced with a fiberglass shell for protection.[10] The crab was so hated, players on both the Giants and even the opposition would throw rosin bags and other objects at the mascot. Doba sued the San Diego Padres after two of their players tackled him, causing injuries. The mascot lasted only one year and the Giants would not have another mascot until Lou Seal in 1997. Crazy Crab has regained popularity in recent years. The crab returned for the last game at Candlestick Park that the Giants played in 1999, and a bobblehead was given away with its likeness in 2008 as the franchise celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in the Bay Area. On July 18, 2008, the Giants held a crazy crab promotion. There is even a website devoted to bringing back the Crazy Crab called Rehab The Crab.[11]

Dandy[]

Main article: Dandy (mascot)

Dandy was a short-lived mascot of the New York Yankees. He was a large pinstriped bird that sported a Yankees hat. He had a mustache that gave him an appearance similar to that of former Yankee pitcher Sparky Lyle. His name was a play on the classic American folk song "Yankee Doodle Dandy". He appeared at the start of the 1980 season and was so unpopular that he was quickly canceled. Dandy was beaten up by fans who didn't want a mascot, and quit, leading to the elimination of the character as the Yankees chose not to replace him.

Along with this experiment, the Yankees briefly had mascots resembling ballpark food (plus Yankees hats on top) during the mid-1990s. Outside of these two occasions, the Yankees have not had an official mascot or cheerleading squad roam the stands or perform on the field, although the late Freddy Schuman has served as an unofficial promoter in the stands for decades, and a squirrel appearing on the field has brought inspiration as a mascot for the team.

Diamond[]

Diamond was Ace's girlfriend. She was the Toronto Blue Jays Mascot for 4 years from 2001 to 2004.

General Admission[]

General Admission (a pun on the unreserved $4 seating section of the Astrodome) was a mascot for the Houston Astros in the mid to late 1990s. He was played by a middle aged white male and wore a traditional U.S. Cavalry uniform complete with gold stars he would affix to his uniform for every Astros home run hit in the Dome. Whenever an Astro hit a home run The General would fire off a cannon from his outfield platform that would often scare those seated near him. He was killed off at the end of the 1999 season when the Astros main mascot, Orbit, had him zapped by an alien ray gun on the penultimate game of the regular season.

Lady Met[]

Lady Met, or Mrs. Met, is the female version of Mr. Met, the mascot of the New York Mets. She is a baseball-headed humanoid being, wears an orange skirt and white blouse, and has orange hair in a bob, topped off with a Mets baseball cap.

Lady Met has not appeared at games since the 1970s. However, she did appear with Mr. Met in a 2003 "This is SportsCenter" commercial.

Mettle the Mule[]

Mettle the Mule was a mascot of the New York Mets for a short time starting in 1976.[12] Originally named Arthur, Mettle was renamed as a result of a fan contest. Mettle was kept in a pen near the Met's bullpen in the right field of Shea Stadium.[13]

Mr. Red[]

File:Mr Red.jpg

Mr. Red in 2005

Main article: Mr. Red

Mr. Red was the first mascot of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team He was a humanoid figure dressed in a Reds uniform, with an oversized baseball for a head.

Mr. Red made his first appearance on a Reds uniform as a sleeve patch in 1955. The patch featured Mr. Red's head, clad in an old-fashioned white pillbox baseball cap with red stripes. The following season, 1956, saw the Reds adopt sleeveless jerseys, and Mr. Red was eliminated from the home uniform. He was moved to the left breast of the road uniform, and remained there for one season before being eliminated entirely. In 1999, the Reds re-designed their uniform and "Mr. Red" was reintroduced as a sleeve patch on the undershirt. A human version of the mascot didn't appear until the early 1980s. The costumed mascot disappeared in the 1980s but was reintroduced in 1997. The humanoid Mr. Red retired in 2007 leaving Gapper and Mr. Redlegs to take his place.

Orbit[]

Main article: Orbit (mascot)

Orbit was the mascot of the Houston Astros while they were in the Astrodome. When the team moved to Minute Maid Park, they adopted a new mascot, Junction Jack. Orbit represented a green space alien with antennae, in keeping with the Space City theme of the city of Houston.

Philadelphia Phil and Philadelphia Phillis[]

Philadelphia Phil and Philadelphia Phillis served as mascots for the Phillies during the 1970s (1971–79). Their costumes invoked the city's revolutionary spirit from 1776. The pair reappeared with their replacement—the Phanatic—as the Phillies celebrated their final year at Veterans Stadium in 2003, including the final opening day and final game.

Rally[]

Rally was one of the Atlanta Braves mascots. He was a bear-like mascot and looked like Wally the Green Monster. He does not exist now.

Ribbie and Roobarb[]

Ribbie and Roobarb were a pair of mascots used by the Chicago White Sox from 1981 to 1988 at Comiskey Park. After the Sox were sold in 1981 by Bill Veeck to an ownership group headed by Jerry Reinsdorf and Eddie Einhorn, the new owners, who were eager to draw on the 1970s popularity of such mascots as The San Diego Chicken, hired the design firm responsible for creating the Phillie Phanatic to create a new mascot for the Sox.

They debuted the pair of furry mascots in September 1981, but the fans never accepted the two, ridiculing them throughout their tenure with the team—both because of their ludicrous appearance, which had no apparent connection with the team, and also because they were seen as an attempt to eliminate Andy the Clown, who had performed unofficially at Sox games since 1960. "Rhubarb" is longtime baseball slang for a heated on-field argument; Ribbie comes from the acronym RBI, for runs batted in. Often reports will say ribbie instead of RBI to describe it.

For most of the 1980s, the patrons at Comiskey Park ... were asked to endure the 'antics' of baseball's least appealing mascots, Ribbie and Roobarb. One looked like the dim-witted son of Oscar the Grouch, the other like a chartreuse anteater with a genetic flaw. [14]

After thirteen seasons without a mascot, the ChiSox introduced a new mascot, Southpaw, in 2003.

Rootin' Tootin' Ranger[]

Rootin' Tootin' Ranger is a mascot used by the Texas Rangers briefly in the 70's. He resembled the cartoon character Yosemite Sam as well as The Lone Ranger somewhat.[15] The person portraying the mascot fainted on the first day of the mascot's existence due to heat exhaustion and the mascot was retired immediately thereafter. The Rangers would not have a mascot for nearly 30 years until the 2002 debut of Rangers Captain, the current mascot.

Souki[]

Souki was the mascot of the Montreal Expos, for only one season (1978), a figure in an Expos uniform with a giant baseball for a head. It was a variation of the popular mascot of the New York Mets called Mr. Met, but with one difference. The Expos' Mr. Met, called Souki, had odd antennas sticking out the sides of his head. He looked like something from outer space and the kids were afraid of him. During a game in late fall, a father attacked Souki after his child was afraid of him (and after a loss).

Twinkie the Loon[]

Twinkie was used by the Minnesota Twins for two seasons 1980 and 1981.

Youppi[]

Main article: Youppi

Youppi was the mascot of the Montreal Expos, before the franchise moved to Washington as the Washington Nationals. He is an orange furry creature with a white face originally leased in 1979 and designed by Bonnie Erickson, formerly a designer for some of Jim Henson's Muppets characters. Youppi! was so named resembling the phrase Yippee! or Hooray! in French. Youppi! was the first mascot to be thrown out of a Major League Baseball game: on August 23, 1989, in the 11th inning, while atop the visitors' dugout, Youppi! took a running leap, landing hard and noisily on its roof, and then snuck into a front row seat. Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda complained to the umpires and Youppi! was ejected, though he later returned, confined to the home team's dugout roof. Youppi! was abandoned as a mascot after the Expos franchise moved to Washington in 2005, but was adopted by the NHL team Montreal Canadiens on September 16, 2005.

Teams without a mascot[]

The following MLB teams do not currently have a mascot:

Gallery[]

See also[]

Template:Commons category

  • Occurrence of Religious Symbolism in U.S. Sports Team Names and Mascots

References[]

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