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BROOKLYN CYCLONES
BASEBALL COMES HOME TO BROOKLYN
Wednesday, November 29, 2000
MAYOR GIULIANI ANNOUNCES NEW YORK
METS MINOR LEAGUE TEAM TO BE NAMED THE "BROOKLYN CYCLONES"
Mayor and Club Owners Congratulate
Suffolk County Fan Who Won Team-Naming Contest
Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani today
joined Mets Club owners Jeffrey Wilpon and Fred Wilpon to announce that the
first professional baseball team to play in Brooklyn in 43 years will be
named the "Brooklyn Cyclones". The Mayor and Jeffrey and Fred Wilpon
congratulated John Diffley of Port Jefferson, N.Y., who submitted the
winning team name in a 12-week-long contest sponsored by The Daily News and
660-WFAN-AM that drew more than 7,000 entries.
"Today we're proud to announce that the Mets' new minor league team will be
known as the 'Brooklyn Cyclones', in honor of Coney Island's signature
roller-coaster," Mayor Giuliani said. "For baseball fans in Brooklyn this is
an especially important announcement because this will be the first
professional baseball team to call Brooklyn home since the Dodgers left. The
Brooklyn Cyclones will no doubt draw people to the neighborhood, initiate
the re-development and economic growth of Coney Island, and add to
Brooklyn's reputation as a legendary sports borough."
"The fantastic response to the "Help Us Name the Team" sweepstakes
demonstrates what we've known all along - that New Yorkers are eagerly
looking forward to the return of professional baseball to Brooklyn,"
Executive Vice-president of Brooklyn Baseball Company Jeffrey Wilpon said.
"For years, the Brooklyn Cyclone has been the last word in heart-stopping
summer thrills for roller coaster riders at Coney Island," New York Mets
co-owner Fred Wilpon said. "Now the Brooklyn Cyclones are going to bring the
heart-stopping thrills of professional baseball to Coney Island."
More than 7,000 fans took part in the "Help Us Name the Team" sweepstakes
begun at the groundbreaking of the new Coney Island stadium in August, when
Mayor Giuliani submitted the first entry in the contest. The contest winner
John Diffley will receive two season passes for all Brooklyn Cyclones 2001
home games and other prizes. One hundred randomly selected runners-up will
receive tickets to home games for the upcoming season. The Daily News and
WFAN-AM sports talk radio sponsored the contest.
The Brooklyn Cyclones, who will be a Class "A" team in the New
York-Pennsylvania Professional Baseball League ("New York-Penn League"),
will play the home games of their inaugural 2001 season in a 6,500-seat
stadium now being built. The Brooklyn Cyclones will play a 76-game regular
season from mid-June to Labor Day against 13 other teams of the New
York-Penn League.
Approximately 700 jobs will be created during the Brooklyn Cyclones ballpark
construction and corresponding site improvement work. Once the ballpark is
open, the team will have a 38-game home schedule, including four games
against their new cross-city rivals, the Staten Island Yankees. The stadium
will also be used to stage non-game events that could include scholastic and
athletic events, concerts, and other community activities. These games and
events, along with the City's right to stage up to 35 events per year, will
create approximately 240 full and part-time jobs.
The Brooklyn Cyclones ballpark will be located at the site of the former
Steeplechase Park in Coney Island, at Surf Avenue and Riegelmann Boardwalk
between West 16th and 19th Streets. The ballpark is to be built on four
parcels of land owned by the City of New York and will total 869,452 gross
square feet.
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Ebbets-Field.com in no way is affiliated with the
Brooklyn Cyclones or the New York Mets.

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