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The Salt Lake City Bees was a primary moniker of the minor league baseball teams, based in Salt Lake City, Utah between 1911 and 1970 under various names. After minor league baseball first began in Salt Lake City in 1900, the Bees were long-time members of both the Pacific Coast League and Pioneer League. The Salt Lake Bees played their home ...
Salt Lake Bees. The Salt Lake Bees are a Minor League Baseball team that plays in the Pacific Coast League (PCL) and the Triple-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Angels. Based in Salt Lake City, Utah, the team plays its home games at Smith's Ballpark, which opened in 1994. With a seating capacity of 15,411, it boasts the largest capacity in the ...
Smith's Ballpark at sunset in 2009. An entrance gate in 2013. Smith's Ballpark (formerly known as Franklin Quest Field, later Franklin Covey Field, [8] and more recently Spring Mobile Ballpark) is a minor league baseball park in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is the home field of the Salt Lake Bees of the Pacific Coast League and the collegiate Utah ...
Derks Field. Derks Field was a minor league baseball park in the Western United States, located in Salt Lake City, Utah. It was the home field of the Salt Lake Bees, Angels, and Gulls of the Pacific Coast League, Bees, Giants, and Trappers of the Pioneer Baseball League, and the Salt Lake Sting of the American Professional Soccer League.
The original six teams were the Boise Pilots, Lewiston Indians, Ogden Reds, Pocatello Cardinals, Salt Lake City Bees, and Twin Falls Cowboys. With players in short supply due to World War II, the league suspended operations for the 1943 through 1945 seasons.
Daybreak (community) Coordinates: 40.546842°N 111.99965°W. Example of homes in Daybreak. Daybreak is a master-planned community of over 4,000 acres (16 km²) located in South Jordan, Utah. Daybreak was originally owned by Kennecott Land but as of 2024 was being developed by the Larry H. Miller Company.
In 1965, the Giants moved its PCL team back to Phoenix. However, the Chicago Cubs chose to move their affiliate, the Salt Lake City Bees, to Tacoma the same year and renamed the team the Tacoma Cubs. Tacoma played as a Cubs affiliate for six seasons, compiling a 410–466 (.468) record.
This is for players of the Salt Lake City Bees minor league baseball team, who played in the Pacific Coast League from 1915–1925, 1958–1965 and 1970, Utah–Idaho League from 1926–1928, and Pioneer League (baseball) from 1939–1957 and 1969.