Rice, Boggs & Mondor to be Inducted Into PawSox Hall of Fame

Thursday, July 07, 2016

 

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Jim Rice

The Pawtucket Red Sox have announced that Jim Rice, Wade Boggs and Ben Mondor will be inducted, as the inaugural class, to the Pawtucket Red Sox Hall of Fame on Friday, July 29. 

The ceremony will take place at approximately 6:30 p.m.  prior to the game against Scranton Wilkes-Barre, the Triple-A affiliate of the New York Yankees. 

The inductees were chosen this past March by a 15-person panel. 

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Jim Rice 

Rice is the only player over the last 44 years to win the International League Triple Crown, hitting .337 with 25 home runs and 93 RBI in only 117 games in 1974 for the PawSox. 

Rice came to the PawSox during the 1973 season and helped the team win the Governors' Cup Championship and Junior World Series title. He is Pawtucket's all-time hit leader with a .340 average.

Rice was promoted to Boston in August of 1974 and went on to have a Hall of Fame career, being inducted into Cooperstown in 2009. 

Ben Mondor 

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Ben Mondor

Mondor owned the Pawtucket Red Sox for 34 years before he passed away at the age of 85 in October of 2010. 

Mondor acquired the PawSox, then known as the Rhode Island Red Sox, in 1977 after retiring from the corporate business world. At the time, the organization was bankrupt and was deprived of its membership in pro baseball. 

Over the next 34 years, Mondor teamed up with current PawSox Vice Chairman Mike Tamburro, turned the team around, bringing in over 14 and a half million fans to home games under their leadership. 

Wade Boggs

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Wade Boggs

Boggs is the last PawSox to win the International League batting title when he hit .335 in 1981. Boggs played only one other season with the Pawsox, 1980, he hit .306 and lost the batting title by a point. 

In 1981 the PawSox played the longest game in professional baseball history. In  that game, Boggs had the RBI single in the bottom of the 21st inning to extend  the game, which Pawtucket would go on to win 3-2 in 33 innings. Boggs was inducted into the International League Hall of Fame in 2011. 

In his career with Boston, Boggs hit .338 in 11 seasons which is second to only Ted Williams. Boggs was inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2004 and the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2005. 

Pawtucket Red Sox 

The PawSox 2016 campaign is in full swing. Pawtucket is currently 45-41 overall and 8 games back of first place Scranton Wilkes-Barre in the International League North division. 

Click here for more. 

 

Related Slideshow: Greatest Moments in PawSox History

With the Pawtucket Red Sox sold and looking to leave Pawtucket, here is a look back at the some of the greatest moments in Pawtucket Red Sox history. 

See the slideshow below. 

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4th of July

McCoy Stadium fills up on every 4th of July for baseball and then one of the best fireworks shows in the state of Rhode Island. 

The PawSox put on several fireworks shows that go throughout fourth of July week and weekend depending on the team's schedule. 

Baseball and fireworks has become quite the family event over the years. 

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Mondor Gardens

In 2011, the Pawtucket Red Sox completed work on Mondor Gardens, a tribute to late owner Ben Mondor behind the left field fence. 

The garden features six miniature bronze statues of kids playing baseball along with park benches and handicap accessible area's. 

"Mondor Gardens adds a park-like setting to the exterior of McCoy where fans both young and old can sit and relax and enjoy thinking of tonight's game or memories of seasons gone by," said PawSox president Mike Tamburro at the time. 

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Move to AAA

The Pawtucket Red Sox moved from AA to AAA prior to the 1973 season. 

They have since stayed in AAA and have become one of the model franchises in the international league. 

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Community Work

The Pawtucket Red Sox have done great work in the community and in 2014 they were rewarded for it, winning the John Henry Moss Community service award. 

Over the last five years, the Pawsox Charitable Trust has donated more than $250,000 to important causes in the area and their Ticket Fundraiser Program has contributed over $200,000 to organizations like the American Parkinson's Disease Association. 

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Major League Stars

Throughout the history of the Pawtucket Red Sox, they have been able to develop great Major League players who have gone on to be successful in Boston or in other organizations in the Major Leagues.

The list of players is endless but here are a few of the names that came up through Pawtucket.

Wade Boggs, Carlton Fisk, Jim Rice, Jon Lester, Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis among others.  

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Ortiz Comes to Pawtucket

Boston Red Sox slugger David Ortiz has made a couple of rehab starts with the Pawtucket Red Sox and McCoy Stadium has been filled for each and everyone. 

Ortiz's last rehanb start with the Pawsox came in 2013 when he batted third as the DH in the PawSox lineup. Ortiz went 2-for-3 in the game and notched one RBI.  

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Perfect Games

There have been four perfect games in Pawtucket Red Sox 121 year history. 

The last one came in 2003 when Bronson Arroyo was perfect against the Buffalo Bison in a 7-0 PawSox Win. 

Arroyo threw 101 pitches and had nine strikeouts in the game.

Photo courtesy of Aaronstrout/ flickr

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Baseball Hall of Famers

Jim Rice, Wade Boggs and Carlton Fisk are among several former PawSox  players that have made it into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. 

Other PawSox members such as Ben Mondor, Joe Morgan, President Mike Tamburro along with Rice and Boggs have been inducted into the International League Hall of Fame. 

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Mike Tamburro

PawSox President Mike Tamburro's story is one of the great stories in the Pawtucket Red Sox history. 

Tamburro started with the PawSox as an intern under Ben Mondor and worked his way up to now being the president of the team. 

Tamburro was inducted into the International League Hall of Fame in a 2012 ceremony at McCoy Stadium and is the only front office employee ever to earn the International league's Executive of the year award five times. 

Mike Tamburro is a major reason why the Pawtucket Red Sox continue to be a model franchise in AAA ball. 

 

 

Photo courtesy of tjperr/ flickr

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The Longest Game

The Pawtucket Red Sox played in and won the longest game in ever played in baseball history. 

The game started on April 18, 1981 and went until play was suspened at 4 a.m. the next morning in the middle of the 32nd inning. 

The game resumed on June 23 and that is when Pawtucket's Dave Koza got a base hit to drive in Marty Barrett .

The PawSox won the game 3-2 in the bottom of the 33rd inning. 

Photo courtesy of bunkosquad/ Flickr

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1984 Champions

The Pawtucket Red Sox won their second Governors Cup Championship in franchise history, defeating Maine 3-2 in the best of five series. 

The team went 75-65 under manager Tony Torchia that season before making a playoff run and winning the title. 

This was a huge turnaround for Pawtucket considering the previous season the PawSox went 56-83. 

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First Title

The PawSox won their first championship in 1973 defeating Charleston 3-2 in the series. This was Pawtuckets first season in AAA ball. 

Pawtucket then went on and won the Junior World Series (now the Triple-A National Championship) by beating Tulsa 4-1. 

Darrell Johnson was the manager of the team that season as the PawSox went 78-68 finishing second in the International League. 

Photo courtesy of Jonathan Birge/ Flickr

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Ben Mondor Purchases Team

After the 1976 season, the Pawtucket Red Sox franchise, which actually had changed it's name to the Rhode Island Red Sox, went bankrupt and it looked certain that the team's stay in Pawtucket was over. 

Ben Mondor bought the Pawtucket Red Sox in 1977 and kept them in Pawtucket. The Pawsox won the Governors Cup in 1978 and in 1998, Ben Mondor oversaw the revamping of McCoy Stadium into one of the nicest minor league ballparks in the country. 

Ben Mondor passed away in October of 2010 at the age of 85. 

The PawSox have since won two Governors Cup Championships (2012, 2014) and McCoy Stadium remains one of the nicest minor league ballparks in the country.

Photo courtesy of Butch Adams/ Flickr

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2012 Governors Cup Champs

In 2012, the Pawtucket Red Sox won their first Governors Cup title in 28 years, defeating the Charlotte Knights 4-1 in South Carolina.

PawSox pitcher Nelson Figueroa earned the win in the game shutting down the Knights while the PawSox offense scored two runs in both the second and seventh innings.

 

Photo courtesy of tjperr/ Flickr

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2014 Governors Cup Champs

The Pawtucket Red Sox won the Governors Cup for the second time in three years in 2014, defeating Durham 3-2 in the best of five series. 

The PawSox trailed 2-1 in the series and faced elimination in game four before Ivan De Jesus hit a two run home run to force a game five. 

In game five, the PawSox Keith Couch pitched a one hitter through 6 2/3 innings while the PawSox added offense. Pawtucket defeated Durham 4-1 to advance to the International League Championship. 

Ryan Lavarnway was named MVP. 

Photo courtesy of tjperr/ Flickr

 
 

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