Decatur Commodores
The Decatur Commodores were a professional minor league baseball team based in Decatur, Illinois that played for 64 seasons. The Commodores are the primary ancestor of today's Kane County Cougars. They played, with sporadic interruptions, from 1900 to 1974 in a variety of minor leagues, but spent the majority of their existence in the Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League, later joining the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League and the Midwest League. While they spent most of their years as an independent without formal major league baseball team affiliation, their primary affiliations were with the St. Louis Cardinals and later the San Francisco Giants, with isolated affiliations with the Detroit Tigers, Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies.
The ballparks
The Commodores played home games at Fans Field. Fans Field had a 5,200-seat grandstand which was demolished when the team moved to Wausau, Wisconsin in 1974 and became the Wausau Timbers. The field is still being used as a softball field.Before the 1927 construction of Fans Field, the Commodores played at Racetrack Ballpark and Staley Field. They shared Staley Field with the football team for which it was built, the Decatur Staleys. The Staleys were the early NFL franchise started by A.E. Staley and headed by George Halas that relocated from Decatur in 1922 and became the Chicago Bears.
The Commodores began play at Downing Racetrack in 1901. The ball club played at the racetrack until 1915, but a tornado destroyed the grandstand on July 15. The structure was razed, but the Commies continued to play until ceasing operations on August 10.
Commodores nickname
The nickname Commodores refers to Stephen Decatur, for whom the city is named. The team was often called the "Commies" for short, from a time before that became a slang term for "Communist". In their final years, they wore hand-me-down Giants uniforms, although still called the "Commodores", leading some fans to call them the "Commodore Giants".League Championships
- 1928 – Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League Champions
- 1952 – Mississippi-Ohio Valley League Champions
- 1953 – Mississippi-Ohio Valley League Champions
- 1957 – Midwest League Champions
No-hitters
| Date | Pitcher | Opponent | Score | Notes | Ref |
| May 31, 1952 | Ed Garrett | Mt. Vernon | 5–1 | ||
| July 28, 1954 | John Bumgarner | Clinton | 1–0 | ||
| August 3, 1958 | Jerry Fields | Clinton | 5–0 | ||
| August 18, 1960 | Bob Sprout | Waterloo | 3–0 | 22 strikeouts | |
| June 20, 1961 | Vern Orndorff | Clinton | 3–0 | 7 Innings, Perfect Game | |
| August 13, 1963 | Ollie Brown | Wisconsin Rapids | 8–0 | ||
| June 7, 1966 | Jesse Huggins | Wisconsin Rapids | 1–0 | 7 Innings | |
| August 15, 1969 | Gary Lavelle | Clinton | 4–0 | 7 Innings | |
| May 31, 1972 | Doug Capilla | Appleton | 1–0 | 7 Innings | |
| June 12, 1974 | Jeff Little | Dubuque | 1–0 | 7 Innings |
Notable alumni
[Baseball Hall of Fame] alumni
- Carl Hubbell Inducted, 1947
Other notable alumni
- Morrie Arnovich MLB AS
- Ray Benge
- Buddy Blattner Inducted Missouri Sports Hall of Fame
- Ollie Brown
- Don Bryant
- Ron Bryant 1973 NL Wins Leader
- Bud Byerly
- Charlie Case
- Bob Clear – 1947
- John D'Acquisto 1974 NL Rookie Pitcher of the Year
- Rube Dessau
- Murry Dickson MLB All-Star
- Ben Dyer
- Ed Figueroa
- Jim Freeman First Black Decatur player
- Tito Fuentes
- Heinie Groh
- Johnny Groth
- Odell Hale
- Ed Halicki
- Jack Hamilton
- Grover Hartley
- Bob Hartsfield
- Beany Jacobson
- Oscar Judd MLB All-Star
- Eddie Lake
- Gary Lavelle 2 x MLB All-Star
- Johnnie LeMaster
- Dutch Leonard 4 x MLB All-Star
- Grover Lowdermilk
- Bob Knepper 2 x MLB All-Star
- Gary Matthews MLB All-Star; 1973 NL Rookie of the Year
- Frank McCormick 8 x MLB All-Star; 1939 NL Runs Batted In Leader; 1940 NL Most Valuable Player
- Hal McKain
- Butch Metzger 1976 NL Rookie of the Year
- John Montefusco MLB All-Star; 1975 NL Rookie of the Year
- Skeeter Newsome
- Jim Northrup
- Tom Oliver
- Jimmy Outlaw
- Claude Passeau 3 x MLB All-Star; 1939 AL Strikeouts Leader
- Jim Rooker
- Bob Scheffing
- Dick Sisler MLB All-Star
- Elías Sosa
- Denny Sothern
- Mickey Stanley 4 x Gold Glove
- Max Surkont
- Emil Verban 2 x MLB All-Star
- Pinky Whitney MLB All-Star
Memorable games
- May 30, 1909 – The Commodores win a 26-inning, 5-hour marathon over the Bloomington Bloomers 2–1. The 26 innings stays the record for the most innings in a completed professional game in the United States for 57 years.
- August 18, 1960 – 18-year-old, left-handed pitcher Bob Sprout of the Commodores pitched a no hitter against the Waterloo Hawks. In that game, Sprout struck out 22 hitters, which stands as the MWL single-game strikeout record. The Commies won by a 3–0 score.
In fiction