The Holiday Showdown - Sussex County Miners
The Sussex County Miners are one of North Jersey’s winningest professional baseball teams, most recently winning the 2018 Can-Am League Championship. The Miners are a proud member of the Frontier League, one of four professional baseball leagues designated as Partner Leagues of Major League Baseball. Sussex County plays a 96-game season from May through September. Their home field is Skylands Stadium, a premier sports and entertainment venue in Augusta, New Jersey. Home games feature exciting events such fireworks, daily specials, promotion nights, giveaways, player meet and greets, parades, shows, performances, and much more.
Sussex County Miners, Miners, professional baseball, baseball, Frontier League, Major League Baseball Professional Partner League, Skylands Stadium, Augusta, New Jersey, Sussex County, New Jersey, champions, events, fireworks, sports, entertainment, daily specials, promotion nights, giveaways, player meet and greets, parades, shows, performances
16285
post-template-default,single,single-post,postid-16285,single-format-standard,bridge-core-3.3.1,qi-blocks-1.3.3,qodef-gutenberg--no-touch,qodef-qi--no-touch,qi-addons-for-elementor-1.8.1,qode-page-transition-enabled,ajax_fade,page_not_loaded,,qode_grid_1300,overlapping_content,footer_responsive_adv,hide_top_bar_on_mobile_header,qode-theme-ver-30.8.1,qode-theme-bridge,qode_header_in_grid,wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-7.9,vc_responsive,elementor-default,elementor-kit-13913

The Holiday Showdown

The Holiday Showdown

What could be better than a ballgame on the Fourth of July? A ballgame followed by fireworks, of course. But it’s even better this year at Skylands Stadium. This time, it will be a confrontation of in-state arch-rivals slugging it out for first place in the Frontier League standings.

     It’s been a battle for the top spot all year long between the Miners and the New Jersey Jackals, and it’s only intensified since the summer solstice on June 21, when the Jackals were in the process of winning 18 out of 19 to emerge from the field as the Miners major nemesis.

     Today, the two teams are tied for first place in the East Division with identical records of 27-16. That’s because the Jackals lost a 9-5 decision against the Tri-City ValleyCats yesterday while the Miners game against the Empire State Greys was postponed by threatening weather. That combination of events produced the first dead tie of the year, after each team had enjoyed a turn on top.

     Now, the heat is on. It’s time for a head-to-head showdown, starting with a doubleheader under a full moon in Paterson tonight, then a holiday game tomorrow night at Skylands and a series finale Wednesday night back in Paterson.

     The Miners have gotten here with the best pitching staff in the league, ranked No. 1 with a team ERA of 3.25. They’ve given up less hits and less runs than any other club and they’re among the top three in fewest walks and home runs allowed. 

     The Jackals are the exact opposite, succeeding despite a team ERA of 5.59 by leading the league in home runs, slugging percentage and runs scored, while currently ranked No. 2 in hits, RBI, on-base percentage and stolen bases and No. 3 in drawing walks.

     The offensive-dominant Jackals and the defensive-minded Miners met earlier this year, splitting two games of a planned three-game series that was shortened because of a rainout, resulting in the make-up doubleheader tonight at the Jackals’ new home of Hinchliffe Stadium in Paterson. 

     New Jersey’s Josh Rehwaldt leads the league with 19 home runs and is No. 7 in the league with a .363 batting average, joining teammates James Nelson (No. 3 at .399) and Keon Barnum (No. 5 at .373) in the league’s elite. For Sussex, it’s been all about the pitching, led by Mark Moclair (9 starts, 2.93 ERA), Tyler Thornton (9 starts, 3.19) and Griffin Baker (8 starts, 3.27). The Miners bullpen has been sensational, including Robbie Hitt (13 appearances, 7 saves, 0.00 ERA), Ronnie Voacolo (13 appearances, 0.60) and Billy Parsons (12 appearances, 0.96).

     On May 19 at Skylands, the Miners took an early 2-1 lead and turned it into a 6-1 spread in the middle innings on the way to a 10-2 victory over New Jersey. Gavin Stupienski was 3-for-4 with a home run and four RBI for Sussex, which improved to 6-1 with the win behind starter Tyler Thornton and relievers Jimmy Boyce and Matt Still, who combined to hold the power-happy Jackals to just five singles and one double.

     The following Saturday night was supposed to be the Jackals home opener, but bad weather prevailed, so it was a Sunday matinee to open the renovated 1932 ballpark. And, both teams had their hitting shoes on for that one, with New Jersey whacking six home runs on their new turf and Sussex adding four more in a 10-6 Jackals victory to make it a 1-1 draw for the abbreviated series.

     First pitch for tonight’s first seven-inning game is 4:35, followed by a second seven-inning game, which will then be followed by fireworks. And, for Miners fans who haven’t visited Hinchliffe Stadium yet, this might be the perfect time to make the 42-mile trip. 

     Designated as a National Historic Landmark because of its past glory hosting teams in the Negro leagues, Hinchliffe is located off of Route 80 and right next door to the Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park. That’s where the 77-foot waterfall first inspired Alexander Hamilton in 1778 to create the nation’s “first planned industrial city” eventually founded as Paterson in 1791.

     MINERS/JACKALS RIVALRY: After this series, the Miners and Jackals will meet just one more time in a midweek home-and-home three-game series Aug. 1-3, the first two at Hinchliffe and the finale at Skylands. That’s nine games between the two teams this year, compared to 12 head-to-head matches in past seasons. Last year, the Jackals won six out of 11, with the cancellation of the 12th game which would have been the last game of the 2022 season.

     The Jackals first took the field in 1998 at Yogi Berra Stadium, on the campus of Montclair State University. They played in the Northeast League and the Northern League before joining the Can-Am League in 2005, merging into the Frontier League to start the 2021 season.

     The Miners were founded in 2015 to take over what had been known as Skylands Park, first opened in 1994 as home to the New Jersey Cardinals, the Class-A affiliate of the St. Louis organization playing in the iconic New York-Penn League. The ballpark had been empty for five years before the Miners joined the Jackals in the Can-Am League setting the stage for a natural in-state rivalry. The two teams met in the league championship series in 2019 – the last year of existence for the Can-Am – and the Jackals came out on top, three games to two. 

     ON DECK: With yesterday’s postponement of the Miners-Greys game, the teams will have two chances in the future for a make-up date. The travel-team Greys will be back at Skylands for a three-game series Aug. 11-13 and again for a three-game series to end the regular season Sept. 1-3. 

     First, the Miners and Jackals will finish their current business after the holiday with a Wednesday night game in Paterson, then the Miners take a weekend road trip 28 miles outside of Pittsburgh for a three-game series with the West Division’s Washington Wild Things, and that’s followed by the annual four-day mid-season all-star break.

     Meanwhile, after that Wednesday night game at Hinchliffe, the Jackals will head north across the border for a three-night stand against the Aigles in scenic Trois-Rivieres, leading up to the all-star break.

By Carl Barbati, former sports editor of the New Jersey Herald, Daily Record and The Daily Trentonian.