Nashville Sounds: Difference between revisions
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The '''Nashville Sounds''' are a [[Minor League Baseball]] team competing in the [[International League]] as the Triple-A affiliate of the [[Milwaukee Brewers]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Ballpark Guide |url=https://www.milb.com/nashville/ballpark/ballparkguide |work=MiLB.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> They | The '''Nashville Sounds''' are a [[Minor League Baseball]] team competing in the [[International League]] as the Triple-A affiliate of the [[Milwaukee Brewers]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Ballpark Guide |url=https://www.milb.com/nashville/ballpark/ballparkguide |work=MiLB.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> They're named after the city's deep connection to music, specifically the "[[Nashville sound]]", a country music subgenre that emerged here in the mid-1950s. Nashville's oldest active professional sports franchise, period. Founded in 1978, the team has become one of the most reliably attended squads in Triple-A baseball, playing home games at [[First Horizon Park]] in Germantown. After finishing their 48th season in 2025, the Sounds have played 6,725 regular-season games with a record of 3,490–3,233–2 (.519). | ||
== Founding and Early History == | == Founding and Early History == | ||
Larry Schmittou and his group of investors purchased expansion rights in the Double-A Southern League back in 1978, establishing the Nashville Sounds. Schmittou had coached the [[Vanderbilt University|Vanderbilt]] baseball team and was already woven into Nashville's baseball fabric. He drove the push to bring professional baseball back to the city, tapping into a long history: the Nashville Americans played in the original Southern League from 1885 to 1886 at Sulphur Spring Park, later called Athletic Park and [[Sulphur Dell]]. | |||
The franchise's name came straight from Music City's identity. Country legends like Larry Gatlin, Jerry Reed, Conway Twitty, and Richard Sterban (bass singer of the [[Oak Ridge Boys]]) became stockholders. Schmittou and general manager Farrell Owens landed the [[Cincinnati Reds]] as a Major League Baseball affiliate after meeting with Sheldon "Chief" Bender, Cincinnati's farm director, at the 1976 Winter Meetings. The Sounds played their first game on April 15, 1978, against the Memphis Chicks at Memphis' Tim McCarver Stadium. They lost, 4–2. | |||
The 1978 expansion team led all of Minor League Baseball in attendance from day one. Over their seven seasons in the Southern League, they drew bigger crowds than anyone else year after year. Their original logo, used from 1978 into 1998, showed a mustachioed player nicknamed "Slugger" swinging a guitar instead of a bat, with G-clef letters spelling out the team name and an eighth-note cap logo. | |||
After two seasons with Cincinnati, | After two seasons with Cincinnati, things changed. In 1980, the Sounds switched to become the Double-A affiliate of the [[New York Yankees]]. This sparked the most successful period in franchise history. Five straight winning seasons. Five straight second-half Western Division titles. Five straight postseason berths. Manager Stump Merrill's 1980 Sounds team posted a franchise-best 97–46 record. Nashville set the league season attendance record that year: 575,676 fans showed up at [[Herschel Greer Stadium]]. | ||
== Championships and Competitive Milestones == | == Championships and Competitive Milestones == | ||
Six consecutive second-half division titles from 1979 to 1984. Two Southern League championships, too: 1979 as Cincinnati's Double-A affiliate, and 1982. The 1982 Sounds, managed by Johnny Oates, finished 77–67 and won the second half. They beat the Knoxville Blue Jays, 3–1, in the Western Division finals, then took the Jacksonville Suns 3–1 in the league championship series. That's the franchise's second Southern League title. | |||
Before the 1985 season, Schmittou and the owners purchased the Triple-A Evansville Triplets from the American Association and relocated them to Nashville. The move bumped the franchise up to Triple-A, where it's stayed ever since. In 1987, Nashville rejoined Cincinnati's organization this time as the Reds' Triple-A affiliate. Over the next three seasons, fans watched future members of Cincinnati's 1990 World Series championship team develop right there. | |||
1990 was special. The Sounds drew 605,122 fans to Greer Stadium, an all-time record. They compiled an 86–61 record under manager Pete Mackanin. After tying the Buffalo Bisons in the regular season, they won the Eastern Division title in a one-game playoff. They made their first American Association championship series but fell to the Omaha Royals. | |||
The Sounds joined the Triple-A Pacific Coast League in 1998 following | The Sounds joined the Triple-A Pacific Coast League in 1998 after that league dissolved following 1997. Their sole Pacific Coast League crown came in 2005. Manager Frank Kremblas led them to win the American Conference Northern Division title, then the conference title over the Oklahoma RedHawks, three games to two. They swept Tacoma, 3–0, to capture the Pacific Coast League championship. That's Nashville's first Triple-A championship since moving up in 1985 and their first since the 1982 Southern League crown. | ||
Greer Stadium witnessed something remarkable on August 6 and 7, 1988. Back-to-back no-hitters. First, Indianapolis' [https://biography.wiki/r/Randy_Johnson Randy Johnson] and Pat Pacillo combined on a no-hitter that Nashville beat them anyway. The next night, Jack Armstrong pitched the third no-hitter in franchise history, a 4–0 Sounds victory. | |||
== Herschel Greer Stadium == | == Herschel Greer Stadium == | ||
From 1978 through 2014, the Sounds called Herschel Greer Stadium home. The Metro Parks Board leased Schmittou the site of Nashville's former softball fields at Fort Negley, a Civil War fortification two miles south of downtown. That $1.5 million ballpark was named in honor of Herschel Lynn Greer, a prominent Nashville businessman and president of the Nashville Vols. | |||
In 1993, the stadium got one of its most beloved additions: a guitar-shaped scoreboard. Pure Nashville. The Sounds played their final season at Greer in 2014 with the hashtag #LastCheerAtGreer. The last home game on August 27, 2014, drew a standing room only crowd. The stadium was demolished in 2019. | |||
Over | Over 36 years, millions of Nashville fans passed through Greer Stadium's gates to watch some of minor league baseball's greatest moments. One that stands out: the 1994 visit by [[Birmingham Barons]] outfielder [https://biography.wiki/m/Michael_Jordan Michael Jordan] during his famous baseball sabbatical. | ||
== First Horizon Park == | == First Horizon Park == | ||
Two big things happened before the 2015 season: the Sounds moved into a brand new [[First Horizon Park]] (built on the same grounds as [[Sulphur Dell]], returning baseball to its historic home) and switched to the Oakland Athletics organization. | |||
On April 17, 2015, First Horizon Park opened | On April 17, 2015, First Horizon Park opened to a sellout crowd of 10,459. The franchise's 38th season was a smashing success. With 19 sellouts in 71 games, total attendance hit 565,548, the highest the Sounds drew in the previous 25 years. Former mayor Karl Dean pushed the stadium proposal. The Nashville Metro Council approved funding. Populous and Hastings Architectural Associates designed it. Barton Malow and Bell & Associates Construction built it. | ||
The | The park got its name "First Horizon Park" in January 2020. It sits at 19 Junior Gilliam Way with roughly 10,000 seats and dimensions of 330 feet in left field, 403 feet in center, and 310 feet in right. | ||
The | The most striking feature pays direct tribute to Music City's heritage. Beyond the right-center field wall sits an HD LED scoreboard measuring 4,200 square feet, one of the largest in minor league baseball. It's shaped like a guitar. The line score runs down the neck, a nod to the guitar scoreboard at old Greer Stadium. In 2021, Nashville led all of Minor League Baseball in both total attendance (436,868) and average attendance (6,721). They did it again in 2022 with 555,576 total fans. | ||
The park hosts more than just baseball. MLB Home Run Derby X came to First Horizon Park on August 31, 2024. Four teams of three competed, racking up points for home runs and balls that fell short of the wall. Pedro Álvarez, Andruw Jones, Nick Swisher, and Manny Ramirez all participated. | |||
== Recent Seasons and Outlook == | == Recent Seasons and Outlook == | ||
Nashville | Nashville switched to the Texas Rangers organization in 2019. Then came 2021: they rejoined the Milwaukee Brewers, and it's been productive. The 2025 season finished 85–63, tied for fifth-most wins in the International League with Durham. Manager Gary Sweet finished his fifth consecutive season and is the Sounds' all-time winningest manager with a 484–379 record (.561). | ||
When Major League Baseball reorganized Minor League Baseball in 2021, Nashville went into the Triple-A East, which became the International League in 2022. The franchise has served eight different Major League organizations. Twenty-nine managers have managed the club. More than 1,500 players have worn Sounds uniforms. | |||
The | The bigger picture keeps getting attention. ESPN's senior baseball insider Jeff Passan listed Music City first among likely expansion candidates during a [https://biography.wiki/p/Pat_McAfee Pat McAfee] Show interview in 2025. Dave Dombrowski, the former Red Sox executive leading the Nashville expansion effort since 2019, said it's "clear to him that Nashville is ready for Major League Baseball." A 2023 poll showed 69% of MLB players think Nashville's the best fit for an expansion franchise. The plan includes a privately funded 42,000-seat stadium next to Nissan Stadium, estimated to cost roughly $1.2 billion. For now, the Nashville Sounds remain the city's primary professional baseball institution and one of minor league baseball's most storied franchises. | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
Latest revision as of 23:52, 23 April 2026
The Nashville Sounds are a Minor League Baseball team competing in the International League as the Triple-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers.[1] They're named after the city's deep connection to music, specifically the "Nashville sound", a country music subgenre that emerged here in the mid-1950s. Nashville's oldest active professional sports franchise, period. Founded in 1978, the team has become one of the most reliably attended squads in Triple-A baseball, playing home games at First Horizon Park in Germantown. After finishing their 48th season in 2025, the Sounds have played 6,725 regular-season games with a record of 3,490–3,233–2 (.519).
Founding and Early History
Larry Schmittou and his group of investors purchased expansion rights in the Double-A Southern League back in 1978, establishing the Nashville Sounds. Schmittou had coached the Vanderbilt baseball team and was already woven into Nashville's baseball fabric. He drove the push to bring professional baseball back to the city, tapping into a long history: the Nashville Americans played in the original Southern League from 1885 to 1886 at Sulphur Spring Park, later called Athletic Park and Sulphur Dell.
The franchise's name came straight from Music City's identity. Country legends like Larry Gatlin, Jerry Reed, Conway Twitty, and Richard Sterban (bass singer of the Oak Ridge Boys) became stockholders. Schmittou and general manager Farrell Owens landed the Cincinnati Reds as a Major League Baseball affiliate after meeting with Sheldon "Chief" Bender, Cincinnati's farm director, at the 1976 Winter Meetings. The Sounds played their first game on April 15, 1978, against the Memphis Chicks at Memphis' Tim McCarver Stadium. They lost, 4–2.
The 1978 expansion team led all of Minor League Baseball in attendance from day one. Over their seven seasons in the Southern League, they drew bigger crowds than anyone else year after year. Their original logo, used from 1978 into 1998, showed a mustachioed player nicknamed "Slugger" swinging a guitar instead of a bat, with G-clef letters spelling out the team name and an eighth-note cap logo.
After two seasons with Cincinnati, things changed. In 1980, the Sounds switched to become the Double-A affiliate of the New York Yankees. This sparked the most successful period in franchise history. Five straight winning seasons. Five straight second-half Western Division titles. Five straight postseason berths. Manager Stump Merrill's 1980 Sounds team posted a franchise-best 97–46 record. Nashville set the league season attendance record that year: 575,676 fans showed up at Herschel Greer Stadium.
Championships and Competitive Milestones
Six consecutive second-half division titles from 1979 to 1984. Two Southern League championships, too: 1979 as Cincinnati's Double-A affiliate, and 1982. The 1982 Sounds, managed by Johnny Oates, finished 77–67 and won the second half. They beat the Knoxville Blue Jays, 3–1, in the Western Division finals, then took the Jacksonville Suns 3–1 in the league championship series. That's the franchise's second Southern League title.
Before the 1985 season, Schmittou and the owners purchased the Triple-A Evansville Triplets from the American Association and relocated them to Nashville. The move bumped the franchise up to Triple-A, where it's stayed ever since. In 1987, Nashville rejoined Cincinnati's organization this time as the Reds' Triple-A affiliate. Over the next three seasons, fans watched future members of Cincinnati's 1990 World Series championship team develop right there.
1990 was special. The Sounds drew 605,122 fans to Greer Stadium, an all-time record. They compiled an 86–61 record under manager Pete Mackanin. After tying the Buffalo Bisons in the regular season, they won the Eastern Division title in a one-game playoff. They made their first American Association championship series but fell to the Omaha Royals.
The Sounds joined the Triple-A Pacific Coast League in 1998 after that league dissolved following 1997. Their sole Pacific Coast League crown came in 2005. Manager Frank Kremblas led them to win the American Conference Northern Division title, then the conference title over the Oklahoma RedHawks, three games to two. They swept Tacoma, 3–0, to capture the Pacific Coast League championship. That's Nashville's first Triple-A championship since moving up in 1985 and their first since the 1982 Southern League crown.
Greer Stadium witnessed something remarkable on August 6 and 7, 1988. Back-to-back no-hitters. First, Indianapolis' Randy Johnson and Pat Pacillo combined on a no-hitter that Nashville beat them anyway. The next night, Jack Armstrong pitched the third no-hitter in franchise history, a 4–0 Sounds victory.
Herschel Greer Stadium
From 1978 through 2014, the Sounds called Herschel Greer Stadium home. The Metro Parks Board leased Schmittou the site of Nashville's former softball fields at Fort Negley, a Civil War fortification two miles south of downtown. That $1.5 million ballpark was named in honor of Herschel Lynn Greer, a prominent Nashville businessman and president of the Nashville Vols.
In 1993, the stadium got one of its most beloved additions: a guitar-shaped scoreboard. Pure Nashville. The Sounds played their final season at Greer in 2014 with the hashtag #LastCheerAtGreer. The last home game on August 27, 2014, drew a standing room only crowd. The stadium was demolished in 2019.
Over 36 years, millions of Nashville fans passed through Greer Stadium's gates to watch some of minor league baseball's greatest moments. One that stands out: the 1994 visit by Birmingham Barons outfielder Michael Jordan during his famous baseball sabbatical.
First Horizon Park
Two big things happened before the 2015 season: the Sounds moved into a brand new First Horizon Park (built on the same grounds as Sulphur Dell, returning baseball to its historic home) and switched to the Oakland Athletics organization.
On April 17, 2015, First Horizon Park opened to a sellout crowd of 10,459. The franchise's 38th season was a smashing success. With 19 sellouts in 71 games, total attendance hit 565,548, the highest the Sounds drew in the previous 25 years. Former mayor Karl Dean pushed the stadium proposal. The Nashville Metro Council approved funding. Populous and Hastings Architectural Associates designed it. Barton Malow and Bell & Associates Construction built it.
The park got its name "First Horizon Park" in January 2020. It sits at 19 Junior Gilliam Way with roughly 10,000 seats and dimensions of 330 feet in left field, 403 feet in center, and 310 feet in right.
The most striking feature pays direct tribute to Music City's heritage. Beyond the right-center field wall sits an HD LED scoreboard measuring 4,200 square feet, one of the largest in minor league baseball. It's shaped like a guitar. The line score runs down the neck, a nod to the guitar scoreboard at old Greer Stadium. In 2021, Nashville led all of Minor League Baseball in both total attendance (436,868) and average attendance (6,721). They did it again in 2022 with 555,576 total fans.
The park hosts more than just baseball. MLB Home Run Derby X came to First Horizon Park on August 31, 2024. Four teams of three competed, racking up points for home runs and balls that fell short of the wall. Pedro Álvarez, Andruw Jones, Nick Swisher, and Manny Ramirez all participated.
Recent Seasons and Outlook
Nashville switched to the Texas Rangers organization in 2019. Then came 2021: they rejoined the Milwaukee Brewers, and it's been productive. The 2025 season finished 85–63, tied for fifth-most wins in the International League with Durham. Manager Gary Sweet finished his fifth consecutive season and is the Sounds' all-time winningest manager with a 484–379 record (.561).
When Major League Baseball reorganized Minor League Baseball in 2021, Nashville went into the Triple-A East, which became the International League in 2022. The franchise has served eight different Major League organizations. Twenty-nine managers have managed the club. More than 1,500 players have worn Sounds uniforms.
The bigger picture keeps getting attention. ESPN's senior baseball insider Jeff Passan listed Music City first among likely expansion candidates during a Pat McAfee Show interview in 2025. Dave Dombrowski, the former Red Sox executive leading the Nashville expansion effort since 2019, said it's "clear to him that Nashville is ready for Major League Baseball." A 2023 poll showed 69% of MLB players think Nashville's the best fit for an expansion franchise. The plan includes a privately funded 42,000-seat stadium next to Nissan Stadium, estimated to cost roughly $1.2 billion. For now, the Nashville Sounds remain the city's primary professional baseball institution and one of minor league baseball's most storied franchises.
References
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