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2006 Season

Year in Review
When the Winnipeg Goldeyes opened the 2006 Northern League season
at home on May 19,
it marked the dawn of a new era at CanWest
Global Park. Not only were there just three
players back from
the 2005 squad that finished with the worst record in franchise
history,
but there was also a new manager, and there was no mistaking
that this team was his team.
When Rick Forney was named the third manager in franchise history
last fall, he made it
known that his first priority was to get
the Goldeyes back to the playoffs following a two-year absence.
The way the year started, it looked like that was almost a lock,
as Winnipeg
swept former manager Hal Lanier and his Joliet JackHammers
to begin a stretch that saw
them win seven straight at home.
As successful as this team was here in Winnipeg, though, it
was a different story on the road. Night after night, game after
game, the Goldeyes battled but just couldn't come up with the
wins and that ended up costing them a shot at a first-half title.
In an effort to find the right balance, Forney made a lot of
personnel moves as the season
went on and, at times, it seemed
the door to the clubhouse revolved almost non-stop. But
when
the roster deadline passed in mid-August and the players knew
it was up to them
whether they made or missed the post-season,
they stepped up and met the challenge.
Heading out on their season-ending road trip to Alberta, where
last year's team saw its
playoff dreams go to die, this year's
team was still very much in contention. With the first-
half winners
from Fargo-Moorhead in position to lock up the second half, Winnipeg
had
its sights set on a Wild Card spot, although that meant winning
in two cities where
victories were at a premium. And win they
did.
With one mighty sweep of the broom, the Goldeyes took four straight
in Edmonton to
knock the Cracker-Cats out of playoff contention
and put them one win away from
September baseball. Standing in
their way were the Calgary Vipers, who had Winnipeg's number
at home, but not this time. The Goldeyes won twice to not only
claim their first-
ever series victory in Calgary, but also secure
a place in the playoffs for the first time
since 2003 and the
eleventh time in 13 seasons.
Meeting up with Fargo-Moorhead in the playoffs for the eighth
time, Winnipeg was cast as
a heavy underdog, despite winning
nine of 19 regular season meetings with the
RedHawks. That was
just fine, though, for it relieved them of any pressure and that
paid
off as the Goldeyes snuck in to Newman Outdoor Field and
won the first two games.
Needing just one win in a place where wins were plentiful this
year, the Goldeyes
returned home very much in the driver's seat.
But the RedHawks grabbed the wheel
and seized control with two
wins of their own, sending it back to Fargo for a fifth-and-
deciding
game. The visitors grabbed the early lead, yet it was not to
be, as the hosts
eventually tied it and then won it in their
final at-bat.
It may have ended sooner than it was supposed to, but it was
still a very successful
season for the Goldeyes in more ways
than one. Several players were recognized
over the course of
the season for their efforts, including seven that joined Forney
at
the Northern League All-Star Game in Kansas City. Two of those
players, pitchers
Josh Kite and Howard Pence, were later picked
up by Major League clubs, as was
fellow pitcher Mike Wagner.
Other individuals given their due included outfielder Fehlandt
Lentini, designated hitter
Jimmy Hurst and pitcher Luis Villarreal.
All were named to play in the all-star game
and all made the
post-season all-star team. General manager Andrew Collier,
meanwhile,
received the nod as the NL Executive of the Year for the third
time in five
years. And the awards did not stop there.
As an organization, the Goldeyes were saluted once more for
being the best at what
they do. In a year where 312,213 fans
were welcomed to CanWest Global Park,
Winnipeg surpassed the
300,000 mark for the fifth straight year and led the league in
attendance for the seventh straight year. Those kinds of numbers
attracted attention
from around the league, as the Goldeyes were
named the Organization of the Year,
becoming the only two-time
winner since the award was first handed out in 2003.
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