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Appalachian League releases 2019 community report

January 17, 2020

Here is a link to the original story on the team's website.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – The Appalachian League today announced it surpassed $2.3 million in charitable contributions for the 2019 calendar year. The multi-million dollar figure is a culmination of all community involvement from the ten teams in the Advanced-Rookie league, as well as efforts from the Appalachian League office.

“As a league, we appreciate the opportunity to give back and to enhance the communities that have supported our member clubs for more than 100 years,” said League President Dan Moushon.

Appalachian League executives, staff members, players, coaches, and umpires spent more than 7,600 hours volunteering in their communities across more than 220 events. Additionally, organizations partnered with five Minor League Baseball national charity partners and hosted local activations for five MiLB community initiatives.

More information about the Appalachian League’s 2019 community initiatives and charitable contributions can be viewed in the official 2019 report available here.

The 2020 Appalachian League season begins on June 22. Fans can view the complete schedule at appyleague.com.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Bluefield Blue Jays, Bristol Pirates, Burlington Royals, Community Benefit Report, Danville Braves, Elizabethton Twins, Greeneville Astros, Johnson City Cardinals, Kingsport Mets, Princeton Rays, Pulaski Yankees, Supporting the Community, Volunteering { }

Join Rays Kids Club, Summer Reading Program

April 12, 2016

Here is a link to the original story on the team's website.

Princeton, WV- The Princeton Rays are proud to unveil the 2016 Rays Kids Club and the 2016 Princeton Rays Summer Reading Program.

Rays Kids Club:

The Rays Kids Club has been a staple of summer fun for young Rays fans for many years and will continue to provide members with club-exclusive incentives and experiences in 2016.

Sponsored by MedExpress Urgent Care of Princeton, the Kids Club privileges for members include:

  • Invitation to five pre-game club meetings with meals provided including a picnic with several Rays players.
  • Official Kid’s Club T-Shirt, Membership Card and Certificate
  • Free admission to all regular season Rays games when wearing Kids Club T-Shirt
  • A custom birthday card autographed by Roscoe the Rooster
  • All members registered by June 3, 2016 will have their name listed in the Rays 2016 Game Program

The Kids Club is open to children ages 12 and under with a cost of membership is set at just $22 per child.

Membership registration forms are available on the Rays’ official website princetonrays.net, from the Rays’ front office or via email by request sent to princetonrays@frontier.com.

Rays Summer Reading Program:

The Rays and the Princeton Public Library aim to show that that baseball is a mental as well as physical game. With that in mind, the Rays official announce their partnership with the Princeton Public Library and the formation of the Rays 2016 Summer Reading Program.

The program will extend from the time Princeton-area schools release students for Summer Break until the end of the Princeton Rays regular season. Children ages 6 to 14 are welcome to register and win Rays’ prizes for reading throughout the summer.

The only requirement of Summer Reading Program members is to read one book about baseball and have their parent or guardian sign-off on the amount of hours they have read.

Prizes for members include:

  • One exclusive player autograph opportunity for five hours of reading
  • One game ticket for ten hours of reading
  • A 15% off coupon to the Rays’ Team store for 15 hours of reading
  • A Rays’ Reader T-Shirt for 25 hours of reading

Also, the Reading Program member who reads the most hours as of August 26 will earn the opportunity to throw the ceremonial first pitch at one of the Rays’ final regular season home games against the Bluefield Blue Jays.

Registration for the Rays Summer Reading Program is free for all interested members of age.

Membership registration forms are available at the Princeton Public Library, on the Rays’ official website princetonrays.net, from the Rays’ front office or via email by request sent to princetonrays@frontier.com.

The Princeton Rays, for the 20th season, are the proud Appalachian League Affiliate of the Tampa Bay Rays and will begin their 2016 home schedule on Sun., June 26 against the Danville Braves.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Children's Health and Development, Princeton Rays, Reading Programs, Tampa Bay Rays, Ticket Donations, West Virginia { }

Princeton Rays Looking for Pop Tabs To Help Others

July 19, 2013

“Saves” are an important statistic in baseball. The Princeton Rays are hopeful they can encourage all the team’s fans to save all their soda pop pull tabs and bring them to Hunnicutt Field. The Princeton Rays will in turn donate the pop tabs to Ronald McDonald Charities through their Charleston, WV facility.

The collection of pop tabs is an important revenue-raising source for Ronald McDonald House locations world-wide. Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) is an independent 501c3 organization whose mission is to create, find and support programs that directly improve the health and well being of children.

Once pop tabs are opened on a soft drink can, at first glance they seem to have no further relevant use but the Princeton Rays and the Princeton Senior High School Key Club beg to differ. The P-Rays are honored to join the local high school’s Key Club chapter in their quest to accumulate pop tabs for donation.

“I personally have delivered about 150 pounds of pop tabs to the Ronald McDonald House in Charleston on behalf of the Princeton Senior High School Key Club. I’ve been through the whole Charleston facility and see the great work they are doing in comforting families through meals and lodging at a time when they have sick kids in nearby hospitals. We thoroughly support the efforts of the PSHS Key Club to collect these items and encourage our fans to bring all their leftover pop tabs here to the stadium and put them into special clear plastic containers we will make available at several locations in the stadium. Collecting these pop tabs is a very simple way that everyone in the P-Rays family can help,” outlined P-Rays’ General Manager Jim Holland. He added that he has encountered many people that have utilized the services of a Ronald McDonald House location sometime during their lives.

The RMHC Pop Tab Program has already generated more than $4 million. The Pop Tab Collection Program was been established to allow individuals and businesses to collect soda pop tabs from aluminum cans and donate them to their local RMHC Chapter or Ronald McDonald’s House. Though it differs from program to program, for the most part, RMHC Chapters use the money received from recycling the tabs to help offset operational expenses or to sponsor or support programs.

So for the balance of this 2013 Appalachian League season, let’s get started and bring those used pop tabs to our collection points at Hunnicutt Field. Persons needing more information are encouraged to contact the Princeton Rays front office either by e-mail at princetonrays@frontier.com or by telephone at 304-487-2000.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Princeton Rays. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Children's Health and Development, Family Relief/Resources, Fundraising Opportunities, Princeton Rays, Ronald McDonald House, Tampa Bay Rays, West Virginia { }

Working within the community for a better Princeton: the 2012 P-Rays

September 24, 2012

Jason Solomonson of "Remember the Miners" (left) accepts for the organization a donation check for $1372.00 from P-Rays General Manager Jim Holland. (Greg Barnett Photography)
Jason Solomonson of “Remember the Miners” (left) accepts for the organization a donation check for $1372.00 from P-Rays General Manager Jim Holland. (Greg Barnett Photography)

The numerous successes enjoyed by the Princeton Rays in 2012 many times extended beyond the foul lines due to a heavy involvement by the team in events that lead to a better community and surrounding region.

“It’s very important to our organization to use our avenue of baseball to be a charity partner in the region when possible. We also want to help develop our players in this aspect of their professional baseball careers,” shared P-Rays’ General Manager Jim Holland in reviewing the season just completed.

The P-Rays, in addition to providing Hunnicutt Field as a venue for canned food drive events at two separate home games this past season, had over half the team participate in a unique related project this past summer.

August 9 and 10 saw 16 P-Rays’ players spread out over two mornings to four different locations of the area’s Grant’s Supermarket stores to bag groceries for customers. The players, who wore their jersey tops for the event, encouraged customers entering the stores to buy extra canned food items for those in need. As the players bagged groceries, the extra cans purchased were collected and placed in a donation area to be contributed to Tender Mercies Food Pantry.

Upon the event’s conclusion, Tender Mercies reported that the overall two-day donation was the largest they had received to date in 2012. Taking it a step further, upon completion of their shift, several Princeton players went back into the store and additionally purchased groceries to be donated toward the cause.

“The event we conducted with Grant’s was really very meaningful to all of us. It’s one of the more unique things we have done in a while and we are very much looking forward to being involved with Grant’s next year and raising those numbers more,” said Holland.

The season just concluded marked the third time in the last four seasons that the team wore specialty hats on a targeted game date to be auctioned for a specific charity.

After suffering a rain-out on the originally scheduled date of July 14, the game of August 11 served as a successful evening for “Coal Heritage Night.” During this game, the P-Rays’ were able to raise $1,372.00 via a game cap auction that was donated to “Remember The Miners,” a non-profit organization formed to spread awareness about the importance of the coal mining industry and create scholarships for deserving students.

The Princeton squad during that game wore very attractive P-Rays’ logo caps designed in coal colors of black and gray. As the game progressed, all players and coaches hats were being made available to everyone in attendance (and even some fans nationwide bidding by phone) via silent auction. Following the game, each winning bidder in attendance was brought on the field to receive their game-worn cap personally from each player and coach, who in turn autographed the cap for the recipient.

Twelve days later, at the August 23 home game, all in attendance were treated to an appearance from “Remember the Miners” co-founder Jason Solomonson, who drove from Charlotte, NC to receive the check on behalf of the organization in an on-field ceremony.

“Remember the Miners is obviously a very important charity to anyone that lives in this region as we especially know the effort miners put forth to power this country through the mining of coal. It is a vital industry and we were honored to be involved. We also want to include a thank you to The Shoppes at Willow Crossing for purchasing the hats to be used. The folks at Fairchild International also made it a very special night and we had several interns that worked hard to make it an evening to remember with a coal theme,” commented Holland.

The list of places that P-Rays’ players showed up this past summer was endless, stretching from appearances at the summer “Energy Express Reading Program” at Mercer School to being ambassadors at the “2012 State Junior League Baseball Championship Tournament” hosted by the Greater Princeton Little League at nearby Gardner Field.

They visited with the young at the Princeton Recreation Center’s Day Camp to the young at heart at Princeton Health Care Center as part of an outdoor luncheon for the residents on a beautiful August afternoon.

And, even further beyond the P-Rays’ player roster, the organization conducted many other events at home games during 2012 highlighting awareness for many other charitable endeavors. This included hosting groups such as firefighters, police officers, EMS workers, active and retired military personnel, members of scouting as well as children from daycare centers. Princeton Baseball Association, Inc also worked in 2012 with the Jonathan Powell Hope Foundation (awareness and prevention of pediatric cancer), Second Chance Learning Center, and Ed Randall’s Bat For the Cure, an official charity partner of Minor League Baseball that targets the awareness and prevention of prostate cancer.

As the area’s focus now turns to thoughts of next summer’s Appalachian League season, be on the lookout for the 2013 edition of the Princeton Rays to materialize at a community function near you.

To get more immediate and breaking information year-round on Princeton Rays Professional Baseball as it occurs, do not forget that the P-Rays are now on Facebook. Be sure to check out and “like” our Facebook section on our website at www.princetonrays.net. Don’t miss your opportunity to sign up for this free service! ANOTHER FREE OPPORTUNITY for you to keep up with your P-Rays is to follow the team on “Twitter” at @princetonrays or by accessing www.twitter.com/princetonrays.
This article originally appeared on the official website of the Princeton Rays. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Charity Auctions/Raffles, Donations, Ed Randall's Bat for the Cure, Food Banks, Food Drives, Food Insecurity, Princeton Rays, Reading Programs, Scholarships, Supporting the Community, Tampa Bay Rays, Volunteering, West Virginia { }

PRINCETON RAYS TO BAG GROCERIES AT LOCAL GRANT’S MARKETS; COLLECTING CANNED GOODS FOR TENDER MERCIES

July 21, 2012

Several members of the Princeton Rays baseball team will be appearing at four Grant’s Supermarket locations next week in the role of bagging groceries for customers while also collecting canned food good items for those in need.

Several team members will be appearing on Thursday, July 26 from 10:30am-12:30pm at two Princeton-area Grant’s Supermarkets: the Main Street location in Princeton and at the Athens Crossroads. They will be bagging groceries for, and visiting with, customers. People shopping during these hours are encouraged to buy an extra non-perishable canned food item and leave it at the checkout counter with the players, who will in turn forward the items to the Tender Mercies Food Pantry of Princeton.

This procedure will then be repeated on Friday, July 27 from 10:30am-12:30pm at two other Grant’s locations: Green Valley and Glenwood.

“It is a privilege for us to be asked to partner in such a worthy endeavor as this with Grant’s. We hope a lot of folks will come out and also purchase at least one extra canned good item to help out Tender Mercies,” said General Manager Jim Holland in making the announcement on July 19, and who also added that the team members bagging groceries may switch on the hour to allow even more players to be involved.

Persons needing more information are asked to contact the Princeton Rays either by e-mail at princetonrays@frontier.com or by telephoning the team’s office at Hunnicutt Field at (304) 487-2000.

To get more immediate and breaking information year-round on Princeton Rays Professional Baseball as it occurs, do not forget that the P-Rays are now on Facebook. Be sure to check out and “like” our Facebook section on our website at www.princetonrays.net. Don’t miss your opportunity to sign up for this free service! ANOTHER FREE OPPORTUNITY for you to keep up with your P-Rays is to follow the team on “Twitter” at @princetonrays or by accessing www.twitter.com/princetonrays.
This article originally appeared on the official website of the Princeton Rays. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Food Banks, Food Drives, Food Insecurity, Princeton Rays, Supporting the Community, Tampa Bay Rays, Volunteering, West Virginia { }

Little Leaguers benefit from visits of P-Rays Little League Caravan

June 11, 2012

P-Rays mascot, Roscoe the Rooster, entertains kids at a recent June 6 "Little League Caravan" visit to Narrows, VA (Brandon Grose)
P-Rays mascot, Roscoe the Rooster, entertains kids at a recent June 6 “Little League Caravan” visit to Narrows, VA (Brandon Grose)

In an effort to raise awareness about the Princeton Rays, as well as reach out to the region’s children and parents, P-Rays’ staff members have been spotted in many area youth ballparks this spring. The team has been doing this annually each spring since 2007 to promote the beginning of the season as a part of their annual Little League Caravan. The 2011 version of the caravan concluded with stops that included Narrows, VA on June 6, along Baileysville, WV and Alderson, WV on June 9.

With the 2012 season almost underway, the recent stops have reminded fans that a fresh, new outcropping of players are set to come to Princeton for another great year of baseball in the city.

The Little League caravans are put in place to inspire the area’s young players to pursue the sport of baseball and continue their journey through the amateur ranks. Seeing the Rays personnel and receiving memorabilia adds excitement to an otherwise already enjoyable day of playing baseball. “The kids get inspired when they see the Rays,” said Baileysville Little League parent Brandon Hall.

Alderson Little League player Bryson Ormsbee said he wanted to suit up for the Rays one day. “Yes [I would],” said Ormsbee. “And I want to play first base.” He listed his favorite player as Yankees Shortstop Derek Jeter.

Covering communities in all directions and youth leagues of all ages, the Rays also promoted their annual youth baseball camp that has been a mainstay for young ballplayers for sixteen years. The camp allows Little Leaguers ages 7 to 15 to interact with the Princeton Rays players, while gaining valuable baseball instruction in the process. It takes place on Saturday, July 28 from 9:30 A.M.- 1:00 P.M.

To get more immediate and breaking information year-round on Princeton Rays Professional Baseball as it occurs, do not forget that the P-Rays are now on Facebook. Be sure to check out and “like” our Facebook section on our website at www.princetonrays.net. Don’t miss your opportunity to sign up for this free service! ANOTHER FREE OPPORTUNITY for you to keep up with your P-Rays is to follow the team on “Twitter” at @princetonrays or by accessing www.twitter.com/princetonrays.
This article originally appeared on the official website of the Princeton Rays. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Baseball Camps/Instruction, Children's Health and Development, Mascot Appearances, Princeton Rays, Supporting the Community, Tampa Bay Rays, West Virginia, Youth Sports { }

Deatils announced for P-Rays 16th annual Youth Baseball Clinic

June 8, 2012

A long-time favorite, the 16th annual Princeton Rays Youth Baseball Clinic will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Saturday, July 28, 2012 at Hunnicutt Field in Princeton, WV, home of the Princeton Rays. The clinic is open to boys and girls ages 7 to 15.

Instructors for the clinic will be 2012 P-Rays’ manager Michael Johns, his coaching staff, and several P-Rays’ players. Kids will be instructed in all facets of baseball and an autograph session will follow the clinic. Each attendee will receive a clinic tee-shirt and free admission to the P-Rays’ home game that evening (July 28) versus the Bluefield Blue Jays. Fee for the clinic is $30.00 per participant and all participants registered and paid in full by July 18, 2012 will receive their shirts on the day of the clinic. The clinic has had the same two corporate sponsors for the entire 16 years, Newberry Ford, and The Lewis Agency of Princeton.

Even now, kids can already register for the clinic. Persons needing more information on the clinic or wanting to request a registration form are asked to contact the P-Rays’ front office either by e-mail at princetonrays@frontier.com or by telephone at (304) 487-2000. The Princeton Rays are the Appalachian League minor league baseball affiliate of the Tampa Bay Rays.

To get more immediate and breaking information year-round on Princeton Rays Professional Baseball as it occurs, do not forget that the P-Rays are now on Facebook. Be sure to check out and “like” our Facebook section on our website at www.princetonrays.net. Don’t miss your opportunity to sign up for this free service! ANOTHER FREE OPPORTUNITY for you to keep up with your P-Rays is to follow the team on “Twitter” at @princetonrays or by accessing www.twitter.com/princetonrays.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the the Princeton Rays. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Appalachian League, Baseball Camps/Instruction, Children's Health and Development, Princeton Rays, Tampa Bay Rays, West Virginia, Youth Sports { }

Welcome to clubphilanthropy.com!

Minor League Baseball clubs have been actively involved in their communities for many years. For the first time, their activities and contributions will be chronicled on this site.

Clubs don’t publicize all of their activity, so these stories represent a mere fraction of the contributions MiLB clubs make to their communities every year.

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    • Appalachian League releases 2019 community report
    • Join Rays Kids Club, Summer Reading Program
    • Princeton Rays Looking for Pop Tabs To Help Others
    • Working within the community for a better Princeton: the 2012 P-Rays
    • PRINCETON RAYS TO BAG GROCERIES AT LOCAL GRANT'S MARKETS; COLLECTING CANNED GOODS FOR TENDER MERCIES
    • Little Leaguers benefit from visits of P-Rays Little League Caravan
    • Deatils announced for P-Rays 16th annual Youth Baseball Clinic
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