Welcome to YLOAN.COM
yloan.com » memorabilia » The San Diego Padres Tickets : The San Diego Padres Have Used Six Different Logos
Gadgets and Gizmos misc Design Bankruptcy Licenses performance choices memorabilia bargain carriage tour medical insurance data

The San Diego Padres Tickets : The San Diego Padres Have Used Six Different Logos

The San Diego Padres are a Major League Baseball team based in San Diego

, California. They play in the National League Western Division. Founded in 1969, the Padres have won the National League Pennant twice, in 1984 and 1998, losing in the World Series both times.

The team has played its spring training games at the Peoria Sports Complex in Peoria, Arizona since 1994. They share the stadium with the Seattle Mariners.

From 1969 to 1993, the Padres held Spring Training in Yuma, Arizona at Desert Sun Stadium. Due to the short driving distance and direct highway route (170 miles, all on Interstate 8), Yuma was very popular with Padres fans, and many fans would travel by car from San Diego for Spring Training games.

The move from Yuma to Peoria was very controversial, but was defended by the team as a reflection on the low quality of facilities in Yuma and the long travel necessary to play against other Arizona-based Spring Training teams (whose sites are all in the Phoenix and Tucson areas, both rather far from Yuma).


The San Diego Padres have used six different logos and four different color combinations throughout their history. Their first logo depicts a friar swinging a bat with Padres written at the top while standing in a sun-like figure with San Diego Padres on the exterior of it. The "Swinging Friar" has popped up on the uniform on and off ever since (he is currently on the left sleeve of the jersey), and is currently the mascot of the team. The original team colors were the brown and gold of the original logo.

In 1985, the Padres switched to using a script-like logo in which Padres was written sloped up. That would later become a script logo for the Padres. The team's colors were changed to brown and orange and remained this way through the 1990 season.

In 1989, the Padres took the scripted Padres logo that was used from 1985 to 1988 and put it in a tan ring that read "San Diego Baseball Club" with a striped center.

In 1991, the logo was changed to a silver ring with the Padres script changed from brown to blue. The logo only lasted one year, as the Padres changed their logo for the third time in three years, again by switching colors of the ring. The logo became a white ring with fewer stripes in the center and a darker blue Padres script with orange shadows. In 1991, the team's colors were also changed, to a combination of orange and navy blue.

The logo was completely changed when the team changed stadiums between the 2003 and 2004 seasons, as the logo now looks like home plate at a baseball field with San Diego written in gold font at the top right corner and the Padres new script written completely across the center. Waves finish the bottom of the plate. Navy remains but a sandy beige replaces orange as a secondary color. The team's colors were also changed, to navy blue and sand brown.

Starting in 2008, during every Sunday home games, the Padres wear camouflage jerseys, to honor the military. They also wear these uniforms on Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day. Recruits from the nearby Marine Corps Recruit Depot often visit the games en masse, in uniform, often filling entire sections in the upper deck. When they are present, the team commemorates this with a special Fourth Inning Stretch featuring the Marine Hymn.

This is part of an extensive military outreach program, which also includes a Military Appreciation Night game, and game tapes mailed to deployed United States Navy ships of the Pacific Fleet for onboard viewing (a large portion of the Pacific Fleet is homeported in San Diego).


The "Swinging Friar" is currently the mascot of the team. Some in the past have confused The Famous Chicken as the mascot of the Padres. Although he does make appearances occasionally at San Diego sporting events, he has never been the official mascot of any San Diego sports team.

The San Diego Padres are the sponsors of and heavily involved in most aspects of the Sports Business Management MBA degree program offered in conjunction with San Diego State University's College of Business Administration. SDSU's Sports MBA is the only program of its kind created in partnership with a professional sports franchise.

The curriculum focuses on the entire sports business industry, not just baseball. The program includes an internship. Members of Padres senior management regularly participate, including work with the development and continued coordination of SDSU's International Case Competition, which annually attracts participation from top business schools.

by: Amanda Harrison
How To Go About Finding Step Vans For Sale Finding The Best Pest Control Company In West Palm Area Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - How The Size Of A Cyst Affects You Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - Ovarian Cyst Sizes Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - Cyst Size And What It Means Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - What The Size Of A Cyst Means Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - Large Or Small, Ovarian Cysts Are Painful Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - The Varying Sizes Of Ovarian Cysts Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - The Differences In Sizes Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - The Differeing Sizes Of Cysts Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - The Size Of A Cyst Tells All Natural Cures For Ovarian Cysts - Size Variations Of Ovarian Cysts Virgo Free Horoscope - The Easiest And Cheapest Way To Have Your Signs Read
print
www.yloan.com guest:  register | login | search IP(216.73.216.180) California / Anaheim Processed in 0.024999 second(s), 5 queries , Gzip enabled , discuz 5.5 through PHP 8.3.9 , debug code: 28 , 4699, 870,
The San Diego Padres Tickets : The San Diego Padres Have Used Six Different Logos Anaheim