Stompers Re-Sign Sean Conroy

Sean Conroy will return to the Sonoma Stompers for the 2016 season. Last season, he was named the Pacific Association's top reliever, and was recognized by the league as its top defensive pitcher during his rookie season.James Toy III/Sonoma St…

Sean Conroy will return to the Sonoma Stompers for the 2016 season. Last season, he was named the Pacific Association's top reliever, and was recognized by the league as its top defensive pitcher during his rookie season.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Theo Fightmaster, General Manager

Right-handed pitcher Sean Conroy, perhaps the most celebrated player in the short history of the Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club, has agreed to terms on a contract that will bring him back to Sonoma for the 2016 season, the team’s General Manager, Theo Fightmaster said.

“Sean is a guy we were lucky to have last season, and we’re even luckier to have him come back to Sonoma,” Fightmaster said. “We know what he’s capable of – being one of the best pitchers in the league – and that puts us in a very good spot heading into the season.”

Conroy enjoyed a historic 2015 season, and was voted the Pacific Association’s top defensive pitcher, as well as being named league’s top relief pitcher.

The 23-year-old Clifton Park, New York, product pitched in 22 games for Sonoma, and Fightmaster said he was outstanding in his first year of professional baseball. The rookie had a 5-3 record with a 2.70 ERA, including 10 saves (second in the league among qualified pitchers), and a strikeout-to-walk ratio of 52-15. Opposing batters hit just .192 against him with a WHIP (walks plus hits per innings pitched) of 0.950, tops in the league among pitchers who pitched at least 20 innings.

Fightmaster said the 6-foot-1, 195-pound Conroy was a true asset to the Stompers, pitching in a variety of roles. In addition to his four starts, Conroy appeared out of the bullpen 18 times, earning three wins along with his 10 saves. In the second half of the season, Conroy was used in a “fireman’s” role, pitching multiple innings of relief after coming in at the game’s most critical point – not simply in the final inning.

When opposing hitters put the ball in play against Conroy, their luck didn’t change much. They accumulated a meager .202 batting average in those at-bats. His component ERC was 1.986. (ERC is a baseball statistic invented by famed baseball statistician Bill James, and attempts to forecast a pitcher’s earned run average from the number of hits and walks allowed rather than the standard formula of average number of earned runs per nine innings.) Using that metric, Conroy was the second best pitcher in the Association, and best among pitchers who pitched more than 20 innings.

Conroy garnered international attention in late June becoming the first openly gay active professional baseball player. Conroy at that time made his first career start on the team’s Pride Night in spectacular fashion, pitching a complete game shutout against the Vallejo Admirals, allowing only three hits and striking out 11, leading the Stompers to a 7-0 victory in front of a packed house, hordes of reporters and television cameras.

“I’m happy I will have a chance to continue my career in Sonoma with the Stompers,” Conroy said. “Last year was so much fun, and such a great experience. My hope is that this year the team can improve on our success from last season and finish what we started.”

The Stompers finished the 2015 season with their second winning record in as many years, going 44-33. In the franchise’s inaugural campaign in 2014, Sonoma boasted a 42-36 record.

The Stompers open the season May 31, and start their home season in Sonoma on Tuesday, June 7, at 6 p.m. against the Vallejo Admirals.

Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets are on sale on the website, stompersbaseball.com, or at the Stompers Fan Shop, 234 W. Napa St., Sonoma. For details, call 938-7277.

Stompers Add Jose Flores To Pitching Staff

Right-handed pitcher Jose Flores went 10-2, with five complete games, and four shutouts in two seasons at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma.Photo credit/USAO Athletics.

Right-handed pitcher Jose Flores went 10-2, with five complete games, and four shutouts in two seasons at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma.

Photo credit/USAO Athletics.

Theo Fightmaster, General Manager

In a move intended to strengthen its starting rotation, the Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club’s has signed former Milwaukee Brewers prospect, Jose Flores.

Flores, 23 and originally from Fremont, pitched for the Brewers Rookie Ball team in 2015, appearing in 12 games, primarily as a short-reliever, earning a win and a save.

The Friday starter at University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma and a shortstop, Flores furnished a 1.67 ERA in 43 innings pitched his junior year (2014). As a senior, he pitched in 56 1/3 innings with a 2.56 ERA, and allowed just 36 hits. In his two years at OSAO the 6-ffor-4 right-hander struck out 124 batters while walking just 39, and conceded only one home run.

“Jose is the kind of player that makes a big difference in leagues like the Pacific Association,” Stompers GM Theo Fightmaster said. “He has the tools, the stuff and the makeup of a prospect. It’s our job to help him put all those things together and then we all will enjoy watching him pitch here and throughout the rest of his career, wherever it takes him.”

Flores joins a pitching staff that will include Eric Mozieka, Landon Hunt and expects to return a number of key hurlers from 2015, along with rookie of the year, Mark Hurley, shortstop Eddie Mora-Lorea and slugging first baseman, Daniel Baptista.  

Additionally, the team will scout and sign players out of the Pacific Association’s Open Tryout, slated from April 23-24 at CC Sabathia Field in Vallejo. Players interested in competing for a job with any of the Pacific Assoc. teams are encouraged to register online at www.StompersBaseball.com. The tryout was rescheduled due to inclement weather after originally being slated to take place March 12-13 in Sonoma.

The Stompers finished the 2015 season with their second winning record in as many years, going 44-33. In the franchise’s inaugural campaign in 2014, Sonoma boasted a 42-36 record.

The Stompers open the season May 31, 2016, and start their home season in Sonoma on Tuesday, June 7, at 6 p.m. against the Vallejo Admirals.

Full Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets are on sale on our website, www.stompersbaseball.com, or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 West Napa Street in Sonoma. Group events and Group Tickets are also available now. Please email jack@stompersbaseball.com, or call 707.938.7277 for questions and more information.

MLB Announces ‘Historic’ Partnership With National Gay And Lesbian Chamber Of Commerce

New York Mets mascots Mr. and Mrs. Met attend a news conference to announce the official LGBT Pride Night hosted by the New York Mets Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016, in New York. Billy Bean, MLB's Vice President of Inclusion and Social Responsibility, has w…

New York Mets mascots Mr. and Mrs. Met attend a news conference to announce the official LGBT Pride Night hosted by the New York Mets Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016, in New York. Billy Bean, MLB's Vice President of Inclusion and Social Responsibility, has worked closely with Sonoma Stompers pitcher Sean Conroy. The two will be at the 2016 Diversity Business Summit in Phoenix, Ariz. in March, 2016. 

Frank Franklin II/AP

Originally Published: Think Progress

Lindsay Gibbs, ThinkProgress.org

This week at Major League Baseball’s Diversity Business Summit, Fortune reports that the league is set to announce a partnership with the National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce (NGLCC).

The deal, which NGLCC spokesman Jonathan Lovitz called “historic,” will give LGBT businesses an equal opportunity to bid for MLB contracts and opportunities. To be certified by the NGLCC, a business must be 51 percent owned by an LGBT person or persons.

“The National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce is such a well-respected organization,” said Billy Bean, MLB’s Vice President of Inclusion and Social Responsibility, “and for them to feel that what they see in baseball is something they would want to align with, it’s a compliment for the work that we’re doing.”

“I’m just so grateful that baseball is open to it now,” Bean told Fortune. “I’m really optimistic about how they can help us and then how in turn that helps our community.”

Bean played in the major leagues on and off from 1987 to 1995, and in 1999 he became the first former (or current) MLB player to come out publicly as gay. He began working with the league in a formal capacity in 2014, as part of the league’s efforts to promote inclusiveness — or, more specifically, to help pave the way for the league’s fist openly gay player.

Though no active MLB player has come out, Sean Conroy became the first openly gay professional baseball player when he pitched a complete game shutout for the Sonomoa Stompers last year. And Bean helped advise David Denson, a minor league player who is part of the Milwaukee Brewers organization, before he came out last year.

Overall, it’s hard to deny that baseball is moving in the right direction. Several teams acrossthe league have held LGBT Pride Nights or made videos directed at supporting LGBT youth andathletes.

As part of its Diverse Business Program, which has been around since 1998, MLB already works with nonprofits that represent female and minority business owners.

“The mission of the Diverse Business Partners program is to promote efficiency and profitability for Major League Baseball and its Clubs while extending Baseball’s ability to contribute to the economic growth, strength and well-being of diverse communities,” the league’s website reads.

Now, the businesses owned by members of the LGBT community will be given a chance to vie for the all-important MLB contract. The NGLCC already has a similar partnership with the USTA and the NFL during the Super Bowl.

“We take great pride in the fact that this not only puts us closer to Major League Baseball and the ability to bring innovative suppliers to their operation, but also that we get to work with incredible advocates and athletes like Billy Bean,” Justin Nelson, founder and president of the NGLCC, told Fortune.

Now that the MLB partnership is in place, Nelson is focused on forging partnerships with the NBA and WNBA.

“There’s a lot of work to be done still,” he said. “We’re going to put foot squarely on the gas pedal — not on the brakes — and work to use this as an opportunity to expand our vision, our mission, and our connections with sports entities, sports leagues, and major corporations.”

Daniel Baptista Re-Signs With Sonoma Stompers

Daniel Baptista, a defensive player of the year and one of the top rookies in the Pacific Association, has agreed to terms on a contract that will bring him back to Sonoma to play for the Stompers in 2016.Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Daniel Baptista, a defensive player of the year and one of the top rookies in the Pacific Association, has agreed to terms on a contract that will bring him back to Sonoma to play for the Stompers in 2016.

Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Theo Fightmaster, General Manager

After a rookie campaign that helped spark the Sonoma Stompers Pro Baseball Club’s 2015 first-half championship, and the team’s first postseason appearance, first baseman Daniel Baptista is returning to Sonoma for the 2016 season, Stompers GM Theo Fightmaster announced Wednesday.

Baptista, a 6-foot-5, Fairfield, Calif. Native batted .321 (third-best in the Pacific Association) with six homers and 41 RBIs in his rookie campaign, reaching base at a .386 clip. He slugged .425 and tallied an OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging percentage) of .811. Impressively, the left-handed hitting Baptista enjoyed what’s known as a reverse-split, hitting even better off left-handed pitchers than he did against right-handed hurlers.

Additionally, he was sixth on Sonoma with 40.2 Runs Created (a stat invented by Bill James to estimate the number of runs a hitter contributes to his team), trailing only the likes of Mark Hurley (47.2), Gered Mochizuki (44.7), Joel Carranza (41.3), Matt Hibbert (41.1) and Isaac Wenrich (40.5). Of those players credited with more runs created, only Mochizuki failed to receive a promotion to a higher league.

The slick fielding Baptista proved nearly as valuable with the leather as he did with his bat, furnishing a fielding percentage of .985, while converting 317 putouts with 16 assists. He committed only five errors in 338 chances in 42 games at first base, and was voted the top defensive first baseman in the Pacific Association last September. He also finished fourth in the league’s Rookie of the Year balloting, which was claimed by Hurley.

“I’m proud of what Daniel has blossomed into,” said Fightmaster. “He’s completely transformed himself since college, and really since the first time I saw him play in 2014.

“He was a great player for us last year, and was a great character in the clubhouse. We’re excited to see what’s in store for him this year.”

The Stompers finished the 2015 season with their second winning record in as many years, going 44-33. In the franchise’s inaugural campaign in 2014, Sonoma boasted a 42-36 record.

The Stompers open the season May 31, 2016, and start their home season in Sonoma on Tuesday, June 7, at 6 p.m. against the Vallejo Admirals.

Full Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets are on sale on our website, www.stompersbaseball.com, or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 West Napa Street in Sonoma. Group events and Group Tickets are also available now. Please email jack@stompersbaseball.com, or call 707.938.7277 for questions and more information.

Stompers Sign Four Out Of California Winter League

Marcus Blackmon Jr. (left) signed with the Stompers in February. He was named the North Star Athletic Association’s gold glover winner and all-conference for the University of Jamestown baseball team.John M. Steiner/Sun File Photo

Marcus Blackmon Jr. (left) signed with the Stompers in February. He was named the North Star Athletic Association’s gold glover winner and all-conference for the University of Jamestown baseball team.

John M. Steiner/Sun File Photo

Over the past few years, the Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club’s annual pilgrimage to Palm Springs, Calif. to scout the California Winter League has netted some nice returns.

In 2014 the team used the scouting trip to sign the man who would make the first start in franchise history, Will Scott, and acquired two-year starter, Eric Schwieger. The following year saw Palm Springs produce second baseman Yuki Yasuda, as well as the man who would become the team’s eventual manager, Takashi Miyoshi.

Though the results of this spring’s harvest have yet to bear fruit, the club is excited about the signing of four young hopefuls. Catcher Marcus Blackmon Jr., left-handed pitcher Landon Hunt, utility player Masahiro Miyadera, and outfielder Ethan Szabo all agreed to terms with the Stompers.

“It’s a delicate balance, building a roster at this level, and at this time of year,” said Stompers GM Theo Fightmaster. “We spent a lot of time watching these players, speaking with scouts and coaches who have seen them play even more than we had, and spent time with these young men in an effort to teach them about the Stompers, Sonoma, and gauge what kind of people they are.

"In every instance, we’re optimistic about what they all can do for the ball club, and our community.”

Blackmon Jr, is a right-handed hitting catcher and graduate of the University of Jamestown in North Dakota. The 6-foot-1, 180-pound Oregon native received was a 2015 First- Team All-Conference player in the North Star Athletic Association (NAIA), and also earned was the recipient of the conference’s Gold Glove for catcher. During his college career, he threw out 57-percent of would-be base stealers.

In the CWL, Blackmon hit .379 (11 for 29), drove in eight runs, scored seven times while leading the Toronto Rush to the CWL championship, earning him rave reviews from Los Angeles Dodger Special Assignment Scout, Barry Moss, as well as Jamestown head coach Tom Hager.

“(Marcus) is a first class kid and I will do anything I can to help him out. Marcus is one of the most talented catchers I have ever worked with,” Hager said in an email. “He is very athletic, has a great arm, and definitely knows how to lead a pitching staff. … I think he could be a great fit for (the Stompers).”

Hunt, 24, a 6-foot tall, left-handed hurler, is a product of Long Beach State University (the Alma mater of former Stompers Matt Hibbert and Brennan Metzger). With the Dirtbags, Hunt was used primarily as a lefty specialist, and in 2012 he didn’t allow a hit in his final four appearances.

In 13 1/3 innings in Palm Springs, Hunt was 1-1 with a 1.58 ERA. In three starts he struck out 23 batters, and walked just four. Opponents in the CWL hit just .216 against him and he furnished a WHIP (walks plus hits per innings pitched) of 1.13.

Miyadera under Miyoshi’s in the CWL, and has enjoyed stints in the CanAm League (Trois Rivieras Aigles), the Pecos League as well as professionally in Japan. In 29 at bats in the CWL, Myadera had 12 hits (.353) with four walks, three doubles, scored eight runs and stole three bases while playing all over the field.  

Szabo – 6-foot-2, 230 pounds – is a resident of Delaware and product of Glenville State in West Virginia. He started 38 games in 2014, with a .278 average and a dozen extra-base hits, and an on-base percentage of .333. Last summer, Szabo played in the short-lived Ozarks Baseball League, where he was a two way player (pitcher and outfield). He is following in his father’s footsteps in an athletic sense. Gerry Szabo was drafted by the Dallas Cowboys and has spent more than 40 years coaching and teaching.

These signings come in advance of the first Pacific Association tryout, that will be held Saturday, March 12-13 at Peterson Field in Sonoma. While the Stompers will serve as host, each team from the league will be in attendance to scout and sign players. More than 35 players have been signed to pro contracts out of these tryouts the last two years. All interested can register by clicking here.

The Stompers open the season May 31, 2016, and start their home season in Sonoma on Tuesday, June 7, at 6 p.m. against the Vallejo Admirals.

Full Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets are on sale on our website, www.stompersbaseball.com, or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 West Napa Street in Sonoma. Group events and Group Tickets are also available now. Please email jack@stompersbaseball.com, or call 707.938.7277 for questions and more information.

Pacific Association Announces 2016 Regular Season Schedule

The Sonoma Stompers celebrate their first-half championship in July of 2015. The Stompers went on to the franchise's first ever championship game last August.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

The Sonoma Stompers celebrate their first-half championship in July of 2015. The Stompers went on to the franchise's first ever championship game last August.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

The Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club has received the final regular season schedule from the Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs. The season will consist of 78 total games, 39 at the Stompers home, Arnold Field, and 39 on the road.

The home schedule begins with a three-game series starting Tuesday June 7, 2016 through Thursday, June 9.

For the first time in team history, the Stompers will host a game on Father’s Day, Sunday, June 19, at 5 p.m.

The Stompers will be home Friday, July 1 through Monday, July 4 for a four-game Fourth of July Extravaganza with the San Rafael Pacifics and the Pittsburg Diamonds. The home schedule comes to a close with a mid-week series, August 23-25 versus Vallejo.

Home games start at 6 p.m. on Tuesday through Friday, and start at 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. The lone scheduled exception is Monday, July 4, when the first pitch is slated for 5:30 p.m. in order for fans to watch the World Famous Sonoma Fireworks from the field after the game.

In the Stompers third season, and the fourth for the Pacific Association, Sonoma will host 21 week night games, and 18 weekend matches.

As in past seasons, the Pacific Association’s champion will be determined with a one-game playoff between the winners of the first half and the second half winner. If the same team wins both halves, it will be crowned the league champion. The team with the best full season record will host the Championship Game on the evening of Monday, Aug. 29.

Full Season tickets, mini-plans and partial season tickets are on sale on our website, www.stompersbaseball.com, or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 West Napa Street in Sonoma. Group events and Group Tickets are also available now. Please email jack@stompersbaseball.com, or call 707.938.7277 for questions and more information.

Stompers Re-Sign 2015 Rookie Of The Year Mark Hurley

Mark Hurley, the 2015 Pacific Assoc. Rookie of the Year has be re-signed by the Sonoma Stompers. The Hollister, CA native also earned defensive Player of the Year honors.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Mark Hurley, the 2015 Pacific Assoc. Rookie of the Year has be re-signed by the Sonoma Stompers. The Hollister, CA native also earned defensive Player of the Year honors.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Theo Fightmaster, General Manager

In the first official move of the New Year, the Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club has re-signed 2015 Pacific Association Rookie of the Year and Defensive Player of the year, Mark Hurley.

“I would like to thank the Stompers for giving me the opportunity to return to Sonoma,” said Hurley, who hit .302, with nine homers and led the club with 51 RBIs. “I’m excited to come back to Sonoma and play for a great organization, in front of an amazing fan base.

“I’m also looking forward to getting back to work with (our manager Takashi Miyoshi) and the rest of the team.”  

The 23-year-old rookie impressed with a .362 OBP, slugged .466 for an OPS of .828, he also stole 11 bases and scored 61 runs in 2015, serving as a staple of the club that started the season 18-3 en route to a first-half league title. But the Cal State Monterey Bay product was just as stout in the outfield, handling 106 of 109 chances, with a league-best six outfield assists while playing both corner outfield positions.

Hurley edged out a field of deserving candidates vying for the honors for the 2015 Pacific Association Rookie of the Year, including his teammates, right-handed pitcher Sean Conroy, first baseman, Daniel Baptista.

“Mark is the epitome of the type of player we want here in Sonoma,” said Theo Fightmaster, the Stompers Vice President and General Manager. “He’s a fantastic ballplayer and an even better young man. And if what he did last season is any indication of his talents, he has a bright future ahead of him.”

The 2016 Pacific Association schedule is nearing completion, and 2016 Season Ticket Plans are currently on sale at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 West Napa Street in Sonoma. For questions or info, please call 707.938.7277. 

Stompers Pitcher In Cooperstown

Isaac Wenrich, left, and Sean Conroy at the Baseball Hall of Fame Museum's Today's Game exhibit, which features Conroy's June 25 start as a pro baseball's first openly gay active player.Sean Conroy/Family Photo

Isaac Wenrich, left, and Sean Conroy at the Baseball Hall of Fame Museum's Today's Game exhibit, which features Conroy's June 25 start as a pro baseball's first openly gay active player.

Sean Conroy/Family Photo

 

Originally Published: Sonoma Index-Tribune

Christian Kallen, Index-Tribune Staff Reporter

It’s not every small- market independent league baseball team that can claim a Hall-of-Famer, but for a few months at least, the Sonoma Stompers are represented in Cooperstown.

Last month the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, the fabled repository of the National Game’s finest moments, updated their “Today’s Game” display – documenting the highlights of the sport over the past year – and included the line-up card for the Stompers vs. Vallejo Admirals game of June 25, 2015.Starting pitcher was Sean Conroy, who thereby became the first openly gay active baseball player in the professional sport. Although usually a reliever, he tossed a complete game shut-out to win 4-0, celebrating National Pride Day with a memorable moment in sports.

The Today’s Game case is in a newly re-modeled section of the Hall of Fame, known as “A Whole New Ball Game,” covering the years since 1970, according the Brad Horn, the Museum’s Vice President for Communications and Education. “It’s where we show achievements from the recent year or the last couple of years,” Horn told the Index-Tribune.Stompers general manager Theo Fightmaster appreciates Conroy for more than just that one game, however. “He was competitive from the first pitch he threw in spring training, and put together one of the best seasons this league has ever seen by a pitcher,” he said, noting that Conroy won the league’s most valuable relief pitcher vote for the season as well.Other memorabilia on display in the current Today’s Game case include the bat Alex Rodriguez used to homer for his 2,000 RBI, the red Phillies cap Cole Hamels wore when he threw a no-hitter against the Cubs on July 25, the jersey Mike Hessman of the Toledo Mud Hens wore when he hit his record 433rd minor league home run (shades of “Bull Durham”).

More esoteric collectibles include a faux “rookie card” for Pope Francis celebrating his September visit to Philadelphia – and that signed lineup card, with a photo of Conroy hurling toward victory, and a place in the Hall of Fame.

“The reason that piece was of interest to our team and the curators, and has a place on display now, is that it continues to show the world that baseball is about inclusion,” said Horn. “It certainly is a notable mark whether it’s at the independent level, the minor league affiliate level or the major league level to show that baseball is a game played by all for all to enjoy.”“He rose to the occasion, and then some,” said Fightmaster of Conroy’s June 25 start. “He struck out 11, allowed just three hits and pitched a complete-game shutout to earn a win in his first start as a professional.


“It was maybe the highlight of the year, and will endure as one of the best moments in franchise history.” The Today’s Game exhibit is always in flux, so once the 2016 season starts and the no-hitters and historic homers start again, the Sean Conroy exhibit may be phased out – but it will remain in the archives until the time comes when it’s once again relevant.

Ironically, when Conroy and family dropped by the Baseball Hall of Fame over Thanksgiving weekend, they found another group paying particular interest in the Today’s Game exhibit. It turned out to be Isaac Wenrich and family– the former Stomper who caught the historic game.

The two posed for family photos and went their separate ways – Wenrich home to Pennsylvania, Conroy to history.

Email Christian at christian.kallen@sonomanews.com

Stompers Announce 2016 Summer Baseball Camps Schedule

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There is more to a baseball team than box scores and pennant drives. The Sonoma Stompers are stewards of the game, and wish to grow the game with the youth in our community. Stompers Baseball Clinics are a great way for your son or daughter to learn the important elements of the great game of baseball while having a ton of fun while learning from their favorite Stompers players.

In 2016 the Stompers plan to host two baseball camps:

Session I: June 13-16
Session II: July 11-14

As a treat for those who sign up for the first session, former Major League All-Star first baseman JT Snow will be present on Wednesday, June 15 to help run that day's camp ahead of his appearance that night during Sonoma's home game against the San Rafael Pacifics.

Both sessions will run from 10 am until 2 pm each day, Monday through Thursday. Players should bring their own lunch, equipment and sun block.  The Clinics are designed for Kids aged 8 to 16 years old, and they will be coached by Stompers players.  Each kid will also receive a certificate on the last day of the Clinic which will entitle them to two complimentary tickets to a Stompers game during the 2016 season.  Please note, there will be a few excluded dates for these complimentary tickets.

Registration is $189 per player for the four days and the two complimentary tickets. Sibling discounts are available. If a family has two kids in the household and both want to attend, the price is $159 each. 

The Skills Clinic is a perfect gift for a kid who loves the game, or is just learning about the great game of baseball.  If you would like to give a Gift Certificate for the Clinic to a kid, just stop in the Fan Shop at 234 W. Napa Street or call Jack at 707-938-7277 ext. 12.

Stompers Add Stone To Club's Front Office

Jonathan Stone brings more than 25 years of sales and marketing experience to Stompers front office.Staff Photo/Sonoma Stompers

Jonathan Stone brings more than 25 years of sales and marketing experience to Stompers front office.

Staff Photo/Sonoma Stompers

The Sonoma Stompers Professional Baseball Club has introduced Jonathan Stone to serve as the team’s Director of Sponsorship Sales.

Stone, who worked for the Stompers’ Guest Services Department during the 2015 season brings a wealth of experience and enthusiasm after a long career in marketing and advertising to companies throughout North America.

“Jonathan did a fantastic job for us as part of our fan experience team last summer, and we think he’ll do great in this capacity as well,” team vice president and general manager Theo Fightmaster said. “He showed great concern for our fans at the ballpark, and I’m sure that passion will translate to the type of relationship he’ll forge with our partners and sponsors.”

In 1988 Stone founded Another Dancing Bear Productions, a nationally recognized leader in the promotional advertising industry. In 2014 he sold his San Francisco business of 26 years and moved to Sonoma with the idea of retiring to the good life. But the strong desire to work and good baseball lured him to the Stompers. Stone has been with the organization since the spring of 2015, helping the team with day of the game events, marketing, merchandising and advertising. This new role will get him out into the community including all of Sonoma County. 

In San Francisco, Stone served on the Board of Directors for the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce as well as many other business, charitable and non-profit organizations. He has already jumped in representing the team in a number of Sonoma related projects.

The Newton, Mass. native currently resides in Schellville. He has one son away at college.

To reach Jonathan Stone, call 707.938.7277, ext. 12, or email him at jstone@stompersbaseball.com.

For more information, visit StompersBaseball.com, or call 707.938.7277.