Hillsboro Hops

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ClassHigh-A (2021–present)
Previous classesClass A Short Season (2013–2020)
LeagueNorthwest League (2013–present)
TeamArizona Diamondbacks
(2013–present)
Hillsboro Hops
Team logo Cap insignia
Minor league affiliations
ClassHigh-A (2021–present)
Previous classesClass A Short Season (2013–2020)
LeagueNorthwest League (2013–present)
Major league affiliations
TeamArizona Diamondbacks
(2013–present)
Minor league titles
League titles (3)
  • 2014
  • 2015
  • 2019
Division titles (3)
  • 2014
  • 2015
  • 2019
Team data
ColorsNavy blue, green, light blue, white
       
MascotBarley
BallparkHillsboro Hops Ballpark (2026–present)
Owner(s)/
Operator(s)
Short Season, LLC
General managerK.L. Wombacher
ManagerMark Reed
Websitemilb.com/hillsboro

The Hillsboro Hops are a Minor League Baseball team in the northwest United States, located in Hillsboro, Oregon, a city in the Portland metropolitan area. The Hops are members of the Northwest League and are the High-A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. As of 2026, they play their games at Hillsboro Hops Ballpark, a new stadium directly across the street from their former home, Hillsboro Ballpark (Ron Tonkin Field).

As early as 2011, the Yakima Bears, a team of the Northwest League in Yakima, Washington, started exploring options to relocate after a lack of progress on a new ballpark to replace their below-standard Yakima County Stadium and escape a declining local economy.[1] Following a failed proposal to move to Vancouver, Washington, the team received an offer to move to Hillsboro, Oregon, in June 2012, with plans to start play in 2013.[2] The city and team reached a deal, with city council approval on June 5,[3] and approval by the league and franchise on June 8.[4] The city signed the agreement with the team on June 26,[5][6] with approval by Major League Baseball coming in August.[7] Groundbreaking for a new 4,500-seat stadium took place on September 21,[8] and the team's name, Hillsboro Hops, was announced on October 16.[9] The Hops replaced the Triple-A Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League, which relocated to Tucson at the end of the 2010 season.[2] The Portland area went without minor league baseball in 2011 and 2012.

The Hillsboro Hops' first game was played on the road against the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes on June 14, 2013, a 3–2 loss.[10] Ryan Gebhardt had the team's first hit and Brian Billigen earned the first RBI.[10] Their first win came on June 17 in the Hillsboro Ballpark home opener against the Eugene Emeralds.[11] The inaugural home opener was attended by a sellout 4,710 fans, who watched Jordan Parr hit the first home run in the Hops' history.[11][12]

Barley, the team's mascot, was introduced on June 28, 2013.[13] The Hops set the franchise attendance record in 2014, when their games were attended by 138,732 people.[14] They also won their division and the league championship.[15] The team was managed by J. R. House, whose coaching staff included fellow-former major leaguers Doug Drabek and Mark Grace. Hillsboro swept the championship series against the three-time NWL defending champion Vancouver Canadians. The team set another franchise attendance record in 2015 with 143,412 (an average of 3,774 for 38 dates) while winning a second consecutive league title.[16][17]

The Hops hosted the NWL All-Star Game in 2017.[18]

On August 28, 2019, the Hops clinched a playoff berth for the sixth straight season breaking the Northwest League record previously held by Vancouver at five straight seasons.[19] They faced the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes in the divisional round, where they won the series 2–0, and advanced to Northwest League finals for the first time since 2015.[20] In Game 1, Hillsboro entered the bottom of the ninth inning trailing 3–1 but put up four runs in the inning including a walk-off 3-run home run by Andy Yerzy. The Hops were defeated in Game 2, losing 9–1, but bounced back in Game 3 with a two-run ninth-inning rally to snag the win. The Hops were shut out in Game 4, losing 6–0. Then in Game 5, Hillsboro captured their third NWL title, and their first since 2015, winning the series 3–2.[21]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Minor League Baseball season was cancelled. In conjunction with Major League Baseball's restructuring of Minor League Baseball in 2021, the Hops were organized into the High-A West along with five other teams previously of the Northwest League.[22] They continued as the High-A affiliate of the Diamondbacks.[22] In 2022, the High-A West became known as the Northwest League, the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization.[23]

In January 2023, it was announced that Veronica Gajownik had been hired to manage the Hops, which made her the first woman to manage a minor league Class High-A baseball team,[24] and the first openly LGBTQ manager in minor or major league baseball history.[25]

The team competes as the "Sonadores de Hillsboro" as part of minor league baseball's "Copa de Diversion" program.[26]

Season-by-season records

Northwest League (2013–present)

Season PDC Division Finish Wins Losses Win% Postseason Manager Attendance
Hillsboro Hops
2013 ARI South 3rd 34 42 .447 Audo Vicente 135,167
2014 ARI South 1st 48 28 .632 Defeated Boise in division series 2–1
Defeated Vancouver in championship series 2–1
J. R. House 138,732
2015 ARI South 1st 45 31 .592 Defeated Salem-Keizer in division series 2–1
Defeated Tri-City in championship series 2–1
Shelley Duncan 143,412
2016 ARI South 2nd 42 33 .560 Lost to Eugene in division series 2–1 Shelley Duncan 131,851
2017 ARI South 1st 41 35 .539 Lost to Eugene in division series 2–0 Shawn Roof 128,416
2018 ARI South 1st 51 25 .671 Lost to Eugene in division series 2–0 Shawn Roof 130,286
2019 ARI South 1st 48 28 .632 Defeated Salem-Keizer in division series 2–0
Defeated Tri-City in championship series 3–2
Javier Colina 133,605
2021 ARI West 4th 52 60 .464 Vince Harrison 110,384
2022 ARI N/A 4th 60 70 .462 Vince Harrison 150,792
2023 ARI N/A 6th 56 76 .424 Veronica Gajownik 158,723
2024 ARI N/A 3rd 69 62 .527 Javier Colina 153,571
2025 ARI N/A 4th 60 71 .458 Mark Reed 174,777
  • The 2020 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Division winner League champions

Ballpark

Hillsboro Ballpark scoreboard

The Hops played their home games at Hillsboro Ballpark until 2025. A new state of art facility opened next door, named Hillsboro Hops Ballpark in 2026.[27][28]

Radio

Rich Burk was signed as the team's radio announcer on KPOJ (620 AM).[29]

Roster

Players Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 28 Wellington Aracena
  •  2 Kyle Ayers
  • 21 Rio Britton
  • 37 Dawson Brown
  • 17 Brian Curley
  • -- Patrick Forbes Injury icon
  • 23 Joangel González
  • 31 Caden Grice
  • 11 David Hagaman
  • 34 Sawyer Hawks
  • 37 Tommy Henry * #
  • -- Grayson Hitt ~
  • 44 Sam Knowlton
  • 14 Adonys Perez
  • 33 Rocco Reid
  • 38 Zane Russell
  • 22 Junior Sanchez
  • 16 Sandro Santana
  • 35 Nate Savino
  • -- Jacob Steinmetz Injury icon
  • 45 John West
  • 27 Ricardo Yan

Catchers

  • 15 Alberto Barriga
  • 13 Kenny Castillo

Infielders

  •  5 Wallace Clark
  •  8 Brady Counsell
  •  9 Modeifi Marte
  • 24 Yerald Nin
  • 12 Adrian Rodriguez
  • 19 Ruben Santana
  • 10 Yassel Soler

Outfielders

  •  5 Slade Caldwell
  • 25 Avery Owusu-Asiedu
  •  1 Trent Youngblood

Manager

Coaches

60-day injured list

  • 14 Luke Craig
  • 24 Mason Marriott

Branding

The team name is a reference to the plant used in beer brewing (Oregon is the second-largest hop-producing US state by volume),[30] as well as to various baseball terms such as the short hop, bad hop, and crow hop.[9] No previous professional or collegiate sports team has ever been called the "Hops".[31] The team's logo includes a hop cone wearing a baseball hat, evergreen trees, and Mount Hood.[32] Team colors are green, navy blue, and light blue.[30] The Hops' mascot is Barley, who is green with a blue baseball cap.[13] (Barley is another plant used in beer brewing.) The team's branding and logo was named by Ballpark Digest as the best in Minor League Baseball for 2013.[33]

Sponsorships

In March 2013, the team announced a three-year deal with BridgePort Brewing Company to be the official beer of the Hops.[34][35] Advantis Credit Union, Les Schwab Tires, Nike, Tuality Healthcare, and The Oregonian were the founding sponsors.[36]

Notable alumni

Minor league affiliations

References

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