Over the past 150+ years http://www.yankeesfanproshop.com/authentic-giancarlo-stanton-jersey , baseball has been part of Arizona life. teFanposts Fanshots Sections Diamondbacks Farm TeamsGameday ThreadsDiamondbacks NewsDiamondbacks Game ReportsFang FoodSome history of baseball in ArizonaNew,39commentsOver the past 150+ years, baseball has been part of Arizona life. It hasn’t all been about the Diamondbacks...EDTShareTweetShareShareSome history of baseball in ArizonaGadsden Park, Yuma: Civilian Conservation Corps enrollees engaged in a baseball game, September 1939National Archives and Records Administration [Public domain]As we head towards Fox Sports Arizona’s first Baseball Day Arizona, which will be taking place on Saturday, thought it might be interesting to look back at the history of the game in our state. Though I use the word “some” in the title, rather than “a” or “the”, because it proved remarkably difficult to track down information about pre-Diamondbacks baseball in Arizona. From what I could find, there’s no single website or even story that talked about the subject in its entirety. So what follows is more of an eclectic buffet, pulling together elements out of various places into a platter of appetizers, from various eras and locations across the state.1872: Earliest recorded mentions of baseball in ArizonaThe first references to the sport came when it was still a territory, not long after the end of the Civil War. Researcher and author John Tenney says it was the military - present to protect settlers from the native population - who brought the game here.In his book, the earliest reference found was the April 27, 1872 edition of the Daily Miner, which mentions troops at Fort Whipple and Camp Hualpai forming a baseball club. Those clubs would later challenge Prescott’s town team, the Champions, for the first Territory championship. The earliest game recorded took place on December 26, 1872 at Camp Grant, described in a subsequent letter to the Miner: “In the forenoon, an exciting game of base ball took place.”1892: “Flame” Delhi born in Harqua HalaEven though his career was brief - a single game for the White Sox while still a teenager in 1912 - Lee William “Flame” Delhi was the first major-league player born in the state. His birthplace served the Harquahala gold mine, located to the West of Phoenix. The Delhi family moved to California when he was young, and he became the best pitcher for the Los Angeles Angels of the PCL, from where the White Sox signed him. After his major-league career, he returned to Arizona and pitched for the Ray Copper Mines team, in exchange for engineering tuition. Delhi found far greater success in that field than on the baseball one, eventually becoming vice president of Western Pipe and Steel. He died in 1966.1904: First college baseball season in TucsonThe University of Arizona had its first campaign that year - albeit a brief one, playing just seven games and going 6-1. Up in Phoenix, Arizona State University adopted baseball as a varsity sport in 1959, though they had been fielding a team for decades. For instance, records show them playing the U of A in 1924, with Cliff “Chick” Morefield throwing a no-hitter for the Wildcats in a 5-0 win. Beginning with Hank Leiber in 1933, both colleges have sent many players to the majors, including Hall of Famers Trevor Hoffman (U of A), Reggie Jackson (ASU) and Jim Palmer (ASU). The Wildcats have won four national college titles and the Sun Devils five. Jshook072 [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)]1909: Warren Ballpark, Bisbee opensThis was originally built by the Calumet and Arizona Mining Company for employees and their families Johnny Damon Jersey , at a time when Bisbee was close to the biggest city between St. Louis and the West Coast. Claimed to be the oldest continuously used baseball venue in the country, it’s named after local man George Warren, the model for the prospector who appears on Arizona’s Great Seal. In 1913, the New York Giants played there as part of their World Tour, and in 1917, 1,300 striking miners were held there during the infamous Bisbee Deportation. Hall of Famers Honus Wagner and Connie Mack managed the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Athletics against each other in an exhibition game there in 1940.1915: Professional baseball beginsThe first pro ball game involving local teams took place in Tucson on April 26, when the home team, the Old Pueblos, beat the Phoenix Senators 10-2, despite their catcher being fined five dollars for arguing balls and strikes, according to the game report. Along with the Douglas Miners, they were part of the Rio Grande Association. but the Douglas franchise folded less than a month into the season. The league itself barely survived into July before also going down, and more than a decade would pass before the next attempt, the Arizona State League. That ran from 1928-30: teams were initially out of Bisbee and Miami, as well as Phoenix and Tucson, with Globe and Mesa joining subsequently. 1929: First spring training campA number of major-league teams had played games in Arizona earlier, as they headed back West from training in California. But the Tigers were the first team officially to set up camp here, playing the Pirates and Cubs at Phoenix Riverside Park. The latter game, won 11-10 by the Tigers, was described as having “everything in it that the most violent fan could desire”! However, the next season Detroit moved to Tampa, and it was not until after the war, in 1947, that any teams returned, when the Cleveland Indians (at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson) and San Francisco Giants (at Phoenix Muni) set up shop here. The Cubs became the Cactus League’s third member five years later. 1943: Inaugural game at Zenimura Field, Gila River Internment CampOne of the more shameful incidents in World War II is the forced internment of Japanese-Americans, mostly US citizens. At its peak, the Gila River camp was the fourth-largest city in the state. But after Kenichi Zenimura arrived there, he organized the construction of a baseball park using whatever material could be found: the lines were flour, and the bases, bags of rice. 32 teams from camp inmates were formed, and they also played opponents from outside. That included inflicting the first defeat of the season on the three-time high school state champions, the Tucson Badgers, when they visited. The field is now an olive orchard, but the home plate Masahiro Tanaka Jersey , made of wood, is now part of the Hall of Fame. 1947: Pink Pony opensThe Pink Pony was a legendary Scottsdale restaurant, much patronized by baseball people in spring and just a couple of blocks from the ballpark. Filled with memorabilia, such as the home-plate from the original stadium, the original location was the first restaurant in Old Town Scottsdale. Sportswriter Roger Angell once called the Pink Pony, ‘‘the best baseball restaurant in the land,” and it was feted in a famous 1986 story in Sports Illustrated. However, it closed in 2009 and multiple subsequent attempts to resurrect it failed. The other legendary spring training haunt, Don and Charlie’s, shut up shop this week, bringing to an end its 38-year run in Scottsdale. 1958: Phoenix Giants foundedThe year after they started, following the folding of the Arizona-Mexico League, the Giants were the only pro sports team in Arizona. After two seasons, San Francisco’s Triple-A affiliated relocated to Tacoma. But they returned in 1966, and remained until the arrival of the Diamondbacks, changing their name to the Firebirds in 1986. They played through the summer, even on the notorious day the temperature reached 122F; Bob Brenly, once a prospect here, said he would lose 8-10 lbs in a game. The team played at Phoenix Muni and Scottsdale Stadium, and even tried having an above-ground pool, years before the one at Chase Field. They also once had a game called due to excessive grasshoppers. 1973: Tucson reaches LLWS finalThe first of two trips by Tucson to the final game in the Little League World Series, they won 12 straight games in single-elimination, running through the state, regional and national championships. At the LLWS, they powered through their first two games, beating New York 4-0 and then Michigan 8-1. But they ran up against the proverbial buzz-saw in the final, losing 12-0 to a team from Taiwan and being no-hit. The team included Ed Vosberg, who pitched 10 years in the majors, including four games for the D-backs in 1999; he threw a one-hitter in the semi-final. Tucson got a rematch in 1986, the same two teams facing off in the final; unfortunately, the result was exactly the same, the Arizona side going down 12-0. 1992: Arizona Fall League foundedThe Arizona Fall League came about as teams sought a more controlled - and, indeed, more convenient! - alternative to prospects spending the winter in leagues overseas. Longtime D-backs executive, then the Orioles’ GM, was perhaps the league’s chief architect. Since then it has become what’s often referred to as “baseball’s best-kept secret” or “a hidden baseball gem.” Even now Paul O'Neill Jersey , tickets cost less than ten bucks, and you get to see some of the game’s top prospects in a relaxed setting. Well, generally relaxed: in 1994, Michael Jordan was part of the Scottsdale Scorpions roster, and the resulting AFL attendance records which followed him, have yet to be broken. More informationBaseball in territorial Arizona: a history, 1863/1912, by John Darrin TenneyFlame Delhi biography by SABR ArizonaA timeline of University of Arizona baseball historyThe Tigers 1929 spring training in PhoenixBaseball in the Gila River Internment CampIn the spring, the boys of summer make the Pink Pony their hangoutBefore Chase Field, Phoenix heat didn’t stop baseballImprobable run to Little League World Series was ‘all so cool’ for 1973 teamChanges Coming To Arizona Fall League After Season Closes SaturdayLineup for Baseball Day Arizona12 a.m. Rockies at D-backs from 4/1/98 (first D-backs regular season telecast on FOX Sports Arizona)3 a.m.Padres at D-backs (replay of Friday’’s game) 6 a.m.Diamondbacks Live Postgame (re-air)6:30 a.m. Braves at D-backs from April 26, 2001 (Luis Gonzalez 13th homer in April) 9:30 a.m. Baseball Day Arizona Pregame10 a.m. Baseball Day Arizona: Corona del Sol vs. Desert Vista 12:30 p.m. Baseball Day Arizona Live1 p.m. Baseball Day Arizona: Arizona vs. Grand Canyon softball 3 p.m. Baseball Day Arizona Live4:30 p.m. Diamondbacks Live Pregame 5 p.m. Padres at D-backs8 p.m. Diamondbacks Live Postgame 8:30 p.m. Baseball Day Arizona Recap9:30 p.m. Diamondbacks Live Postgame 10 p.m. Padres at D-backs (replay) NEW YORK (AP) — The surging New York Yankees appear to have help on the way.All-Star slugger Aaron Judge participated in baserunning and fielding drills for about a half hour Monday at Yankee Stadium under the watchful eye of team staff, and Gary Sanchez and Didi Gregorius also made progress in their recoveries from injuries for New York, which is a season-best 36 games over .500.“Just gradually starting to introduce some baseball-type activities,” manager Aaron Boone said of Judge. “It feels like, hopefully, he’s improving a little bit.”The towering right fielder has not swung a bat since July 26, the night he fractured his right wrist after being drilled by Kansas City’s Jakob Junis. Judge is hitting .285 with 26 home runs and 61 RBIs.“We just haven’t gone to the next level of really starting to swing the bat yet,” Boone said. “That’s been trending in the right direction but has been something that’s moved kind of slow.”The Yankees originally anticipated the reigning AL Rookie of the Year could return to action in as soon as three weeks, a prediction that has since missed the mark. Although he fielded some balls in right field Monday, Judge has yet to let his big right arm loose on any throws.“He’s not throwing the ball (at ) full intensity because I think that’s along the lines of really starting to hit,” Boone said. “When you’re cutting it loose there, that’s the motion of that, you’re going to feel that.”Sanchez, on the shelf since July 24 with a strained right groin, began a rehab assignment with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Monday night and homered in his first at-bat. Despite sporting a .188 batting average with 14 homers in what has been a disappointing season for the 25-year old backstop, a rejuvenated Sanchez could provide another major power threat down the stretch.“I just feel like his conditioning is at a really, really good level,” Boone said. “To me, it’s the best it’s been all year.”Out for a week with a left heel contusion, Gregorius hit off a tee Monday and was set to see a doctor. The steady shortstop is hitting .270 with 22 homers and 74 RBIs.“He’s doing well,” Boone said. “We’ve seen significant improvement with him every day.”Meanwhile, New York’s deep bullpen is awaiting the return of All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman. Placed on the 10-day disabled list Wednesday with tendinitis in his left knee, the lefty flamethrower received a platelet injection Friday.“A little bit of improvement but we’re still in the early days of responding to the injection,” Boone said. “Let the injection take hold and hopefully a little bit of downtime and rest time before we start ramping him back up.”