Savannah Bananas

The Savannah Bananas are an exhibition barnstorming baseball team based in Savannah, Georgia.[1] The team was founded in 2016 and has played at Grayson Stadium since its inaugural season. Until 2022, the Bananas competed as a collegiate summer baseball team in the Coastal Plain League's (CPL) West division,[2] where they won three Petitt Cup championships (2016, 2021, and 2022).[1] However, after the growth of their alternate "Banana Ball" format, the team transitioned entirely to exhibition games against their partner touring teams, the Party Animals, the Firefighters, and other "challenger" professional teams, similar to the decades-long format of basketball's Harlem Globetrotters and their partner touring team, the Washington Generals.[3] The team has been featured by ESPN, The Wall Street Journal, and Sports Illustrated because of its on-field hijinks and viral videos.[4]

Savannah Bananas
Information
LocationSavannah, Georgia
BallparkGrayson Stadium
Year founded2016
League championships3 (2016, 2021, 2022)
Former league(s)Coastal Plain League (2016–2022)
ColorsNavy blue, green, yellow, and white
MascotSplit
OwnershipFans First Entertainment (Jesse & Emily Cole)
CoachReginald Horton, Adam Virant
ManagerTyler Gillum
Websitethesavannahbananas.com

History

Following the departure of the South Atlantic League's Savannah Sand Gnats for Columbia, South Carolina, on September 22, 2015, the Coastal Plain League (CPL) announced Savannah as its newest team to begin play for 2016. On February 25, following a name-the-team contest, the Bananas name, logo and colors were officially revealed by the team.[5][6]

In 2016, the Bananas ended their inaugural season as the first seed in the CPL West Division, earning home-field advantage for the first two games of the playoffs. In game one, the Bananas beat the Asheboro Copperheads, 3–2, with the first walk-off in franchise history. The Bananas then defeated the Forest City Owls, 2–0, to win the CPL West Division championship and advance to the Petitt Cup Championship. Game one of the championship was played at Grayson Stadium, where the Bananas defeated the Peninsula Pilots, 8–4. The team traveled to Hampton, Virginia, where the Pilots' 4–3 win in game two forced an all-or-nothing game three. The Bananas took home the Petitt Cup after a 9–7 win in game three.[7] The Bananas were named the league's organization of the year in both 2016 and 2017.

Following the 2022 summer league season, the Bananas announced they were folding their collegiate amateur team and only playing "Banana Ball."[1] An ESPN+ miniseries about the team, called Bananaland, was released in August 2022.[8][9] As of 2023, the team has over six million followers on TikTok, more than any MLB team.[3]

Banana Ball World Tours

"Split", mascot of the Bananas

In 2021 the Bananas announced their first "world tour" where they traveled to Mobile, Alabama, and sold out both nights in Hank Aaron Stadium, with a combined crowd of over 7000 fans.[10]

In 2022, the Bananas added six more cities across four different states to the tour, creating a 14 game "world tour" in which all games were sellouts.[11] While the majority of Banana Ball games feature the Bananas versus the rival Party Animals (similar to the relationship between the Harlem Globetrotters and the Washington Generals), the Bananas introduced a "Challenger Series" in which they play against a different opponent. The first such series was played May 5–6 against the Kansas City Monarchs of the American Association of Professional Baseball and saw each team win one game.[12]

In 2023, the "world tour" was significantly expanded to over 80 games,[13] with the team implementing their new exhibition-only status. The tour was scheduled to include 33 different cities in 22 U.S. states,[14] starting at the The Ballpark of the Palm Beaches in Florida on February 17 and ending seven months later on September 16 at Doubleday Field in Cooperstown, New York.[15] The tour also includes numerous challenger games against teams such as the Charleston Dirty Birds, Southern Maryland Blue Crabs, Florence Y'alls, and a rematch with the Kansas City Monarchs. Additionally, the Bananas played their first international opponent, the Aussie Drop Bears, a team from Australia featuring professional and collegiate players.[16]

Three teams currently compose the World Tour cast - the Bananas proper, the Party Animals, and the newer Firefighters. Joined by the Bananas' coaching staff and team employees, the Bananas Band and the 3 cheering sections - Man Nanas, Banana Nanas and the Splits - alongside elements of the broadcasting team and social media staff, these constitute the more then 150-strong travel team contingent that travels the US during the exhibition season.

Bananas Premier/Pro Team

The 2021 exhibition series in Mobile was the debut of what was then called the Premier Team, the exhibition Banana Ball team under the Bananas umbrella to differentiate from the collegiate team that played in the CPL. This team was a mix of both alumni of the CPL squad and new hires from independent leagues and colleges and later on Minor League Baseball. Following the disbandment of the CPL team in 2022, the Premier Team became the basis of the barnstorming and exhibition Bananas team, the senior of the three and the traditions and heritage of the former collegiate squad were merged into its identity. This composition stayed on for the 2023 season.

Of all the three, the Pro Team, the flagship of the organization, has the most of the social media followings - an estimated 10 million combined fans in all Bananas platforms as of 2023.

Savannah Party Animals

During the 2020 shortened Bananas CPL season, the organization debuted what would be the second of the current three teams during the test Banana Ball games at home - the Party Animals. Previously, the test Banana Ball games were played as scrimmage games of the CPL Bananas pre-season. The creation of the team gave the Bananas a true home or away opponent in its exhibition gamedays during most of the season.

So named to honor Savannah's nightlife and party atmosphere as well as to aim to the 90s generation among the fanbase, the pink or black shirted Party Animals were first recruited from graduates of the Bananas CPL program before turning pro a year later and with a similar composition of players as in the more senior Bananas.

In the challenger series games versus the Bananas proper, players from this squad are the ones that help train those of other baseball teams from independent leagues, summer collegiate leagues and MiLB, and other teams as needed that face the Bananas to help adapt to Banana Ball rules and the traditions of the wider Bananas organization.

Savannah Firefighters

Debuting on October 5, 2023, as part of the 2024 season launch night, the Firefighters - with their red uniforms - are the newest and youngest Banana Ball club under the Bananas umbrella, slated to make their official debut in the 2024 season. The Firefighters are a nod, not just to the real life heroes of the Savannah Fire Department, but also of all the heroes of the fire services in the United States and globally.

"Banana Ball" rules

The Bananas have deviated from standard baseball rules in creating the "banana ball" format.[17] This format has been used since June 2020 at home and for most touring exhibition games. Refinements have been made over time—the challenge rule was introduced in 2023. The current "banana ball" rules are, as amended:[18]

  1. Games are won by points, instead of runs: the team that scores the most runs in an inning gets one point, except in the final inning when every run counts as one point. The final inning may be earlier than the 9th inning, due to the below noted time limit. When the home team has scored enough runs to "win" any inning other than the final inning, the inning immediately ends.
  2. There is a "two-hour" time limit; no new inning may start after 1 hour and 50 minutes have elapsed. Once an inning starts, it is played to completion.
  3. Batters cannot step out of the batters box. Doing so results in an automatic strike.
  4. Batters cannot bunt. Doing so results in an automatic ejection.
  5. Batters can attempt to steal first base at any point during their at bat, including on passed balls or wild pitches.
  6. Walks are called "sprints". After ball four, the batter is allowed to advance as far around the bases as he can while the ball is sequentially thrown to all of the fielders other than the pitcher, starting with the catcher. The ball remains dead, with the batter-runner not liable to be put out, until the four infielders and three outfielders have each touched the ball. This often results in the batter-runner advancing to second base on the sprint.
  7. No mound visits are allowed.
  8. Foul balls caught by fans are counted as outs.
  9. Ties are broken by a "showdown tiebreaker", an abbreviated extra innings format. Each team's half-inning during the showdown ends with any out or with any run scored by the batter—if the batter puts the ball in play, he must attempt to score. A batter who draws a walk advances to second base, with the hitting team allowed to send a new batter to the plate. At any point during the showdown, a home run hit over the outfield wall immediately ends the game in favor of the batting team. If the game is still tied after a showdown round, another showdown round is played, until there is a winner. Scenarios differ by showdown round:[18] In showdown round 1, each team selects a pitcher and hitter to face off, with the defense fielding only their pitcher, catcher, and a single fielder. In showdown round 2, the fielder is eliminated. In showdown round 3 (and later), the fielder returns, but each half-inning starts with the bases loaded, and each run scored counts as a point.
  10. Each team is allowed to challenge certain calls by the umpires: whether a ball was fair or foul, whether or not a runner was tagged out (at home plate or on the basepaths), and whether a ball was caught or not. A team retains its right to challenge until they lose a challenge, after which they may not challenge any calls for the remainder of the game. The fans can also challenge one play per game, as determined by a fan who is chosen to initiate the challenge. Challenged plays are reviewed by the broadcast team, who relay their ruling to the umpire.
  11. “The Golden Batter Rule” - One time in a game, a team may send any hitter in the lineup to bat in any spot. The goal of this rule is so a team can have their best hitter hit when the game is on the line.

Other non-standard baseball activities are sometimes used for entertainment purposes. For example, an August 2023 game featured an at bat where the pitcher and batter played rock paper scissors before each pitch: each time the pitcher won, the batter had to bat from the opposite side of home plate as he normally would, and each time the batter won, the pitcher needed to announce what type of pitch he was about to throw.[19]

Attendance

The Bananas recorded over 80,000 total fans at 25 home games in 2016. The team also ranked second in average attendance (3,659 fans per game) among 160 collegiate summer teams across the country.[20][21] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the team reduced capacity to 30% to ensure safe distances between fans. They reopened to full capacity after the 2021 season started, and drew 86,407 to 23 games, an average of 3,757 fans per game, which led all summer collegiate teams for that season.[22]

References

  1. Dominitz, Nathan. "Savannah Bananas fold collegiate team, focus on taking Banana Ball nationwide". Savannah Morning News. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  2. "Savannah Bananas announce they will play Banana Ball year round". wtoc.com. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  3. Palmer, Joseph (May 26, 2023). "'More than baseball': how the Savannah Bananas became the greatest show in sports". The Guardian. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  4. Heupel, Shannon (March 17, 2022). "Going Bananas! Two wild nights of 'the greatest show in baseball' coming to Montgomery". Montgomery Advertiser. Retrieved March 20, 2022.
  5. "Savannah Baseball Announces Team Name and Unveils Logo". Coastal Plain League. February 25, 2016. Retrieved February 25, 2016.
  6. "Savannah's new baseball team: The Bananas". SavannahNow.com. Savannah Morning News. February 25, 2016. Retrieved February 25, 2016.
  7. "Bananas Win CPL Championship". The Savannah Bananas. August 17, 2016. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  8. Williams, Dave (August 18, 2022). "New series 'Bananaland' to debut Friday". WJCL. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  9. Luter, Carianne (August 19, 2022). "Bananaland: Savannah Bananas get original series on ESPN+". WJXT. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  10. "Savannah Bananas bring their 'One City World Tour' to Mobile". WKRG News 5. March 29, 2021. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  11. "Savannah Bananas World Tour sites unveiled | Ballpark Digest". October 19, 2021. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  12. "Savannah Bananas deliver a dance party to Legends Field". The Pitch. May 9, 2022. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  13. "2023 Banana Ball World Tour Schedule". thesavannahbananas.com. Retrieved August 14, 2023.
  14. "See Banana Ball on the Road". thesavannahbananas.com. Retrieved August 14, 2023.
  15. "Savannah Bananas 2023 tour: Schedule, tickets and more to know about baseball's most entertaining team". www.sportingnews.com. March 1, 2023. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  16. Zimmer, Amy (June 9, 2023). "Savannah Bananas welcome Aussie Drop Bears in first-ever International Challenger". WJCL (TV). Retrieved August 14, 2023.
  17. "Fans catching foul balls for outs? No walks allowed? Rules for this baseball team are bananas". KSAT-TV. April 12, 2021. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  18. "Banana Ball". The Savannah Bananas. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  19. NESN broadcast of the August 14, 2023, game in Hartford, Connecticut.
  20. "Bananas Finish Second in Country in Attendance". thesavannahbananas.com (Press release). August 2016. Retrieved August 18, 2023.
  21. Reichard, Kevin (August 15, 2016). "2016 Summer Collegiate Attendance by Average". Ballpark Digest. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  22. Reichard, Kevin (August 23, 2021). "2021 summer collegiate attendance by average". Ballpark Digest. Retrieved August 18, 2023.

Further reading

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